Re: [Fis] Molecular-Experimental sciences (II)Re: [Fis] Molecular-Experimental sciences (II)
From: Steven Ericsson Zenith <steven@semeiosis.com>
Date: Fri 25 Nov 2005 - 21:26:28 CET
Dear Pedro,
If living organisms are molecular machines according to principles we
As Goranson says, "Most scientists assume that the basics of science
Roger Penrose has been pointing out the inadequacy of this position for
I have only recently entered the fray. In my discussions across
1. Experience is not a phenomenon of the world and therefore
None of these positions can be formalized since none can be quantified,
Logic has wrestled with the problem for a long time and failed (e.g.,
The reason that these positions remain and are widely accepted comes
The motivations for these violations in the USA are especially
In raising research funding I have to be careful not to offend
For these reasons, progress may be impossible in the USA - even in my
With respect,
-- Dr. Steven Ericsson Zenith SEMEIOSIS RESEARCH Silicon Valley, California http://www.semeiosis.com Pedro Marijuan wrote: > Dear colleagues, > > Trying to sum up the themes of my yesterday message (in this my second > post of the week), the emphasis might be put in the insufficient > theoretical distinction, real conflation, between: > > INFORMATION PROCESSING SYSTEMS > > PROCESSUAL LIFE CYCLES > > As a matter of fact, the latter have been caught under the wings of > the former as one of the core ideas of the "sciences of the > artificial" (eg, in whole disciplines such as artificial intel., > cognitive psych., artificial life, molecular computing...). Ideas and > philosophies of information have been imported and circulated into the > "sciences of the natural" without much trouble --aren't living > organisms but "molecular machines"? Even more, most of the rhetorics > under the banner of information society, knowledge engineering, > entrepreneurial information, etc., is also built around deliberate > confusion between the two realms --aren't we but info processing > systems?, why couldn't computers be conscious? > > Clarifying the relationships along the above informational blurred > boundary may be important ---perhaps by theorizing along the > processual characteristics of life cycles we could advance response to > some of the fundamental questions proposed by Ted about the fis agenda > (his report at <http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/goranson1> > deserves very careful reading). > > greetings, > > Pedro > > _______________________________________________ > fis mailing list > fis@listas.unizar.es > http://webmail.unizar.es/mailman/listinfo/fisReceived on Fri Nov 25 21:23:42 2005
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