Yes. I emphasized "Natural" selection, because scientists, and many philosophers, are uncomfortable with the idea of "Super-natural" selection. But then, who or what programmed the rules for Selection Criteria into the the evolutionary algorithm? As I said before, randomness alone is destructive, so we must somehow account for the creative powers of our universe. Science says "Chance did it", while Religion says "God did it". But, my alternative to Intelligent Design is Intelligent Evolution, imagined as an information processing computer program. But even that begs the question of a Programmer.In the regular uncapitalized natural selection, it is the 'selection' that is the scientific alternate to ID, meaning, too, that evolution doesn't work by chance, which is the same as you said about chance not being able to drive it. — PoeticUniverse
I still view Randomness as a necessary source of novelty, which supplies open possibilities, for Selection to choose from.Yes, I think you have answered the question in the next post. Chance is not actually a cause at all, in evolution, natural selection is the cause. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's where we differ. "Chance" also means Opportunity. Choice may have its reasons, but Chance supplies the substance to be rationalized --- the objects to be ordered."Chance" is the word that we use to describe the situation when we apprehend no particular reason for one outcome or another. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes. But Choice (the power to choose) without a Menu (options) is impotent.You demonstrate a logical intuition, to say that this does not make sense to you. — Metaphysician Undercover
Enformationism does imply PanEnTheism. Yet it's not about pixels, but Bits of meaning. :smile:However, Enformation seems to me to be either pantheistic or panentheistic digitalism, as if pixels have replaced string theory — Gregory
What would the Idealists think about a world composed of Bits of Information? Maybe all those zillions of bits add up to one really big Idea. :joke:If we found that instead of strings, there were tiny photons that rule the world, I think the German idealists and romantics would sing from their graves — Gregory
I still view Randomness as a necessary source of novelty, which supplies open possibilities, for Selection to choose from. — Gnomon
That's where we differ. "Chance" also means Opportunity. Choice may have its reasons, but Chance supplies the substance to be rationalized --- the objects to be ordered. — Gnomon
My Enformationism thesis does have some parallels with Whitehead's Process Philosophy. Unfortunately, I had difficulty following his arguments in Process and Reality. Besides, my theory was pretty well developed before I heard of Whitehead.You are obviously a process philosopher — Gregory
Yes. That infinite source of Possibilities is what I call BEING (General Potential; the power to be). My imaginary creation scenario has Chaos (random possibilities) merging with Logos (Reason & Order) to create Cosmos (an organized process of becoming).The source of novelty need not be randomness, it only needs to be possibility. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes. I suspect that many scientists tend to think of pure Randomness (Chance) as the source of creativity in Evolution. But, without the organizing choices of Natural Selection, random changes (mutations) would go nowhere. So it's the combination of Chance & Choice that makes the world go around, so to speak. Consequently, we need to figure out how the Darwinian process of Evolution came to have the power to choose its direction into the future. That's why the notion of a Cosmic Program appeals to me. :smile:You use it as somewhat synonymous with possibility. — Metaphysician Undercover
Quaint indeed! Berkeley's Idealism was, in part, a justification of Christian Catholic theology --- yet, influenced by ancient Pagan Platonism. My own thesis is similar to Plato's Idealism, but it is grounded in the strange conclusions of modern Quantum theory, that the foundation of material reality is immaterial. As one physicist exclaimed, "A quantum particle is nothing but Information"! He was referring to the frustrating fact that the localized particles they hope to study tend to vanish into a fog of non-local mathematical waveforms --- neither here not there, but floating aimlessly in a Field of probabilistic Potential.Here is a specific audio video you might find quaint. Long before computers.. — Gregory
No, I'm suggesting that since reductive Quantum scientists have sliced the material world down to nothingness, and never found the holy grail of a final foundational uncuttable Atom (Leucippus), the understructure of reality may not be made of solid Matter. That immaterial bedrock of reality now appears to be the same stuff that creates ideas in your mind, and calculates mathematical answers in computers. Information may superficially appear to "not be anything", but it is the substance of everything.Are you saying THE WORLD is corporeal consciousness or simply information? We might not be anything — Gregory
What color is the number Four? No answer?What options to be have of interpreting Enformation apart from mathematics? Plato tried to refute this by saying that the question "is 4 big?" has no answer and therefore there is something prior to math — Gregory
Thanks. But some people on this forum think my thesis is airy-fairy religious nonsense. And others think it's quantum-weirdness atheistic nonsense. But, if anything makes sense in this world, it should be the Information that forms meaning in your mind. :nerd:Your ideas are interesting and consistent — Gregory
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