All this by way of agreeing with Davidson, that while it is tempting to think of language as dependent on agreed conventions of some sort, it isn't so. For any convention one might take up, there will be an ingenious or ignorant construct to undermine it.
And this is also what Pop, and others, who deem language no more than transmission and reception of signals, are doomed never to be able to account for. — Banno
That's the modern viewpoint on information (bits) but it's not what in-formation actually is. — GraveItty
I'm not sure what the connection with art is here. — GraveItty
From this you can maybe see how the equivalence comes to be — GraveItty
So interaction is not information, but a prerequisite. — GraveItty
(n) The problem is how to escape from the circularity. On the one hand, I am conscious of something (an apple) and I interact with it. On the other hand, I interact with something (an apple) and become conscious because of it. — RussellA
(n) Yes, at a large scale, the system may be static, but at a small scale, the system is dynamic. But I see no connection between a dynamic system and any consciousness resulting from such dynamism — RussellA
(n) We have a different definition of "information". I believe that you define it as the dynamic moment of interaction, whereas I define it as the static moment, whether between interactions or at the moment of interaction. For example, I would define "agcactctcacttctggccagggaacgtggaaggcgca" as information" — RussellA
A deterministic system cannot be random, unless one brings in free-will — RussellA
(n) Considering the system "snooker game", there are periods when the snooker balls interact and there are periods when there are no interactions between the snooker balls. Therefore, in this particular system, not everything is an interaction. — RussellA
IE, art happens, art being a subjective experience of an aesthetic, when an observer having a particular state of mind resonates with a particular objective fact in the world. — RussellA
"We cannot use information theory to explain consciousness because the information in question is only information relative to a consciousness. — RussellA
"Koch and Tononi wrote that "the photo-diode's consciousness has a certain quality to it", but the information in the photo-diode is only relative to a conscious observer who knows what it does. The photodiode by itself knows nothing. The information is all in the eye of the beholder" — RussellA
IE, as "beauty is in the eye of the beholder", then "information is all in the eye of the beholder". — RussellA
Does this mean that prior to the evolution of sentient life on Earth, if two rocks (or pebbles, atoms, elemental particles) hit each other, ie, interacted, then at the moment of interaction the wave function collapses giving rise to consciousness ? — RussellA
There is information about the system before the interaction, and there is information about the system after the interaction.
Is it valid to say that the interaction itself is information ? — RussellA
IE, organisation requires a rational process, whether that of a conscious person or that of a non-conscious computer, rather than be a consequence of a deteministic cause and effect — RussellA
1) Is it valid to say that the snooker balls interacting with the applied force of the snooker cue have self-organised themselves into their final resting position ?
2) Is it valid to say that the particles of sand interacting with the applied force of the wind have self-organised themselves into their final sand-dune form ?
3) Is it valid to say that the neurons interacting with unknown "Force X" have self-organised themselves into their final conscious form ? — RussellA
Conclusion
Once conscious, the conscious mind can then organise - books on a shelf etc
But, as consciousness is the consequence of deterministic cause and effect of Force X on neurons, consciousness cannot be the determinant in organising the final form of the neurons when interacting with Force X — RussellA
Following the analogy, the particles of sand are the neurons of the brain, and the resultant form of the sand dune is the mind/consciousness. — RussellA
The obvious answer would be quantum entanglement, but I feel that most discussion about consciousness uses quantum mechanics either as obfuscation or obscurantism. — RussellA
Perhaps we are missing a force acting on the neurons of the brain of which we are presently unaware. If we could discover this missing force, the mystical problem of strong emergence would become an understandable problem of weak emergence. — RussellA
"I have understood information to be equal to interaction" and "I am an evolving process of self organisation". As idiomatic expressions — RussellA
IE, the particles of sand may be thought of as the brain's neurons, and the the sand dune may be thought of as the conscious mind. As enactivism proposes that the mind/consciousness has arisen from a dynamic interaction between the neurons of the brain and its environment, we could also say that enactivism also proposes that the sand dune has arisen from a dynamic interaction between the particles of sand and its windy environment. — RussellA
evolution cannot be driven by information — RussellA
This seems similar to Kant's concept of the "synthetic a priori". Kant wrote in Critique of Pure Reason - "The objects we intuit in space and time are appearances, not objects that exist independently of our intuition (things in themselves). This is also true of the mental states we intuit in introspection; in “inner sense” (introspective awareness of my inner states) I intuit only how I appear to myself, not how I am “in myself”. (A37–8, A42) — RussellA
The word "interact" seems problematic.
Someone observes an artwork, the person becomes conscious of the artwork and the artwork becomes part of the person's consciousness. How can the person consciously interact with the artwork when the artwork is now already part of the person's consciousness. It is not as if one part of the person's consciousness is being conscious of another part of the same person's consciousness.
IE, how can consciousness interact with itself. — RussellA
Perhaps this remains the sticking point, in that I tend to Modernism whilst you may be leaning towards Postmodernism. Both valid as definitions of art, but different.
Within Postmodernism, an artist has total freedom to create whatever object, concept, performance they want for it to be called art.
Whereas in Modernism, regardless of the definition of art, some objects have artistic value and some don't, where someone who makes an object with artistic value is an artist and someone who makes an object lacking artistic value isn't an artist.
IE, personally, I don't agree with the Postmodernist definition of art, because the words art and artist lose all meaning, as everything can be art and everyone can be an artist. — RussellA
Yes. Any single isolated thing is meaningless. The meaning is in relationships (e.g. ratios ; values). So, if you put two Bits together, the result many be an "interaction". Therefore, the basic element of meaning is the Byte -- an ensemble of bits; a system ; an integrated whole. — Gnomon
in order to define something you need to specify it’s unique attributes — praxis
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
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 new Atom is the Bit. — Gnomon
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
So I wonder, is there a statement that explains all information? — Benj96
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
Postscript to my previous post about the "self-organizing" function of Information. In the same book and chapter, philosopher Rolston mentions "autopoiesis" (self-creating) in passing. That seems to be a more provocative term, in that it could imply a teleological tendency, intrinsic to the mechanism of evolution, toward the emergence of self-aware entities. Such organisms are "unique" in the universe, which remains -- after all these years of incremental evolving -- mostly inorganic, and unaware. — Gnomon
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
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
Without memory our body mechanisms would fail. We would not survive — Benj96
Landauer's principle
It holds that "any logically irreversible manipulation of information, such as the erasure of a bit or the merging of two computation paths, must be accompanied by a corresponding entropy increase in non-information-bearing degrees of freedom of the information-processing apparatus or its environment". - Wiki.
This is something that may be relevant to consciousness. In the process of information, as an interaction of one part to another, there is an element of entropy which changes the deterministic nature of the relation, such that a tiny degree of randomness arises - perhaps this is what causes emergence?
Could Landauer's principle explain it? — 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 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
Energy and matter are just place holders for metaphysics, as I see it. Information presupposes these, just as it presupposes metaphysics. — Constance
Dissecting landscape art history with information theory 2020 — RussellA
We may have begun to understand evolution as the marriage of selection and self-organization". Which is the function of what I call EnFormAction. :smile: — Gnomon
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
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
Pop, TC's not the only one here who thinks your idea is empty. But don't make it about him. Abusing the man isn't an argument. — Tom Storm
Not to provoke, but just a quick note: this cart before the horse? The real construction of horses and carts lies in the hor-ca-se-rt. This is phenomenology. Dewey was close to this, but like I said, he missed the boat...or cart. — Constance
All things have their foundational grounding in the aesthetic dimension of our existence, for as Hume said of reason, the same holds for information: in itself, it is empty. — Constance
It's embarrassing. — T Clark