If they weren't separated, they would decompose, as would any organism. Being an organism means being separate — Wayfarer
What if, like some suggest, there was a time when nobody was around who could perceive it? If a tree falls in the woods... — Outlander
:up:Naturally not only would there not be sentient life in such a universe there would be no knowledge. Is information reality? It becomes almost metaphysical. What is not available to a person, cannot be known. We allegedly live in a "world" where when your heart stops, you are dead. But do we really know this? I know some claim to, myself included, but I just feel there's some relevance somewhere here in this quest for more information about information. — Outlander
But everything is nothing if it is just noise with no signal. So you are no better off until you take the next step of producing a theory that offers an epistemic cut that separates signal from noise - something like the algorithm of a Bayesian Brain engaged in minimising its surprisal or free energy. — apokrisis
So you have the problem in saying “everything is information”. It is the kind of monism that is bounded by two self-ridiculing notions - the idea of absolute nothingness and of infinity. Two equally unrealistic notions of “a limit”. — apokrisis
Sure, but each individual will only need specific tailored information — Corvus
No one would need all the information about anything in real life — Corvus
I wonder if the details of how information correlates to it's neural parts, and all the embeddings of the physical changes taking place with the environment ...etc would be philosophically meaningful topics. Would it not be then neuroscience, cosmology or cognitive psychological topic, rather than a philosophical topic? — Corvus
↪Pop I think it is organised data for certain purpose or use. — Corvus
And if we only have indirect epistemic access to the world, then isn't perception a form of controlled hallucination, a sensory veil cutting us off from the very world we appear to inhabit?” — Joshs
Ecological information—the information available to a moving animal in the environment—is inherently semantic because it specifies the affordances of that environment, what the animal can do in that environment, and generates and supports expectations for what that moving animal will experience as it moves. Ecological information reveals the world as significant for a given creature. — Joshs
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
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
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
It would reside neither strictly within the living thing nor in its environment but would be instantiated in the organism-environment coupling. — Joshs
I must take the blame for your lack of grounding in the position you want to argue? That’s saucy. — apokrisis
Change is presupposes here in that each moment introduces a new figure as it re-forms the background. — Joshs
Well it was fun trying to explain it anyway. — apokrisis
An absolute conception would be a dehumanized conception, a conception from which all traces of ourselves had been removed. — Joshs
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
Pragmatic theory of information
— Pop
So in your OP which did you intend? I would have stayed away from the Shannon version. — Mark Nyquist
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
something fundamental is something that exists only actually. — Daniel
So, information about shuffling is not in this case a fundamental quality of the card deck, for card decks can exist without being shuffled.
Potentiality requires an entity that realizes such potentiation therefore anything that can exist potentially cannot be fundamental; something fundamental is something that exists only actually. — Daniel
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
(Note this is not panpsychism, because perspective is only associated with sentient creatures, not with matter in general. — Wayfarer
I don't think anything that anyone is doing at this level is falsifiable, they're frameworks through which we can view the data. — Isaac
Panpsychism is the kind of theory that is in the class of not even being wrong. — apokrisis
- Yes I agreethe brain wants to predict its inputs so it can then ignore them as things it was already expecting — apokrisis
- I agree, and agree that the input receptor is more a predictor.the brain is striving to be unconscious. It wants to predict reality so well that there is nothing left that could disturb it by being surprising. — apokrisis
- fascinatingthus the whole cost of mark-making ceases to be a constraint on any computational process . — apokrisis
A first thought was, matter is physical and information is non-physical, so isn't that dualism? — Mark Nyquist
↪Pop Another thought is that the monism/dualism question and the what is information question should be considered and solved together — Mark Nyquist
At a certain level, integrated information is just a truism. It is obvious - once you accept the brain employs some kind of neural code to construct "consciousness" - that a big problem is how all this local information, this individually triggered firing, then gets integrated into a large structured state of meaningful experiencing — apokrisis
The easy case against ITT is that if people like Tononi and Koch are happy to arrive at a destination like panpsychism, you know that you don't even want to waste time starting going down that particular road — apokrisis
I contrast this with Friston's Bayesian Brain model. Friston worked with Tononi in Edelman's lab as it happens. But Friston's approach struck me as immediately right even before he really got going. — apokrisis
its model of it being a self in a world. So that takes us into a different intellectual space - one where cognition is enactive and semiotic. — apokrisis
It is good you say you don't fully understand it. The scientific story is still being written. And my point is that the concepts of both information and entropy are themselves useful modelling constructs - extreme simplifications of the world they thus also make usefully measurable by those extreme simplifications. — apokrisis
So - as Friston keenly understood - information theory creates a cleared ground, one stripped of the quality of meaning, so that science could then start constructing the right kind of metric for measuring systems with meaning. — apokrisis
The immaterial information was connected to the material dynamics - the self to the world - via an explicit epistemic cut, or modelling relation. — apokrisis
Life can be divided into genetic information and chemistry. But the missing part of the story is how those two realms are mechanically connected. — apokrisis
It bears resemblance to the idea of the Logos, the Tao, Dharma - a principle of organisation which can only be discerned in its effects, never in its essence. — Wayfarer
↪Pop In other words, I agree that information is a quality of objects if and only if it is a quality that results from an interaction. — Daniel
what is required for information to be able to describe. — Daniel
Feldman Barrett’s constructionist theory, in which consciousness is constructed as an ongoing predictive event from incomplete, potential and affected ‘information’. — Possibility
So, in the hypothetical scenario in which there exists only one thing, this lonely thing would be in its entirety pure information, is this correct.? — Daniel