Completely in character, Pop completely ignores the fact.
— praxis
:roll: For the tenth time, and it is the first paragraph of the definition.
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 — Pop
IE, within modernism are many different approaches, as with postmodernism, but for me the primary dividing line within art is the presence or absence of the aesthetic. — RussellA
Is there a definition for playing darts? — Varde
or what I call 'special arts', are also skills. — Varde
Therefore art has no definition — Varde
Martial arts is a skill. Painting, Drawing, Sculpting, Creating Audio, or what I call 'special arts', are also skills. — Varde
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
Why is this so hard for you to understand? — Pop
Xuit is an ungrounded variable mental construct: Objects are arbitrarily deemed to be xuit. Xuit’s only necessary distinction from ordinary objects is the extra deemed xuit information. Xuit can be anything the xuitist thinks of, but this is limited by their consciousness. — “Alter-Pop”
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
Are you someone who thinks art has a responsibility? — Tom Storm
Does your perspective risk a subjectivist aesthetic? — Tom Storm
Modernist (capital M) work like Braque's Cubism has an aesthetic too, but is it beautiful? Cannot something which is 'ugly" (however you define this) not also provide a profound aesthetic experience? — Tom Storm
how does one go about identifying what counts as the aesthetic and what does not? — Tom Storm
Is all post-modern art free of aesthetic merit ? — Tom Storm
Can you clarify how you would apply your modernist perspective to pre-modern era work? Say a Titian. — Tom Storm
Then the art interacts with an observer, and as you point out, this is an inextricable interaction of a consciousness acting upon the artwork and in turn artwork acting upon the consciousness of the observer. It makes no sense to try to separate this interaction in enactivism. — Pop
The aesthetic of art is what separates an airport novel from a Hemingway. Superficially,The Old Man and the Sea is a simple story of Santiago, an ageing experienced fisherman, but concealed beneath the words is a complex allegorical commentary on all his previous works. — 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
In short it makes no sense to think of an organism absent of it's environment — Pop
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
It depends on what you understand information to be — Pop
"I have understood information to be equal to interaction" and "I am an evolving process of self organisation". As idiomatic expressions — RussellA
emergent understanding — Pop
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
but what is the source of self organization? — Pop
If we understand these interactions as information — Pop
The sand dune can be described as a system, and the wind another system, and through interaction they self organize to a form. — Pop
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
Is it valid to say that the interaction itself is information ?........Yes it is absolutely valid. You have posed a reformulation of Schrodinger's cat problem, which cannot be known until the box is opened. The wavefunction is probabilistic / potential information, when interacted with it's potential is collapsed to a point, which gives rise to a moment of clarity - which is consciousness — Pop
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
at the moment of interaction the wave function collapses giving rise to consciousness ?................Basically yes — Pop
"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
it is not art that we speak of but our consciousness of art — Pop
it is important to have definitions that we agree on — Pop
If information is understood as evolutionary interaction — Pop
deterministic with a slight element of randomness — Pop
Therefore interaction = information — Pop
yes beauty is in the eye of the beholder — Pop
The difference is that, whilst beauty is also information, beauty is something the system experiences, whilst information is something the system interacts with and is created from. — Pop
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
(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
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