At a certain level, integrated information is just a truism. It is obvious - once you accept the brain employs some kind of neural code to construct "consciousness" - that a big problem is how all this local information, this individually triggered firing, then gets integrated into a large structured state of meaningful experiencing — apokrisis
The easy case against ITT is that if people like Tononi and Koch are happy to arrive at a destination like panpsychism, you know that you don't even want to waste time starting going down that particular road — apokrisis
I contrast this with Friston's Bayesian Brain model. Friston worked with Tononi in Edelman's lab as it happens. But Friston's approach struck me as immediately right even before he really got going. — apokrisis
its model of it being a self in a world. So that takes us into a different intellectual space - one where cognition is enactive and semiotic. — apokrisis
It is good you say you don't fully understand it. The scientific story is still being written. And my point is that the concepts of both information and entropy are themselves useful modelling constructs - extreme simplifications of the world they thus also make usefully measurable by those extreme simplifications. — apokrisis
So - as Friston keenly understood - information theory creates a cleared ground, one stripped of the quality of meaning, so that science could then start constructing the right kind of metric for measuring systems with meaning. — apokrisis
The immaterial information was connected to the material dynamics - the self to the world - via an explicit epistemic cut, or modelling relation. — apokrisis
Life can be divided into genetic information and chemistry. But the missing part of the story is how those two realms are mechanically connected. — apokrisis
A first thought was, matter is physical and information is non-physical, so isn't that dualism? — Mark Nyquist
↪Pop Another thought is that the monism/dualism question and the what is information question should be considered and solved together — Mark Nyquist
Are you familiar with Neural networks? — Pop
What is so wrong with panpsychism? Buddhism is panpsychist. Bhutan is the only carbon negative country, what is so wrong with that? — Pop
It is based on a Markov blanket, so neural network straight off. And neural networks have proven to be very successful in AI, such as GPT3. — Pop
I agree with this statement, but "semiotic" implies an epistemic cut. Wouldn't it be simpler to say that two informational bodies interact? And develop interrelationally? — Pop
understand basic neural network principles such that an input is shunted to an output ( symbol ), via non logical gradients which can be arbitrarily adjusted. — Pop
There you go again. If we cannot make the cut, why talk about it? This is the difficulty of understanding this, you have to try and understand it whilst being enmeshed in it, there is no cut. Its an interrelational situation. If the cut is arbitrary, then it is simply a cut you choose to make. Don't make the cut, then it it is two systems evolving interrelationally. — Pop
Respectfully, I suspect your bias is getting in the way of logic here. — Pop
I trust in Shannon's understanding that information always exists embedded in a substance, as the co-element of the substance. — Pop
But the meaning of that physical mark or thrown switch is entirely another story - a habit of interpretation. — apokrisis
All signs, symbols, and codes, all languages including formal mathematics are embodied as material physical structures and therefore must obey all the inexorable laws of physics. At the same time, the symbol vehicles like the bases in DNA, voltages representing bits in a computer, the text on this page, and the neuron firings in the brain do not appear to be limited by, or clearly related to, the very laws they must obey. Even the mathematical symbols that express these inexorable physical laws seem to be entirely free of these same laws. — Howard Pattee, Physics and Metaphysics of Biosemios
Physics is the question of what matter is. Metaphysics is the question of what exists (or, what is real). People of a rational, scientific bent tend to think that the two are coextensive—that everything is physical. Many who think differently are inspired by religion to posit the existence of God and souls; Nagel affirms that he’s an atheist, but he also asserts that there’s an entirely different realm of non-physical stuff that exists—namely, mental stuff. The vast flow of perceptions, ideas, and emotions that arise in each human mind is something that, in his view, actually exists (i.e. is real) as something other than merely the electrical firings in the brain that gives rise to them—and exists as surely as a brain, a chair, an atom, or a gamma ray.
In other words, even if it were possible to map out the exact pattern of brain waves that give rise to a person’s momentary complex of awareness, that mapping would only explain the physical correlate of these experiences, but it wouldn’t be them. — Richard Brody, Thoughts are Real
Panpsychism is the kind of theory that is in the class of not even being wrong. — apokrisis
- Yes I agreethe brain wants to predict its inputs so it can then ignore them as things it was already expecting — apokrisis
- I agree, and agree that the input receptor is more a predictor.the brain is striving to be unconscious. It wants to predict reality so well that there is nothing left that could disturb it by being surprising. — apokrisis
- fascinatingthus the whole cost of mark-making ceases to be a constraint on any computational process . — apokrisis
(Note this is not panpsychism, because perspective is only associated with sentient creatures, not with matter in general. — Wayfarer
This amounts to saying that we do not know how linear and digital entities (that is, DNA) came into being; all we can say is that they were not the result of spontaneous chemical reactions. The information paradigm, in other words, has not been able to prove its ontological claim, and that is why the chemical paradigm has not been abandoned.
Living beings are therefore more than simply an arrangement of matter; they signal appearance of the subjective dimension, or perhaps we could say the intentional domain, even if it's in the simplest forms of single-celled organisms. — Wayfarer
Because the ingredient that was always lacking in objective descriptions is perspective. — Wayfarer
So - in any living organism, perspective has already begun to emerge, albeit in extremely simple forms. (Note this is not panpsychism, because perspective is only associated with sentient creatures, not with matter in general.) In the case of h. sapiens, due to rationality and language, new horizons of being - radically new perspectives - open up which are not available to other sentient creatures (and, obviously, not available in a Universe lacking in such beings.) — Wayfarer
So, I solve the issue of what consciousness or the mind is, by showing that it never occurs or appears as an object of perception, although because nothing can be known in its absence, it is nevertheless fundamentally real. And the reality of mind is demonstrated by the ability to grasp meaning, which is, arguably, a refinement of the very same process which is operative at the level of cellular biology. So to that extent, I advocate a form of dualism. — Wayfarer
Such Bias with a capital B! I often think that a philosopher should start their enquiry possessing no knowledge at all, and then they would be free to follow the logic wherever it may go. But that is not possible, is it. They start their enquiry already possessing a body of knowledge, and a sense of self entrenched in it's midst, and so any enquiry first and foremost must preserve this sense of self, as after all that is the mechanism of the system. The system is not free to pursue conclusions that destroy one's sense of self, and so a large part of possibility is left unexplored, and dismissed of hand. — Pop
Given our differences in paradigm, is it possible to agree on "what is information"? — Pop
So you would advise that we specify what kind of information we're talking about? What modifiers should we use? — frank
Information and the speculative sense of information. — Cheshire
even though no answer can be given for “what is not information?”
— Possibility
Hey. I am interested in knowing why you think no answer can be given to such question; it's just curiosity. — Daniel
Call me stubborn, but I keep thinking of information as being subjective; with that I mean that it is not a quality of an object, but it is instead (in its basic form) the effect caused by a given object onto another (the amount of change depends on the "strength" of the effect and on the amount of change the affected object is able to support). Thus, information is a quality of an object if and only if it is caused by something else [and information is not a quality of the object that causes the change but of the object(s) on which the change occurs]; this way, I think information is not a fundamental quality, for in a universe in which there is only one object, information would not exist (although the object does?).
Edit:
We could say information is potentially a quality of an object if such object has the capacity to interact with other objects. But information can only actually be a quality when it has been caused by another object (it is the result of an interaction). I dunno, what do you think? — Daniel
Feldman Barrett’s constructionist theory, in which consciousness is constructed as an ongoing predictive event from incomplete, potential and affected ‘information’.
— Possibility
So you would agree with the view that we are a body of information integrating more information in our path? :up: — Pop
It can’t hurt. At the very least we should acknowledge the ambiguity of the term, referring to an interaction, its evidence and potential. This is why I describe information as ‘variability in an interaction’. I think we need to be clear on our position in relation to the interaction in using the term ‘information’, and recognise that this determines the qualitative structure of that use. — Possibility
There is the common sense of information and then there is a sense of information that is speculated about on the forum. Ergo, speculative sense of information in this context.This still implies that information is definitive, but as what? As an (unobservable) action or as evidence or potential of such? The reality is that we rely on piecing together or constructing evidence of or potential information far more than we observe an actual interaction first-hand. I think that what isn’t a speculative sense of information would be almost entirely constructed from it as a prediction. — Possibility
I also think of active Information (EnFormAction)in terms of Logos and Tao. It's not a physical thing, but a process of organizing and integrating disparate things into novel holistic systems. It's like a physical Force that we know only from its effects, not from observation of a particular thing. In other words : "creativity".What is the source of order in the universe? That which integrates the Universe integrates us! — Pop
It bears resemblance to the idea of the Logos, the Tao, Dharma - a principle of organisation which can only be discerned in its effects, never in its essence. — Wayfarer
But that’s not to say that ‘everything is information’ - I think I get what Pop is trying to get at, but that statement is oversimplified and therefore fraught with miscommunication, in my view. — Possibility
If you have time would you want to disambiguate the various kinds of information? It does seem like there's a common thread through them, so it's easy to just end up sliding them altogether. — frank
something fundamental is something that exists only actually. — Daniel
So, information about shuffling is not in this case a fundamental quality of the card deck, for card decks can exist without being shuffled.
Potentiality requires an entity that realizes such potentiation therefore anything that can exist potentially cannot be fundamental; something fundamental is something that exists only actually. — Daniel
I think of information as a singular co-element of a substance. As the pattern or form describing a substance. — Pop
Everything that exists, does so as an evolving self organizing system. Interaction is a constant. So it is clear that information enables the interactional organization of a system. What a system self organizes is information.. — Pop
As Daniel has intimated, we only receive the information of the substance. — Pop
What the substance is changes as more information becomes available of it. — Pop
substantial being — apokrisis
substantial classical being — apokrisis
The substance is what the substance is. — Daniel
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