[Fis] Informed Symbol Systems are not All the Same[Fis] Informed Symbol Systems are not All the Same
From: Jerry_LR_ Chandler <jerry_lr_chandler@mac.com>
Date: Mon 30 May 2005 - 23:04:20 CEST
Dear Pedro and Bob:
This email responds to Pedro's comments which are reproduced below and indirectly to Bob's work -
which I both admire and question because he invokes the superiority of mathematical symbols across
multiple symbol systems..
Let me attempt to explain this point of view.
Human communication of information, as I understand it, is grounded in the notion that messages can
be encoded, transferred, decoded such that the exact message originating in the mind of one
individual can be transferred to the mind of another individual. Thus, the symbols, 2+2 = 4 are
understood by readers.
To that end, we have created and deployed several different symbol systems, each with its particular
operating characteristics. What are the logical properties of these DIFFERENT symbol systems?
Each symbol system has its own particular set of logical relations that are intrinsic to its
operations. Of these these symbol systems, the alphabetic system, the natural languages, may be the
oldest. However, it is intimately intertwined with numbers and arithmetic operations in practice.
So, natural language and mathematics are both ancient.
Yet, the classical logic is remote from the logic of mathematics, which can appear in a wide array of
forms. Because mathematicians take the time to carefully define their words, they can be tolerant of
a wide range of logical systems, even topoi!
The chemists have also developed a symbol system. neither the classical logic nor the logics of
mathematicians is sufficient to describe chemical relations. In order to accommodate the unique
character of each chemical elements, chemical logic developed very slowly and was, originally,
closely related to smelting and the metals, ie the bronze age. Only in the 20 th Century did
chemical logic establish itself as a derivative of the numbers, the atomic numbers and relations
among them.
Of course, the musical notation system is another system of logic which developed slowly. Like the
logic of chemistry, its ancient origins sustained a slow development over many centuries.
Money is another symbol system.
Such symbol systems are part, a portion, a partition, of human communication capabilities - we also
have sensory systems, don't we? Indeed, we can view synthetic symbol systems as mere augmentations
to our animate sensory systems.
Now, with this information about a particular view of the history of human communication as
background, I turn to Pedro's post.
Date: May 27, 2005 8:45:28 AM EDT
Dear All,
snip
JLRC:
For example, the premisses of chemistry and the operations of chemical reactions use a logic that is
remote from model theory of mathematical logic. Several years of effort are required to learn how to
translate between the symbol system of mathematics and the symbol system of chemistry. ( I offer a
simple problem that demonstrates what I mean. Why is it that chemical formula are excluded from
chemical thermodynamics?)
Pedro:
JLRC:
The lack of appropriate metaphors to be handled in front of the apparent naturality of the
mechanistic and also of the "systemic" or "holistic" complex of thought
(composition and decomposition by manual operations upon objects and their parts) is part of the
missing informational conceptualization too.
JLRC
Pedro:
JLRC
Pedro:
JLRC
Pedro:
At present, science is working on chemical networks, biochemical networks, and the implications for
higher systems. Given the complexity of these networks I expect it will be several decades before a
substantial approach to social networks will be developed. One potent difficulty, in addition to the
intractable mathematics, is the indivisibility of the individual, yet, at the same time, the
individual can demonstrate enormous sensitivity to conditions as a consequence of memory and
organization. Since it is already clear that we need a special mathematics for chemistry, I suspect
we will need a very special mathematics of individuals systems for the creation of memory within a
biochemical / biological system (which is Soren's point, if I understand him correctly.).
We may have to evolve entire new symbol systems in order to tackle such problems. Such a task is
daunting but it is better to face the reality of our situation than to mislead our supporters about
our capabilities.
Pedro continues (the browser accidently deleted the "quotation markers):
Perhaps sort of a middle road between Bob's and Karl's views (could multidimensional partitions as
descriptors of social nets complexity provide a complement to the current conceptualization of
ascendancy?). Then, a pressing issue to consider in this tentative revision of social ascendancy may
be that social information is very largely "decoupled" from entropy growth (as biological
information itself). An additional problem concerning Karl's partitional approach is that he has not
developed a consistent methodology yet---and the attempts made by me and Morris a few years ago,
produced contradictory results with him. So I friendly depart from his views when he heuristically
establishes the number of multidimensional partitions.
Today seems to be my disagreement day: Lots of stuff to discuss in Paris!
regards
Pedro
In short, I view the concept of information as part of human communication and specialized to various
symbol systems in various stages of a long historical development. Each symbol system uses a
different encoding, decoding and logical systems. The widely used narrative that presupposes that
all human communication can be framed within a single linear stream of alphabetic symbols and a
single system of logic seems to me not to be a fruitful approach. It fails for transmission of
biochemical information (structural and optical isomers) and if it fails for relatively simple
chemical systems, it certainly fails for biological systems based on the genetic code.
Despite the relatively pessimistic tone of this message, I do think that we are making progress on
conceptualizing human communication. Despite this bit of optimism, I wonder if social evolution is
not progressing faster than the growth of our understanding of human communication.
It also seems to me that the philosophers of both the European and the Anglo-American schools have a
lot more work ahead of them than the current (dogmatic?) philosophies of the science of information
suggest.
Pedro, thanks for a stimulating post.
Cheers
Jerry
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