Yeah, the cerebellum would represent us, whilst a more primitive mind would have resolved the external world to a coloured in and symbolized world. — Pop
Yes I should write something in more detail, I have still not quite put it together, and there are situations I am not certain about, yet! — Pop
.and of the claim that there is a "big man in the sky" (or existing anywhere else, or otherwise) who created all, and who takes a part in human affairs. — Michael Zwingli
The proposed definition of "Information" is : the evolutionary interaction of form — Pop
What do you think of my description aside from the equation. The comment below the question. I'm not too sure about this, but something of the sort would need to occur? — Pop
Yes I understand. But I find such equations frustrating, as no information can be retrieved from entropy which is chaotic. — Pop
The obvious answer is - show me something that is not information? — Pop
Do you think God interacts with his creation? — Joshs
This interaction is information, and nothing exists outside of this interaction — Pop
Can you please explain the logic that underlies this expression? — Pop
Our goal is to have our first calves in the next four to six years," said tech entrepreneur Ben Lamm, who with Church has cofounded Colossal, a bioscience and genetics company to back the project. — CNN
But I might drop a link here to an article that came up in an earlier thread in determinism.
Indeterminism, causality and information: Has physics ever been deterministic? — Banno
There’s been predictions of Armageddon, ‘the end of the world’, in Christianity since it started. How they deal with it is to say that the Faithful will at that point all go to Heaven, where they will all live forever. (although I also have to say the possibility of actual Armageddon has seemed chillingly real ever since Hiroshima.) — Wayfarer
Countering that with "no you didn't" isn't particularly effective. If you want to convince someone that their religious experience is not what they think it is, you have to offer them a different framework, and indeed people sometimes come to see their own experiences in a different light. — Srap Tasmaner
Unfortunately, since many of the posters on this forum are materialists -- with philosophical physics envy -- I am forced to deal more with the tangible forms of Information. But that's OK. — Gnomon
So I don't think we are saying the same thing. — Daemon
And we aren't culturally fixed, and we are free in limitless other ways, and so the difference between us is vast. — Daemon
For them self is not an entity, it is a constantly transforming interaction with world. They abandon the idea of outer and inner. The self is always outside of itself , coming back to itself from the world. To the extent that my use of social isn’t ‘normal’ it is not because it denies immediate expose use to an outside , an alterity , the foreign and the empirical, but because it is claiming such an exposure is more restricted to interaction with other ‘persons’. — Joshs
by the immanent extinction of its species? — Gnomon
I think you're overlooking the vast difference between human and animal language and thought. We can say something new any time we want. No other animal can do that, and the effects are enormous. — Daemon
What do they do? — Banno
Nothing. But can you please tell me why you say "I don't consider my brain ...." Can you be a body and still have a body at the same time? — Alkis Piskas