Just consider the numbers "13, 13" as they appear on your screen. Are they two different numbers, both classifed as "13"? Or the same number? — hypericin
Are we talking about tokens of a numeral (or numeral string)? Or are we talking about some abstract number or concrete collection, but either way something (or some things) referred to by such a numeral? Or would that be a pedantic question? — bongo fury
the numbers "13, 13" as they appear on your screen — hypericin
Are they two different numbers, both classifed as "13"? Or the same number? — hypericin
I claim that with information qualitative identity *is* numeric identity. As in the example of "13, 13". — hypericin
I can't wait for the translation. — Manuel
your copy is one of 5 million extant in the world, each qualitatively (at least microscopically) and numerically distinct from all the others. — hypericin
We are not referring to the physical mediums when speaking of informational objects. — hypericin
We are referring to the information itself. — hypericin
So, if you watched a copy of the movie dubbed in Spanish, or maybe even a stage production, you might say you watched "A Wizard of Oz". — hypericin
But, there are not as many "Wizard of Oz"es as there are copies of the movie floating around. — hypericin
If you accept this, then it logically follows that two copies of the dvd contain the same, numerically identical, information. — hypericin
This is not some esoteric, woo belief, — hypericin
So your admirable (for me) nominalism, as embraced in paragraphs one thru five (of eight), depends on grammar? — bongo fury
Couldn't it easily have happened that we referred to apples as "apple" (with no article) even while only ever accepting a (any) whole one as answering to the name? — bongo fury
I don't follow this argument. A pictogram is a symbol, and so information, not an apple....Treat an apple as a character in a discrete alphabet (e.g. of fruits) and the analogy is complete... — bongo fury
Would some version of your "informational" exception then not apply? — bongo fury
Why on earth not? — bongo fury
But what is that? — bongo fury
But the information itself could be discovered. Context, and therefore meaning, is not deducible from information. If it was, it would be redundant.Sure. But not if you merely studied, however carefully, the digital or analog recordings themselves (literally, as opposed to the sound-and-light events produced from them). — bongo fury
Considering the screenings, they depend on and are completely reflective of the film reels.the screenings and plays (sound-and-light events) which collectively constitute said artwork — bongo fury
Maybe. But you aren't understanding me.Sorry. Seems like Platonism to me. — bongo fury
You are probably aware that digital data is stored as 1s and 0s. These are interpreted as base-2 numbers, which are just like the familiar base-10, except at every digit only 2 values are possible, instead of 10 So, every file on your computer can be interpreted as an enormous number. In the case of a movie, if it is well compressed and HD the file size might be ~4GB. This is 2^32 base-
2 digits, corresponding to a single base-10 number of around 1.2 billion digits! — hypericin
Ok, so being isomorphic with a natural number means being in a system capable of distinguishing at least that specified whole number of different items? — bongo fury
Perhaps there is an additional requirement that you and the rest must be symbols? — bongo fury
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