The key is, that the creation of information involves abstracting data from phenomena
— Michael Zwingli
Which data? — Prishon
whenever we find information, we find it inscribed or encoded somehow in a physical medium of whatever kind.
This is taken from this page which aggregates various articles about Landauer.
Landauer was the head of IBM Research Labs — Wayfarer
The computing analogy is useful here. Bits and bytes of information are stored on a computer hard drive or other storage device as bipolar charges which can encoded information which can be translated by the software into human languages. The silicon and other media composing the memory chip, and the electrons forming the polarized charges themselves are real things, but the "information" which results from the translation of those strings of charges into human language has no reality outside of the human mind. Facts and ideas only have reality within the mind, and those "mental realities" (for lack of a better term) more-or-less reflect actual, objective reality out in "the universe".I think this pretty much says it all. From what I've seen, computer scientists tend to view information as physical. What they do is called information technology. — baker
The perception of phenomena yields information within the mind, and said data is compiled from that information. — Michael Zwingli
The human brain stores information in quite a similar way as a computer does, only with a strong biochemical element to the mechanism. — Michael Zwingli
The human brain stores information in quite a similar way as a computer does, only with a strong biochemical element to the mechanism. — Michael Zwingli
How so...how is that thought to work? I am unfamiliar with such a theory.Instead, memory is a reconstructive process. — Joshs
Instead, memory is a reconstructive process.
— Joshs
How so...how is that thought to work? I am unfamiliar with such a theory. — Michael Zwingli
All that the claim "information is physical" means is that it's either matter or energy or both, in and of themselves, or changes in them. So, either information is matter (has mass & occupies space) or energy (can do work) or are changes in mass/volume/energy. — TheMadFool
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. — Pattee
Brain state interacting with the physical environment gets you out the front door in the morning. — Mark Nyquist
Killer argument for dualism, in my view. — Wayfarer
Whatever affects the physical is, at least in part, also physical. DNA, for instance, is physical, no? — 180 Proof
Whatever affects the physical is, at least in part, also physical.... — 180 Proof
There's no such thing as a 'brain state'. It is an empty rhetorical device pretending to be a theory. — Wayfarer
...at least in part, also physical — 180 Proof
If you back engineered your brains exact physical states in the moments you composed these quoted sentences, you would have a progression of brain states. — Mark Nyquist
However is that a killer argument for a dualism that is any way unphysical ... in the manner this is normally understood by idealists and others? — apokrisis
there is a world of difference between hylomorphic dualism.., — Wayfarer
The actuality of substantial being arises out of formal constraint on material uncertainty. — apokrisis
What I’m tempted to believe, is that those ‘formal constraints’ can be conceived as being latent possibilities that become actualised by evolutionary processes. — Wayfarer
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