For example, after the end of ancient Egyptian civilisation, and before the translation of the Rosetta Stone, nobody knew what Egyptian hieroglyphs meant. — Galuchat
To me a good question is what does it mean to know what a text means? I'd say it's something like weaving it in to the dominant background text of the collective 'consciousness' or exploiting an otherwise dormant or merely potential utility. I imagine the rings of trees which were always there and then at some point an exploitation of various correlations and implications of said rings. — lll
But can we not also include the automatic reactions of organisms to their environment as a kind of reading? To understand is perhaps best understood as reacting appropriately (which brings it issues of the goals or values of an organism.) — lll
I enjoy metaphors, but if misused, they result in category error and/or the fallacy of misplaced concreteness (reification). — Galuchat
Science may be true or false (just because that's the nature of verbal and mathematical language), whereas; awareness is always true. — Galuchat
Warren Weaver: The word information, in this theory, is used in a special sense that must not be confused with its ordinary usage. In particular, information must not be confused with meaning. https://www.panarchy.org/weaver/communication.html — Daemon
So maybe you can summarize or quote the part of the article that information and meaning are not the same thing because the way people use the terms indicates that they are the same thing — Harry Hindu
Regarding DNA as 'conveying information'- how could it be doing anything else? — Wayfarer
But can we not also include the automatic reactions of organisms to their environment as a kind of reading? To understand is perhaps best understood as reacting appropriately (which brings it issues of the goals or values of an organism.) — lll
Wouldn't viruses be non-living things that store genetic history? (Supposing they don't fall under the definition of living things).
— Count Timothy von Icarus
I think that's an undecideable question. — Wayfarer
but I still maintain there is an ontological distinction between life and inorganic matter — Wayfarer
It baffles me why you want to think of things this way. — Daemon
To respond automatically is to respond without understanding. — Daemon
Rorty, influenced by thinkers like these, understands a naturalist to see "no breaks in the hierarchy of increasingly complex adjustments to novel stimulation – the hierarchy which has amoeba adjusting themselves to changed water temperature at the bottom, bees dancing and chess players check-mating in the middle, and people fomenting scientific, artistic, and political revolutions at the top." — lll
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