Quite close to Claude Shannon's - father of information theory - own thoughts but with one small difference: not just change but also the degree of change as in more extreme the change, the greater the information content in a message that relates that change. C'mon, mathematize information and this is bound to happen. We need to quantify something. Why not measure the extent of the change (from the baseline)? A rough marker that this is how ordinary people actually view information is the sales figures of so-called tabloid news. I believe they sell like hot cakes. — TheMadFool
The grand project would be pansemiosis. The Cosmos would in fact have to have its own organismic point of view. — apokrisis
the Royal Society is promoting views that life is a process of copying, so information processing. — Pop
It would seem a "change in the state of a system" would be a necessity for a system to register external information? — Pop
Life involves copying DNA and producing proteins based on "instructions." — frank
Good point. Not all information is true. You have tapped on to the emotional/social reason for seeking information. That is really something to ponder.
I think you guys have won me back from another forum that is just beginning. I wanted to be in on the beginning of a forum, but it does not have near the depth of thinking that happens here. You all are awesome! — Athena
I am happy just making physicalism work as a model of reality. I don’t see it as a failed project but instead as an already stunning metaphysical achievement.
Do you think what you suggests leads to good science or practical knowledge? — apokrisis
That’s the Dawkins reductionist view. The holistic alternative recognizes that dna and rna are not autonomous structures but components of a cellular and intercellular milieu in which much more than ‘copying’ is going on. Genes are switched on and off in cells in highly complex ways as a function of changes in this larger system. — Joshs
To me, you seem to be speaking of logos, reason, the controlling force of the universe. Is that close to what you are talking about? — Athena
then life is not a process of copying, modeling or representing a world, — Joshs
As a result, they do not explain how certain processes actively generate and sustain an identity that also constitutes an intrinsically normative way of being in the world.”(Thompson) — Joshs
Why do you exclude modelling along with copying and representing? The biosemiotic approach of biologists like Pattee, Salthe, Rosen and many more stress the need for the epistemic cut that indeed produces the closure of autonomy — apokrisis
I think what I suggest leads to good science and practical knowledge in the following areas: — Joshs
An epistemic cut, the attempt to glue back together the objective and the subjective, which we decided to separate many centuries ago, — Joshs
In that light , your view of semiotics as structural coding and decoding strays into the territory of human language,
and clashes with recent thinking in psychology on the nature of language. As psychologist George Kelly wrote — Joshs
Thus it is, even after continued experience in psychotherapy, most of us still hold doggedly to the belief that one man's understanding of the universe can be somehow encoded within a signal system and then transmitted intact to another man via the senses. — Joshs
If one rejects the tenets of first generation cognitive science in favor of enactive, embodied approaches, then life is not a process of copying, modeling or representing a world, it is a process of action, creation, transformation and production. Awareness does not register and copy external information, it enacts a world. — Joshs
“…the semiotic view says there is a real world out there of matter and energy. It is objective, and indeed utterly recalcitrant, in its existence.” — Joshs
Not 'utterly', according to John Wheeler. — Wayfarer
I think people make a lot of the marvels of the mind. Consciousness seems mysterious and fantastic. But biology - the trick of being alive - is revealing its own deep underpinnings at long last. Even biologists are stunned by how little they understood just 15 or 20 years ago. — apokrisis
Yeah, but no room for epistemic cuts here! — Pop
So the genes don’t measure the state of the body, the state of its metabolism, and turn the dials accordingly? There is no separation between the regulation and the action? An enzyme doesn’t have both its quantum pocket for doing its physical magic and also separately it’s regulatory receptor site for listening out for its instructions? — apokrisis
this also reflects the era of Copenhagen quantum mechanics before quantum maths had decoherence, — apokrisis
Decoherence has been developed into a complete framework, but there is controversy as to whether it solves the measurement problem, as the founders of decoherence theory admit in their seminal papers.[3]
[3] Joos and Zeh (1985) state ‘'Of course no unitary treatment of the time dependence can explain why only one of these dynamically independent components is experienced.'’ And in a recent review on decoherence, Joos (1999) states ‘'Does decoherence solve the measurement problem? Clearly not. What decoherence tells us is that certain objects appear classical when observed. But what is an observation? At some stage we still have to apply the usual probability rules of quantum theory.'’Adler, Stephen L. (2003). "Why decoherence has not solved the measurement problem: a response to P.W. Anderson". Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics. 34 (1): 135–142. arXiv:quant-ph/0112095. Bibcode:2003SHPMP..34..135A.
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