So the key difference is that I am arguing that all meaningfulness is ultimately grounded in the materiality of the thermodynamic imperative. — apokrisis
The key as ever is he did derive an equation so that real systems could actually be measured. — apokrisis
Do you think that is something that would be subject to confirmation or disconfirmation by any possible empirical discovery? If so, what kind of discovery might that be? — Wayfarer
There is an important place in traditional philosophy for what is beyond measure, — Wayfarer
Do you think that is something that would be subject to confirmation or disconfirmation by any possible empirical discovery? If so, what kind of discovery might that be?
— Wayfarer
Of course. A perpetual motion machine for a start. Plenty of inventors have applied for patents. There have been big controversies like cold fusion. — apokrisis
I'd dispute that by pointing out all ideas are ultimately based on observation of the world. — apokrisis
I happen to think that the term 'phenomena' applies to 'the manifest domain', i.e. approximately the area of study of the sciences. It's a very general term for whatever exists. But by this definition, numbers (and the like) are not phenomena, or among phenomena, as they're not in the phenomenal domain, but the intelligible domain, [...] — Wayfarer
[numbers] being the domain of things that can only be grasped by a rational intelligence. — Wayfarer
The author of a piece of information puts meaning into that piece. And this act of creating is completely different from the act of interpreting. So it is not true that "meaningful" implies that the thing has been interpreted. — Metaphysician Undercover
If we conflate these two distinct senses of "meaningful", one might insist that naturally occurring structures, must have been created by an author to be meaningful, or, that something created by an author must be interpreted to be meaningful. — Metaphysician Undercover
I would define "information" in such a way as to separate these two distinct senses. — Metaphysician Undercover
But this is where the difficulty arises. Like any other property, we can abstract the property from the object, and start talking directly about the property without necessarily attributing it to any object, as if the property is an object. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is the problem, with associating information with data. If we take a look at some collection of data, we have no way of knowing whether it's information, or misinformation. — Metaphysician Undercover
I contend that: because nobody knew what they meant, they had no meaning for anyone alive at that time. — Galuchat
Meaning is located in a person's mind, nowhere else. — Galuchat
I wasn't. Mindless, natural processes do something. Natural selection is a mindless process, which means that it has no agency. The theory of evolution by natural selection is a description of the process itself. The process of natural selection is environmental feedback where the environment as a whole interacts with it's constituents and vice versa. An example is coat color where one's coat matches the the color of the environment and makes it more difficult to see as compared to other colors, which allows that animal a greater chance of not being eaten. Jerry Coyne calls natural selection the "engine of evolution" in his book, "Why Evolution is True".You ought not to anthropomorphise natural selection, to make of it an agent that 'does' something. Neither natural selection nor evolution 'does' anything. It is simply a description of how species evolve, but by saying that it 'arranges' something, you are attributing to it something that it doesn't have. — Wayfarer
What you're saying here is that the tree rings can't be part of a causal relationship with some visual sensory system of the tree, because the tree doesn't have one. An arborist has a visual sensory system to see the tree rings and then follow the causal sequence backwards to know what the tree rings mean, or what information they carry. How is it that all arborists agree what the tree rings mean and they all point to how the tree rings were caused? Are tree rings the result of how the tree grows throughout the year? Isn't that what the tree rings mean? Would that be the case if there were no visual sensory systems to interact with the tree rings to continue a causal sequence?Tree rings mean something to an arborist, but nothing to the tree. — Wayfarer
I don't see why you can't agree that information resides in all causal relationships, including the ones out there that we never notice, or bother looking at. — Harry Hindu
I never said you denied the "world out there". Idealists don't deny a "world out there" either. It is what keeps them from falling off the cliff into solipsism. They just say that everything, including the "world out there", is mental. What you seem to be saying is that there are two distinct realities. The one out there and the VR in your head. Isn't the VR in your head part of the world out there? If not, then how does information flow between your VR and the world out there?I don't like the term "truth". I would use the pragmatic term, justified belief.
Truth is about an absolute claim of certainty. Pragmatism accepts that knowledge can only make claims about a minimisation of uncertainty.
So sure, you can talk about "some degree of truth" as your way of acknowledging the pragmatic approach to knowledge. Truth is the absolute limit. In practice, we can only approach that state of perfect certainty with arbitrary closeness. In the end, you are saying the same thing.
But I prefer to say that upfront and directly. I don't say a truth is (almost) certain. I say the uncertainty of a belief has been measurably minimised.
I am hardly avoiding any hard question. I am stressing the pragmatically provisional nature of any claims to truth or absolute certainty.
And there is no denial of a "world out there" to be read into this epistemic position. It is pragmatism, not idealism. — apokrisis
No. I was complaining that you were being inconsistent. If you say that we can never reach the truth, but only a semblance of it, then your explanation of reality is as irrelevant as anyone else's. How can you go about testing your theory when the outcome of any test will have your purpose imposed on it? It's no different than saying, "We can never know anything.", which is a contradiction. If we can never know anything, then how did you come to know that we can never know anything?You are complaining that I am concealing the very point I have attempted to make. I am talking about the triadic sign relation of pragmatism/semiotics. So yes, it is taken as basic that there are three players in the equation. — apokrisis
Isn't the self out there as well? How else can my self interact with your self? How else can we transfer information between each other if we aren't connected in some way causally?But the wrinkle is that this is a more generic level of analysis than just the usual me/sign/world relation of indirect realism or standard issue psychology. Sure, for us humans and other creatures with complex nervous systems, it is all about the "subjective self" and the "objective world". We are just talking about useful reality models mediated by a sign relation. Nothing to scare any realists. The world is actually out there ... just as the self is actually in here. >:O — apokrisis
This went over my head. I have no idea what you are saying here. "How selves and worlds arise" seems to me talk about causation and time existing independently of minds. How do selves and worlds arise? Arise from what? How long does it take? What is the causal sequence of events?Anyway, the triadic sign relation is more generic than just our functional psychological relationship with an actual, real, material, completely physical, world. It doesn't even need to care about there being a real world as it is paying attention to the prior thing which is the very manufacturing of a state of information division. It is talking about how "selves" and "worlds" arise as the two complementary aspects of a sign relation.
Which is why Peircean epistemology can become a model of ontological being itself. It drills down to the very causality by which self~world could arise as a self-organising symmetry breaking. — apokrisis
But you used the term "self" yourself in saying that "the self is actually in here". You seem to be the one committing the crime of assuming an infinite homuncular regrees. I'm not because I'm saying that the self isn't in here. The self is out there with everything else. There is no out there and in here. That is the fault of dualism.Look at how you are having to treat the "self" as real here. You are having to reify this little person in your head doing the looking at the representations, experiencing the qualia. Already an inadequate ontology is going badly wrong, headed off down the path labelled infinite homuncular regress. — apokrisis
And we are part of the world, so we can say that our representations are part of the world as well. They are the outcome of our selves interacting with the world - no different than any other mix of causes leading to other outcomes. To separate our selves from the world as if our selves aren't part of the causal sequence, or information flow, is to make a serious mistake and causes many problems (dualism)Isn't that what I plainly said? The world is what it is. Then we represent it in a way that is useful. What we want to see is reality as it looks through the eyes of our purposes. — apokrisis
But swirling lights and coloured dots isn't a world. It is just the firing of "bored" synapses. If we created a world when we close our eyes, then why is there a clear distinction between the world I imagine and the world I experience when I open my eyes. I can imagine any world I want in my head, but that world is less vivid than the world I experience when I open my eyes. As a matter of fact, when I open my eyes, the sensory information is imposing compared to the world I create in my head. It imposes itself on me. It's signals are very strong compared to the world in my head.But I don't see black. I see the photic rustle of retinal neurons seeking missing input. I get the vague impression of swirling lights and coloured dots that are my own endogenous baseline brain activity. So actual phenomenology confirms the constructedness of visual experience. Our brains are so hungry to make a visual world that they will restlessly imagine colours and patterns even in the complete dark. That is, unless we stare into the dark and interpret it as black, ignoring this photic rustle that wants to get in the way of our "reality experiencing". — apokrisis
Then there would be no direct reason why a world might cause our way of modeling it. It is pointless to wonder about why a particular effect is the result of a particular cause as if it could be any different.The real world might be the cause of our having a way of modelling it. But there is no direct reason why the phenomenology of colour experience should reflect the reality of wavelength energy the way it does. — apokrisis
I could see this being the case for non-social organisms, but human beings are highly social. We seek others out for companionship and to share ideas, so I don't see us wanting to ignore each other. That would mean that we aren't a social species. Bees and ants are no different. If ignoring each other is our default disposition, it would falsify that we are a social species.Yeah. Minds need to be connected by physical symbols. And a lot of energy gets expended in transferring information. Especially because another mind really only wants to see the world in the way to which it has become accustomed. The other mind always wants an easy life where it can pretty much ignore other minds and deal with anything they might say as a labelled, pre-packaged position that can be given a quick tick. Yes for true, no for false. Trip the memory switch flag and move along. — apokrisis
I'm not sure what it is you are asking for - a definition of causality, or a definition of information. It seems to me that when you define one, you are defining the other. It seems to me that you would also be defining "meaning".It makes sense to me that causality should be linked to notions of data and/or information origin and/or history. How would you include it in a definition? — Galuchat
This is just a way of framing the issue. — Srap Tasmaner
Certainly meaning can only be discerned by a mind, but I think there are elements of thought and language that are common to all who think. So I wouldn't like to say that they are peculiar to a specific subject.
— Wayfarer
Can you elaborate? Thanks. — Galuchat
Mindless, natural processes do something. Natural selection is a mindless process, which means that it has no agency. The theory of evolution by natural selection is a description of the process itself. The process of natural selection is environmental feedback where the environment as a whole interacts with it's constituents and vice versa. An example is coat color where one's coat matches the the color of the environment and makes it more difficult to see as compared to other colors, which allows that animal a greater chance of not being eaten. Jerry Coyne calls natural selection the "engine of evolution" in his book, "Why Evolution is True". — Harry Hindu
It's a good point. But doesn't the distinction give rise to a four way division as we now have two different dimensions to consider? — apokrisis
there is an in-band signal and an out-of-band signal — Srap Tasmaner
What you seem to be saying is that there are two distinct realities. The one out there and the VR in your head. Isn't the VR in your head part of the world out there? If not, then how does information flow between your VR and the world out there? — Harry Hindu
No. I was complaining that you were being inconsistent. If you say that we can never reach the truth, but only a semblance of it, then your explanation of reality is as irrelevant as anyone else's — Harry Hindu
It seems to me that natural selection would favor organisms that tend to impose their subjectivity on the world less and see the world more as it really is. — Harry Hindu
If we created a world when we close our eyes, then why is there a clear distinction between the world I imagine and the world I experience when I open my eyes. — Harry Hindu
I was thinking about Grice's just-so story about how an animal might make what was heretofore an involuntary signal voluntarily, as a step toward language, etc. But this is already an in-band signal. — Srap Tasmaner
My original point is simply that it is incorrect to say that information is necessarily physical, as the physical representation can be entirely changed, but the information remain the same. So they're separable. — Wayfarer
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