So in your OP which did you intend? I would have stayed away from the Shannon version.Pragmatic theory of information — Pop
I think properties are of an object and therefore there is something in addition to properties. — Daniel
the change that occurs in each element of a set of interacting objects is information, — Daniel
Pragmatic theory of information
— Pop
So in your OP which did you intend? I would have stayed away from the Shannon version. — Mark Nyquist
This is a view of information that leaves out any receiver of the information. It is moot whether an event or degree of freedom is considered to be random noise or orderly signal as there is no higher meaning or symbolism being attached to the mark. The first step is just to discover the foundational thing of a counterfactual - the starting point of it being even meaningful to ask of anything: "are you a 1 or a 0? A presence or an absence? A something or a nothing?" — apokrisis
We can recover the other sense of information as not just about countable physical differences, but differences that make a difference to someone as they are symbols being read as part of an exchange of messages. — apokrisis
Let's pretend that a pattern of information is not a construct of our models but already a form of instantiated being that therefore emanates mind as an inherent property.
Let's take actual metaphysical and scientific holism and present it as if it is the next big thing in property-based reductionism. — apokrisis
That leads to the error of a panpsychic conflation. The global structure and the local potential never have to come together via an interaction that produces the third thing of the actualised substance. You are thinking that form inheres in the substance as an innate primal property. There is no contextuality to formed existence, there is only the brute fact of that existence with a form. And so consciousness can be another property of physical materials - just like materiality itself. — apokrisis
An absolute conception would be a dehumanized conception, a conception from which all traces of ourselves had been removed. — Joshs
So lurking in the background, is the presupposition that, whatever reality is, in the end, it must comprise some kind of ‘substance’ in the customary understanding of it - when that is what is actually at issue in discussions of this kind. — Wayfarer
The Peircean approach is not to rid our view of reality of any subjectivism, it is instead to match such a science of the third person view from nowhere with its “other” of a general science of first person points of view. So a science of semiotics and habits of interpretance, in other words. — apokrisis
Yes, our humanity gets in the way of reality.
Have you considered what information is? Daniel has bought in Change into the mix of considerations. Does information entail change? I think it does. I'm sure you would have some views on this? — Pop
But then there is the process view of Peirce, systems science, and others. Now enduring substance with its inherent properties becomes instead just a generalise potential or state of radical uncertainty. A chaotic fluctuation with no special persistence or direction at all. The material aspect of substantial being becomes the least possible form of substantial being. — apokrisis
Your comments are an exellent example of 'Showboating' and I especially liked this paragraph. Do you have a room with technical terms tacked to the wall and a ball of yarn or do you use more modern methods? I'd like to know — Mark Nyquist
Change is presupposes here in that each moment introduces a new figure as it re-forms the background. — Joshs
Does Peirce aim to derive the third person from the first person as a secondary modality or achieve a mutual affecting between them , a matching of already existence entities or aspects? — Joshs
I must take the blame for your lack of grounding in the position you want to argue? That’s saucy. — apokrisis
f we say that a system is attuned to the world by way of information and information is always acting on a system. A biological system differs from a rock in that it can register fine changes, whilst say a rock can only register coarse changes. So this would be a way of rationalizing what an object is conscious of, by way of what can cause it to change — Pop
It seems to me that showboating is an unnecessary use of technical terms to illustrate a point that could be made more clearly without them. — Joshs
And then first person points of view become something more like what we really mean - private information, personal action - once nature threw up biological structure with internal codes and memories as its latest trick — apokrisis
I am flaunting not just one person’s or one group’s technical jargon here but the great many ways a lot of people have said much the same thing throughout history. — apokrisis
It would reside neither strictly within the living thing nor in its environment but would be instantiated in the organism-environment coupling. — Joshs
But if you start with a truly fresh model of causal motivation at the experiential level, you might have an entirely different notion of first person on your hands, one that might require a rethinking of world as objective Cosmos. — Joshs
We have pretty much established that information goes all the way down to the most fundamental substance — Pop
A place without a point of view would be a vagueness or an Apeiron. — apokrisis
Freud remarked that ‘the self-love of mankind has been three times wounded by science’ referring to the Copernican revolution, Darwin’s discovery of evolution, and Nietszche’s declaration of the Death of God. In a strange way, the Copenhagen Interpretation gave back to humanity what the European Enlightenment had taken away, by placing the observer in a pivotal role in the constitution of the fundamental constituents of reality
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
(@Possibility - sorry if I sound like I’m lecturing you here. I just like your comments and wanted to see if I could make my own position more clear.) — apokrisis
the change that occurs in each element of a set of interacting objects is information, — Daniel
What are your thoughts, queries, arguments, definitions, and insights? It would be great to have a general understanding of information on this forum. — Pop
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