It's a bit too much to set down here — Count Timothy von Icarus
As already discussed, pretty much every science 'above' chemistry leverages the concept heavily. — Theorem
I agree that these terms don't have any work to do at the level of chemistry. They have work to do at higher levels of description. — Theorem
Notably to your point, information based physics are quite popular, and some of these posit that information is the only thing that exists. The apparent haeccity of objects, our lived world of three dimensional space and time, are simply the effects of interactions of information. — Count Timothy von Icarus
So reductionism might disguise the fact that it is a four cause analysis - as it must be to describe nature. Folk like yourself might try to make it conform to atomism by saying functional structure just kind of "emerges" as an accident, and so suppress the role of non-holonomic hierarchical constraints. And also then push the global holonomic constraints right out of the physicalist picture by calling those the fundamental laws and constants of nature - equations in the mind of God, or further accidents because, well ... multiverse.
But this is just self-deluding rhetoric. — apokrisis
Even physics has got around to embracing "information" as fundamental these days. — apokrisis
DNA causes appropriate proteins to be formed. "Encodes" is a commentary on the process. — Daemon
But then it becomes commentary all the way down. What is a protein in your reductionist terms? A chain of peptides. What’s a peptide? The name for a class of amino acids all linked by peptide bonds. What’s an amino acid? Etc. — apokrisis
So, some chemicals passing through the blood brain barrier don't do much. They bounce around and act as close synonyms. Those shaped in such a way that they mimic neurotransmitters at binding sites however have a different meaning for the system. That is, meaning can have a direct relationship with chemical properties, or velocity, or mass, depending on the system in question. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The knowledge that 'DNA encodes proteins' is an additional insight not derivable from the knowledge of chemistry alone. — Theorem
Let's go back to an example you raised earlier, that of DNA. Consider the statement 'DNA encodes genetic instructions for the development and maintenance of all known life forms'. Does this qualify as a useful explanation of what DNA does? — Theorem
(By the way, you may be right that GWT/IIT are both garbage from a scientific perspective. I don't know enough right now to weigh in on that. My intention here isn't to defend those theories specifically, but to the question your assertion that 'information' can't be a legitimate explanatory concept). — Theorem
Theories of information, semiotics, etc. are useful heuristics. — Theorem
I'm not sure I see why this would be the case. DNA is a code, it contains symbols that refer to proteins. The interpretant is the transcription RNA during cellular replication. The DNA does not contain the proteins it refers to, it passes along instructions (meaning/information) that are interpreted by another system. Similarly, in computers, APIs form a full semiotic triangle, with one program being the referent of a string of symbolic code, and a another program acting as the interpretant. — Count Timothy von Icarus
A hardware description of a computer includes all the contents of its software, but isn’t the sort of account that can give us the meaning of the software as software. Similarly , a biochemical description of a neural network that is organized to understand language ‘includes’ the biochemical contents underlying the hierarchically organized semantic categories on the basis of which language processing is structured in the brain. But notions like semantic pattern and category are invisible at the level of biochemical description. — Joshs
One team of researchers used a technique called optogenetics to label the cells encoding fearful memories in the mouse brain and to switch the memories on and off, and another used it to identify the cells encoding positive and negative emotional memories, so that they could convert positive memories into negative ones, and vice versa. https://www.theguardian.com/science/neurophilosophy/2015/mar/09/false-memories-implanted-into-the-brains-of-sleeping-mice
Informational semiotic code is one account and a physico- chemical is another account of the ‘same’ phenomenon. — Joshs
I'll repeat my point. Biochemical processes involving nucleic acids and the proteins they interact with are responsible for the development, functioning, growth and reproduction of organisms. When you've described those processes, you've described everything that happens in genetics.
When we talk about processes like this we use language like "information", "encode". We say "A gene is a sequence of DNA that contains genetic information". But there aren't two different things, the information and the nucleic acid. It's the nucleic acid that does the work. "Information" is just a way of talking about it.
If you think "information" does something in addition to what the nucleic acids and proteins do, then tell us what that is. — Daemon
If that is your point, it is a piss poor one. — apokrisis
Speechless incredulity. — apokrisis
You are welcome to your opinions but they make little contact with informed thought. — apokrisis
So you argue along the lines: "That's not a marsupial. It's a kangaroo!" — apokrisis
Well everyone accepts it is the kind of thing that could produce life. Genes are the informational coding mechanism that brings "brute matter" alive, giving it shape and purpose. — apokrisis
The human mind is the product of four levels of semiosis. — apokrisis
Maybe that's because we don't know the nature of particles. They contain charges by means of which the interact, by coupling to the glue fields between them. — EugeneW
The image of the food and me taking it runs around on the neurons, which makes me say not to do it.Empathy. Dunno how this can be seen or translated in ion currents — EugeneW
How this unification is achieved is the issue. My thought is that fields are extended throughout the brain, and indeed everything, and consciousness is perhaps best understood as a fundamental field-property. — bert1
The only thing happening in the brain is ion currents running parallel on the network, from birth to dead (the brain can't be turned off). — EugeneW
"How?" is still a mystery, but the leading theory is that all structures of the brain operate in a complex network of unparralleled sophistiction. — Garrett Travers
I'll look at the global workspace theory more as that is what Garrett seems to be drawn to, and I like the idea of a space, as consciouness seems somewhat space-like to me, and space might be a candidate for that which unifies brain processes. — bert1
For example, the shape of the flower is engraved by connection strengths between neurons, which is physically accomplished by widening the synapses. — EugeneW
Galen Strawson said he should be sued by Fair Trading for calling his book Consciousness Explained, when he does no such thing. — Wayfarer
The main point of their critique centres around the 'mereological fallacy', i.e. the idea that the brain does things. The brain is not itself an agent, and does not, in that sense, do anything, although obviously you need one to act (although not always, it seems.) — Wayfarer
Do you mean that your body plays piano automatically, like a robot? :smile:
What is that directs it, not just to play (i.e. tap on the keys), but also what to play and how to play it, how to express a melody, how to compose a music piece ... ? — Alkis Piskas
What does "AP" stand for? — Alkis Piskas