Re: [Fis] Re: What is information ?Re: [Fis] Re: What is information ?
From: Steven Ericsson Zenith <steven@semeiosis.com>
Date: Tue 27 Sep 2005 - 00:05:15 CEST
Dear Loet,
I have pointed out that this is exactly the area where I think the term
When we use the terminology "a /informs /b" we mean one convention
I have argued that we cannot define the term /information /in isolation.
In my own definition of the term *information *I mean /that which
Recall I define *knowledge *as /the determinant of action/. So, in
The primary distinction between the two - and this is why I did it in
So, by the above you can see how I can use the term /information /in
At the purely physical level - /in both cases, beit the engineering of
When I say embodied, I mean exactly embodiment in the engineered
When I use the term *consciousness *I define it as the "conspiracy"
Uncertainty and misunderstanding in communication between sentient
Information processing in this model has two forms - Turing / Shannon
With respect,
-- Dr. Steven Ericsson Zenith SEMEIOSIS RESEARCH http://www.semeiosis.com Loet Leydesdorff wrote: > Dear Steven, > > Do you mean with "embodied" embodiments in biological bodies or in > bodies of knowledge. I find it very difficult to understand that > meaning has to be embodied if this is meant biologically. However, I > can accept that meaning is systemic and thus potentially different > among bodies of knowledge. > > How does this relate to information processing? If one distinguishes > between (Shannon-type) information processing and meaning-processing > (e.g., in the generation of knowledge), the uncertainty has to be > positioned within the meaning processing system as meaningful > information (different from Shannon-type information). Investing > meaning to an information can then be considered as an operation of > the selecting system. The operation is recursive: some meanings are > more meaningful than others given a body of knowledge. Knowledge can > again be communicated as discursive knowledge. > > This is all relatively independent of the bodies involved. They > provide the historical conditions for an evolutionary process of > expectations operating selectively upon one another. Of course, the > historical conditions matter because they set the stage for this > cultural evolution. > > With kind regards, > > > Loet > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > Loet Leydesdorff > Amsterdam School of Communications Research (ASCoR) > Kloveniersburgwal 48, 1012 CX Amsterdam > Tel.: +31-20- 525 6598; fax: +31-20- 525 3681 > loet@leydesdorff.net <mailto:loet@leydesdorff.net>; > http://www.leydesdorff.net/ > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > *From:* fis-bounces@listas.unizar.es > [mailto:fis-bounces@listas.unizar.es] *On Behalf Of *Steven > Ericsson Zenith (by way of Pedro Marijuan<marijuan@unizar.es>) > *Sent:* Monday, September 26, 2005 11:38 AM > *To:* fis@listas.unizar.es > *Subject:* Re: [Fis] Re: What is information ? > > > [sorry for the delay in this posting, due to problems in our local > server; please, note that all messages during past week have been > lost. They have to be resend... --Pedro] > ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Dear Pedro and list, > > Once again Pedro, I am in general agreement with your observations. > > However, what you ask here is not merely for a simple definition > of information but the entire context in which such a notion can > be founded. Other definitions / notions are needed. You must > define what it is to "know" - what meaning and prediction are, for > example. > > I have explored this question somewhat - so let me put it out > there as a "straw man." This model takes my previous assertions > regarding experience as its premise. > > In my model all *metaphysics *is the embodied content of experience. > > *Meaning *is the embodied trace of experience - the physiological > structure that characterizes a product of *semeiosis*. Here is > the cellular level requirement - as yet determined, but let us > point to neuroplasticity as a possible example. Penrose might > point to Orchestrated Objective Reduction as another possible > example - whatever, it doesn't matter at this point except to > observe that the model's architecture, when detailed, allows the > prediction of the engineering of that physiological structure. > > *Knowledge *is the determinant of action. That is, it is revealed > in action, in sentient entities it is the product of semeiosis > over the embodied meaning set. We know how to walk by our *innate > *embodiment of meaning - the product of our genetics. We know how > to prove the Pythagoras theorem by *acquired *embodied meaning. > We know how to communicate by speech because we share a common > acquired embodied *convention *(imperfectly). > > Books, paintings, music are all *marks *- the subjects of signs. > *Signs *are the embodied experience of marks. The sun rise, the > wind blowing, flower in the field, are all marks. Marks are > either *natural marks* - the product of physical laws - or they > are *metaphysical mark*s - the product of intent. *Intent *is the > meaning embodied by the creator of a metaphysical mark in its > creation. > > *Semeiosis *is the ongoing experience of signs - both those > embodied as the traces of experience from past semeiosis and those > that are the immediate product of senses. > > So, finally, what is information? *Information *is that which > informs - by which we mean it identifies cause and adds to > /knowledge /(see above definition). > > In my model I generalize the notion of knowledge so that I can > apply the notion over inanimate/non-sentient cases - I know that > this generalization makes people uncomfortable, as it does me on > occasion, but it is by this generalization that I can essentially > define information simply as "difference" in all cases and I can > argue that a particle "knows" what action to take as the product > of information input. This leads inevitably to my notion of > "perfect action" ... but that will side track us here. > > For completeness I should also mention my prediction model. > *Abduction *is the foundation of all prediction - it is the > unfettered intuition. *Induction *is the constraint of abduction > by prior reductive experience - we learn induction by taking apart > the world and putting it back together. *Deduction *is the > constraint of induction by formal conventions (such as > mathematical logic) that we use in analysis and communication. > > I hope this helps the discussion - I think I covered all Pedro's > points. > > With respect, > Steven > > -- > Dr. Steven Ericsson Zenith > SEMEIOSIS RESEARCH > http://www.semeiosis.com > >Received on Tue Sep 27 00:06:52 2005
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