So it is simple to see "the how" of biological, neurological and cultural complexity. There is more going on than just material dynamics. There is also the very different thing of symbolic regulation. — apokrisis
The tricky new thing is pan-semiosis - extending this metaphysics to existence in general. But it is hardly a secret that physics is undergoing its information theoretic revolution. — apokrisis
I mean what do you think an event horizon actually is? Is it matter? Is it information? Or is it really about a habitual relation between these two disjunct aspects of reality? — apokrisis
The only way information can be represented are by parts, no? — darthbarracuda
In that article, I see "switches" spoken of, which are just parts. — Metaphysician Undercover
Where is this background environment of "language" supposed to have come from, God? — Metaphysician Undercover
So what shapes a switch? Is binary logic "real" in your book? (I say yes - as real as any physical circuitry it engenders.) — apokrisis
without co-ordination the 5 would make a poorly performing team i.e. the whole is less than its parts — TheMadFool
I was talking about self-organisation and not merely emergence. And I gave evidence. I said parts "emerge" via holistic constraint in hierarchically organised systems. — apokrisis
So it is not just emergence in the usual sense of new global properties popping out of collective behavior. Instead it is the argument that global forms and purposes act downwards to limit material possibility in fruitful fashion. The whole simplifies messy reality to shape the very parts that compose it. — apokrisis
Thus to the Chinese speaker, the whole (the arrangement of the brush strokes) may be greater (carry more information) than the parts (the brush strokes themselves). But to the English speaker ...?
Saying "The whole is greater than the sum of the parts" has poetic value, but is not technically correct. — Real Gone Cat
The issue is, where does this primeval ecosystem come from, within which the switching systems can emerge, — Metaphysician Undercover
A listing of the parts (the sum of the parts) is a whole no less so than any other arrangement of the parts. And no arrangement carries any more value than any other, accept that the observer chooses to make it so. — Real Gone Cat
what exactly is meant by the phrase "the sum of the parts"? Is it a listing of the parts as I've suggested, or something else? — Real Gone Cat
Now the aphorism is not entirely without meaning - when properly understood. It actually means, "One arrangement is valued above other arrangements." — Real Gone Cat
Hate to say it, but Pattee is just talking about the necessity of vague beginnings. — apokrisis
So the argument is that the primeval "ecosystem language" (and note Pattee is talking specifically about the code half of the dichotomy here) would have condensed out of vaguer, analog, conditions in the same way that the formal grammar that (used to be) taught every kid in school is a "written down" distillation or idealisation of the more informal habits to be found in spoken language. — apokrisis
Vagueness is in the messages, not in the language itself, which pre-exists the messages. — Metaphysician Undercover
In making this type of analogy you must be sure to maintain a proper temporal order so as not to confuse cause with effect. — Metaphysician Undercover
So the messaging system comes into existence, and is formed in such a way as to fulfill the requirements of the pre-existing language, but what the child learns is rules which are derived from messaging system. The former is truly prescriptive, while the latter is descriptive. — Metaphysician Undercover
It's just not the same thing to list a set of components in a way that leaves out the further fact that is their organisation. — apokrisis
Emergence is already saying the organisation that emerges is more than what can be found in the parts themselves. — apokrisis
Perhaps there are no parts, just wholes. If each part itself is a whole, then perhaps we are talking about a classification issue. The discussion becomes one of how wholes interact. If two Hydrogen atoms meet up with an Oxygen atom, they may yield H20. The whole vs parts issue is transformed into a functional analysis of the relationship between discrete wholes. — Cavacava
So the "sum of the parts" consists of the material parts and their organization (arrangement). How then is the whole different from the sum of the parts? It seems that the parts and their organization must exhaust what constitutes the whole, and therefore are equivalent to the whole. Whatever properties the whole exhibits will also be exhibited by the parts and their organization - which is how you have defined the "sum of the parts" - and the aphorism is shown to be false. — Real Gone Cat
It seems that the parts and their organization must exhaust what constitutes the whole, and therefore are equivalent to the whole. — Real Gone Cat
I'd just clarify that it's a matter of dynamic organization. — Terrapin Station
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