talk about complex transmissions of information may be true, as the actuarial tables are true — Constance
life and death qualitatively has nothing whatsoever to do with actuarial tables — Constance
This is why your announcement that art in information offends others here. — Constance
They think art is profound, religious, or deeply meaningful. — Constance
These are experiential qualities, and whoever 'they' are, experience art as profound, religious, or deeply meaningful. This has "nothing whatsoever" to do with Pop's claim so it's strange that you say it's offensive. — praxis
Such a concept even applies to the preservation of the self in time: how much is actually preserved of this constructed self in the transmission of self in time from past through to future? The self is in decay, or, each moment is an entropic loss of the previous, and perhaps a reconstruction: the self is thereby defined as a fluid reconstruction of information, what Husserl called predelineation: We live in an adumbration of the past that is presented in eidetically formed predicated affairs, to use his language. I find this interesting, and perhaps I will look into it. — Constance
My trouble, as I read through this, is that it is entirely a quantifiable analysis. Aesthetics is not quantifiable, — Constance
This is why your announcement that art in information offends others here. They think art is profound, religious, or deeply meaningful. Others look to the meanings in play, how truth connects to images, how images are iconographic reflections of the self; and so on. — Constance
To me, it is a bit like looking at the human condition and its most meaningful dimension, and saying, well, what does the actuarial table say? You may be right, I mean, the table might be a true account. But how is this quantitative account even remotely adequate? — Constance
If something has “nothing whatsoever” to do with qualitative distinctiveness why should it offend? — praxis
Is Norbert Wiener's 1950 The Human Use of Human Beings: Cybernetics and Society relevant to your position - where art is just a part of patterns of information within the world ? — RussellA
That particular theory uses Shannon information theory, but others, including myself, are looking toward a non quantifiable theory of information, where information is a fundamental non-quantifiable observable. — Pop
Academia is coming around to the understanding that information is fundamental - is equal to energy and matter — Pop
Dissecting landscape art history with information theory 2020 — RussellA
This is where you have to comes to terms with reality: The only non quantifiable theory of information there can be, is the art experience itself. You have, in my thoughts, arrived at the critical point: To the extent that a theory is non quantifiable, it is the very embodiment of the quality it is supposed represent. I wonder, what could this be? A poem? Or am I completely missing something? — Constance
This emergent understanding of information was critical to this definition of art. Wit could not find something singular that all art is, and in his time information was something one exchanged with the neighbors over the back fence. We now know definitively that all art is information - since information is fundamental. The only question that then remains for art is - information about what? And the obvious answer is consciousness. The term consciousness captures the mind activity that leads to the creation of art, and how the art is limited only by the consciousness that creates it - which when we look at art across cultures, and through the ages, seems so obvious. To me at least - :lol: - but it has the consequence of ruffling feathers, since we all know exactly what art is! - right? — Pop
We now know definitively that all art is information - since information is fundamental. The only question that then remains for art is - information about what? And the obvious answer is consciousness. — Pop
But an actuary table is not art, and a Matisse CutOut is art. Therefore there must be a conscious act of determining what is art and what isn't. If whatever created the object is irrelevant in the recognition of the object as an artwork, and the object itself cannot determine that is an artwork, then the conscious act of determining the object as an artwork must be in the observer.
But the observer only knows that the object is an artwork by recognizing it as an artwork, regardless of the intentions of whatever made the object.
IE, looking at the object as an artwork is an expression of the ability of the observer to recognize an object as an artwork, rather than any expression of the observer's ability to look into the mind of whatever made it. — RussellA
This would not have been possible in Jane Austin's England. If you hung a piece of rubbish on your wall - you would be carted off to the nut house. You could only hang ideal landscapes, or if you could afford it portraits.
…
My point is that consciousness evolves both collectively and individually and art reflects this. — Pop
Before it is art, it has to be deemed to be art.
— Pop
Suppose a person is conscious of the information arriving through their senses from two objects in the world.
For what reasons would that person deem one object to be art and the other object not art ? — RussellA
what can be inferred about the mind activity that made the work, from the work alone — Pop
There is a flow of information - but in what direction ? — RussellA
Information flows between the maker of the artwork and the artwork, and from the maker of the artwork to the observer of the artwork by-passing the artwork entirely, but cannot flow from the maker of the artwork to the observer via the artwork. — RussellA
1) Some artworks have two or more makers, such as the collaborative work of Ruth Lozner and Kenzie Raulin. To which mind does the artwork have insight into ? — RussellA
So art expresses the same "self organization" that ordered form in the universe expresses — Pop
When someone observes information, the information can only express something to the observer if the observer can make sense of the information, can see patterns in the information, in that the information is not chaotic. IE, information by itself cannot express anything to the observer until the observer is able to see patterns in the information.
The patterns the observer is able to see is a function of the observer's mind, the observer's consciousness, and is not a function of whatever caused the figurine to come into existence.
IE, seeing art in the figurine is an expression of the observer's consciousness rather than any history prior to the creation of the figurine. — RussellA
You are highlighting that the observer interprets the artwork entirely in terms of their own consciousness — Pop
information has a chronological progression. It is causal, — Pop
For what reasons would that person deem one object to be art and the other object not art ?
— RussellA
Ha, ha. This is something you would have to ask the person deeming one object art, and the other one not. But there would be reasons, or in other words something about their state of mind or thinking ( consciousness ) would result in such an action. Because consciousness is "integrated information", the choices people make are congruous with their general state of mind, so when they make the choice that something is art this is an aspect of their general mind activity, and in an ideal setting we should be able to infer a lot of their mind activity from the clues provided in what they choose as their art. — Pop
IE, as art is information about consciousness, and the only consciousness that I know exists is my own, art can only be information about my own consciousness. — RussellA
“Art is an expression of human consciousness. Art work is information about the artist’s consciousness.” In order to define something you need to specify it’s unique attributes. Your definition only identifies information and human consciousness, nothing specific to art. It is not a definition of art and has no explanatory power in regards to art. — praxis
Completely in character, Pop completely ignores the fact. — praxis
Proof of the definition:
1. Art is an ungrounded variable mental construct: Objects are arbitrarily deemed to be art. Art’s only necessary distinction from ordinary objects is the extra deemed art information. Art can be anything the artist thinks of, but this is limited by their consciousness. — Pop
The information is not so much in the brick, but in the fact that a person who has total freedom to do as they like, chooses to put a brick on a pedestal. — Pop
Are you going by an account of aesthetics rooted in modernist theory, or are you just using the terms as you see them apply? — Tom Storm
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