The physical constraints that might in retrospect be recognised as the "primeval ecosystem" can be "crisply informational" for purely accidental reasons. — apokrisis
So - remembering that we are talking about the development of the coding side of the biosemiotic relation - the syntax might seem physically definite in the primeval condition, but the semantics is still maximally contingent. And being uncertain or indeterminate, that makes it spontaneous or vague. — apokrisis
What comes first is a vague state of semiotic relations. So chimps grunting in contextually meaningful, yet ungrammatical fashion, is at least some kind of messaging system. — apokrisis
What Pattee does, is take this right back to the most primitive form of messaging, molecular switching, and claims that this switching must have come into existence within the context of a pre-existing "language" — Metaphysician Undercover
You have it back to front. — apokrisis
Even a trivial version of the argument says you have to add the further thing of "the organisation". Summing the parts ain't enough. — apokrisis
However, I think that this downward causation is still reducible to the properties of parts. I may try to demonstrate this on any example you will choose. — miosim
Great. Start with consciousness. — apokrisis
So your claim is that the existence of the parts precedes the whole, in a manner of vague existence? — Metaphysician Undercover
This is Panpsychism's essential problem. Matter and mind can't be shown to be the two halves of one whole, the two aspects of the one symmetry breaking. — apokrisis
Information theory describes entropy as both epistemic uncertainty and as ontic degrees of freedom. The two sides of the deal are now mathematically joined at the hip. Their essential complementarity has been recognized as a quantifiable quality - the holy bit — apokrisis
Of course the play of signs, the play of symbols, still has to obey the second law. It takes work to run a computer or brain. Both must produce a lot of waste heat. But from the point of view of the play of symbols, the entropic cost of every bit, every operation (like executing a program or uttering a thought) is effectively the same. There is always a cost, but it is immaterial in not making a difference to the computation or the brain activity. — apokrisis
I am not up to speed with this new dominant paradigm, but Wiki also not aware about it. However I found a short clip about Pansemiosis on YouTube.Pansemiosis, on the other hand, has become science's new dominant paradigm - even if cashing out all that which is implied is still a work in progress across the span of the sciences — apokrisis
I've said it hundreds of times now. When things begin, both parts and wholes would be maximally vague. It is in their co-dependent arising that they together dispel the mists of unformed possibility to revealed their mutually supported actuality. — apokrisis
Co-dependence is unacceptable because it produces an infinite regress with no beginning. Therefore the assumption of co-dependence is a negating of the beginning rather than a looking at the beginning. — Metaphysician Undercover
Nonsense. Instead of having to start with either a whole, or the parts, things start with the more foundational step of the beginning of their actual separation. — apokrisis
But it kills the kind of mechanistic regress you are talking about because the first step is already irreducibly complex in being a symmetry-breaking relation. — apokrisis
Such a separation is only a beginning in the sense that it is the end of the old and the beginning of the new. So we must account for the old then. — Metaphysician Undercover
But if that is the case, how is it that the thing which is prior to the co-dependent whole and parts, the symmetry itself, not actually a whole, a whole with no parts, which later becomes a whole with parts? — Metaphysician Undercover
Can we identify a case where the " The whole is LESS than the sum of the parts?" — malcolm
This is similar to Kurt Koffka's (correctly translated) phrase "the whole is other than the sum of the parts" which itself is sometimes mistranslated as "the whole is greater than the sum of its parts", a translation that Koffka disagrees with.
So it seems the particular term "greater" is a misquote. — Michael
Can we identify a case where the " The whole is LESS than the sum of the parts?" — malcolm
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.