By definition, form (code) precedes information. — Galuchat
What it says is:No 7 says the opposite of what you are saying. No 7 says information is the creation of form. Which makes sense, otherwise you end up in an endless regress. — Pantagruel
Correct.Number 3 describes a process. — Pantagruel
Code and Form are specific and structured data: interrelated elements (foundational components).This isn't intended as a direct response to your point, but I have read a lot of information theory, starting with Pierce's early work. And I'm trained in coding. I don't think there is necessarily a facile answer one way or the other, it is a complex question, particularly when you consider the case of 'natural information'. — Pantagruel
Given any set of things, no one arrangement of things is antecedently more or less likely than any other. So if the things are arranged to form, an arrow, for example, or the number 4, it is the information itself which makes the arrangement "informative." — Pantagruel
For me the interesting question is this: is the form preserving the information, or is the information preserving the form? Bearing in mind that the same information can be preserved, probably in an infinite variety of ways. — Pantagruel
There has to be order first, before there is even 'things', as no 'thing' can exist without there being an order. — Wayfarer
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