Information" and "semiosis" have become equivocal terms, and are used by apokrisis in an attempt to validate a physicalist worldview (which I alluded to here). — Galuchat
Peirce himself clearly felt his semiosis applied at the physically and cosmologically general level. — apokrisis
You aren't going to be able to follow this as you are insisting on a mentalistic reading of anything I say. — apokrisis
The current flow of water doesn't interact with that past directly, in some material fashion, but it does interact with that past indirectly in seeing the current state of the channel as an informational constraint on its possibilities. — apokrisis
If you don't follow modern physics, you likely have no idea how important this new approach is. But it is why fundamental physics is attempting to rebuild itself on thermodynamic principles like entropy, dissipation and emergence.
One doesn't have to label this pan-semiotics. Physics calls it information theory, holography, thermal, etc. — apokrisis
My view is that Peircean pan-semiosis offers the best metaphysical framework for interpreting what this new physics is actually struggling to say about reality.
So you can scoff at the triviality of the river in its channel example. But instead, why not think about it carefully. All those little bouncing H2O molecules knocking off one another. And then the mysterious invisible hand that is their collective past. The events of the moment are being shaped by the information which represents the context of a history. But also each molecule has the chance to rewrite the history of the river bed. — apokrisis
But 'information' has many meanings, it is not as if there is a unitary thing, force or power called 'information' which serves a role analogous to (say) 'the atom'. — Wayfarer
it was defined in the context of there being information - a signal - to be sent and received. What is an example of that in a world where there are no senders and receivers, where there is nothing to signal? What are examples of information being encoded and transmitted in a lifeless world?It was defined in terms of message uncertainty or information entropy. So a physical result was derived from psychological argument. — apokrisis
Being constrained by history, and having anticipation for the future are two completely distinct things. — Metaphysician Undercover
Christ almighty. It rewrites the state of the Universe. Another bit of history has accumulated and so points all possibility toward a more constrained future. — apokrisis
Semiotics is about information as the bleeding differences that make a bleeding difference in the real world, even the lifeless real world. — apokrisis
you belly-ache like buggery... — apokrisis
We relate the two to each other through the assumption of present existence, but that they may be related to each other does not make them two faces of the same thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
That has nothing whatever to do with Shannon's laws about information transmission. — Wayfarer
The whole point of Shannon's work was about transmitting actual information, something that has meaning. If it was just about transmitting white noise, then what would have been the point of the analysis? — Wayfarer
Constraints remove degrees of freedom. And the degrees of freedom not removed are then those that must be expressable. It's not rocket science. — apokrisis
No, freedom and constraint only actual exist in relation to something else, a thing which is either free or constrained. — Metaphysician Undercover
Degrees of heat or cold only have reality in relation to something which is either hot or cold. — Metaphysician Undercover
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