Does computation capture the full essence of reality?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion explores the philosophy of information, particularly regarding abstraction and the nature of reality in mathematics. Participants critique historical philosophical views, suggesting that Kant and Plato oversimplified the relationship between ideas and reality. The conversation highlights the emergence of "pseudo objects" in the digital realm, emphasizing the distinction between digital and physical objects. There is a call for contemporary literature that addresses these philosophical inquiries, as well as a recognition of the complexities involved in understanding information and its implications for reality. Overall, the dialogue underscores the need for new philosophical frameworks to better comprehend the interplay between abstraction and tangible reality.
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Does anyone know of work on the philosophy of information? I am thinking along the lines of on abstraction and the related question about reality especially of mathematics? Kant was wrong, Plato not deep enough, Wittgenstein wants to make it a language problem. There must be something more current.
 
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You may have to be more specific about what you are interested in here.

It could be the issue of meaning, and here there is recent work on semiotics in the Peircean tradition.

Or talking about the reality of measurements, there is Robert Rosen's book, Essays on Life Itself, which is a particular favourite.
 
I don't like the idea of symbols, because they are man made and imply subjectivity. I am thinking along the lines that some information is recoverable and therefore still present lending it some reality, and seeing some relationship between reality and concreteness of a description as opposed to mathematics and generalizations... well very fuzzy concepts so far, but since computer science is coming up even philosophers get more exposed to the technicalities, so I am hoping that there is work being done. I am less worried about quantum information and reality, since I am of the "shut up and calculate" fraction.
 
That's still a little opaque but it sounds like you stand at the other end of the spectrum to me so you can discount my references.

Sounds like you want to be reading Wolfram, Tegmark and guys like that.
 
Are you asking about the interpretation of symbols and signs of mathematics? My professor said once that we can never make a perfect circle that obeys the laws of circumference and area and he continued from there with a discussion that I can not remember. However, it was still along the same lines of whether this "perfect circle" exists in our world or in a platonistic world. Am I getting close?
 
AhmedEzz said:
Are you asking about the interpretation of symbols and signs of mathematics?

As I said I don't like the notion of symbols. But it is going in this direction.

My professor said once that we can never make a perfect circle that obeys the laws of circumference and area and he continued from there with a discussion that I can not remember. However, it was still along the same lines of whether this "perfect circle" exists in our world or in a platonistic world. Am I getting close?

Well this is where Plato is wrong. He argued that ideas like the circle you mentioned are as real or actually more real than objects. The point is, that Newtons law of gravity is real in a certain sense, as well as inflation for example, but reality differs from these concepts in subtle ways. There is some kind of reciprocal relationship between abstraction and reality, so "the chair that I am sitting on", is more real in a way than "the European attitude on the death penalty". But ever since the appearance of pseudo objects like files some very abstract things have gained a new kind of reality.

Maybe you can see the direction where I want to go. I think Plato was much to simplistic. He discovered the idea and suddenly he thought that this was the path to enlightenment and claimed that ideas was all there is in the world. This isn't very helpful, and there should be new thought given to this area IMHO.
 
This is indeed interesting. At first, when I was talking to my professor I thought he was amplifying a very small issue. However, as our discussion progressed, I began to see the implication of such discussion. There should be a good read on this subject. If you found anything , please, do let me know.
 
0xDEADBEEF said:
But ever since the appearance of pseudo objects like files some very abstract things have gained a new kind of reality.
Pseudo objects?
 
JoeDawg said:
Pseudo objects?
A file is not a real object.

One of the fundamental differences between an atomic object and a digital object is that a digital object and its duplicate are truly identical and interchangeable, whereas an atomic object's duplicate is never more than a simalcrum. Even if you duplicate it down to the atom, it is still made out of atoms that are distinct from the original's atoms. The same is not true about a digital object (the memory materials are not part of the digital object).
 
  • #10
Greetings OxDEADBEEF!

Would you be so kind as to tell me what exactly was Kant wrong about?

Regards,
 
  • #11
DaveC426913 said:
(the memory materials are not part of the digital object).

That's like saying atoms aren't part of being a hammer, or writing materials aren't part of writing. Every instance of a 'digital object' requires some kind of hardware, or medium, as far as I know. Even if the 'hardware' is just radio waves.
 
  • #12
Condor77 said:
Would you be so kind as to tell me what exactly was Kant wrong about?
Ethics.
 
  • #13
I meant within the context of the OP.

My apologies if I was not clear.

Regards,
 
  • #14
Condor77 said:
I meant within the context of the OP.
Yeah, I didn't understand the OP either.
 
  • #15
JoeDawg said:
That's like saying atoms aren't part of being a hammer, or writing materials aren't part of writing. Every instance of a 'digital object' requires some kind of hardware, or medium, as far as I know. Even if the 'hardware' is just radio waves.

No, the hammer is its atoms.

You are right about the writing thing though. I could copy every letter of a hand-written story onto a paper using a typewriter and it would be the same story. The story is not the medium it is represented with.

In the same manner, the file is an abstract, the medium used for presenting the file is not the file itself.
 
  • #16
DaveC426913 said:
No, the hammer is its atoms.

You are right about the writing thing though. I could copy every letter of a hand-written story onto a paper using a typewriter and it would be the same story. The story is not the medium it is represented with.

In the same manner, the file is an abstract, the medium used for presenting the file is not the file itself.

A hammer is a functional definition. I can use a rock, or a screwdriver, as a hammer. The atoms don't much matter. Even atoms of water, at a certain temp, can be used as a hammer.

Similarly, the story may be similar, but its more clearly different, if say I rewrite it in french. The hardware, does matter, because it defines a different instance and form of the story. Just like a digital image being transmitted over radio waves is different from the magnetic form saved to a hard drive. One can translate from one to the other, given the proper translation hardware, because they are similar, but they are not the same.
 
  • #17
JoeDawg said:
A hammer is a functional definition.
No it isn't. "The hammer" is a particular hammer.

JoeDawg said:
Similarly, the story may be similar, but its more clearly different, if say I rewrite it in french.
Yes, that is a different story.

JoeDawg said:
The hardware, does matter, because it defines a different instance and form of the story. Just like a digital image being transmitted over radio waves is different from the magnetic form saved to a hard drive. One can translate from one to the other, given the proper translation hardware, because they are similar, but they are not the same.
Right, but two copies of the same file (sans metadata) are identical, even in principle.
 
  • #18
DaveC426913 said:
No it isn't. "The hammer" is a particular hammer.
Hammer is not a chemical or atomic property. Its either a functional definition, a category reference, or a given name reference. I guarantee I could buy two identical hammers, from a hardware store, and you wouldn't know the difference. Just like I could buy two copies of the same book. They are still different instances of the same story, just like you can have multiple instances of 'hammer'. The fact, you can't tell the difference between them, doesn't mean they are the same.
Right, but two copies of the same file (sans metadata) are identical, even in principle.

They might 'seem identical' to you, but an original manuscript and a well-made fake would as well, if you were not an expert in manuscripts. Just like, similar digital images will look the same whether they are loaded from a flash drive or a regular hard drive. A computer technician could tell you how the 'files' are different, and could even tell you how identical files on the same hard drive are different.
 
  • #19
JoeDawg said:
They might 'seem identical' to you, but an original manuscript and a well-made fake would as well, if you were not an expert in manuscripts. Just like, similar digital images will look the same whether they are loaded from a flash drive or a regular hard drive. A computer technician could tell you how the 'files' are different, and could even tell you how identical files on the same hard drive are different.

Do you have anything to back that up? Anyway, I think this is a sort of nitpicking because it is not the main point of the OP , but rather a side statement. If again anyone has any idea about the "theory of information", would you please be kind and direct us to the literature?
 
  • #20
AhmedEzz said:
Do you have anything to back that up? Anyway, I think this is a sort of nitpicking because it is not the main point of the OP , but rather a side statement. If again anyone has any idea about the "theory of information", would you please be kind and direct us to the literature?

Back up what? That different files on a hard drive are in different locations? This would be relevant to a computer technician, but doesn't mean that much to someone only using a gui. That doesn't mean files are somehow magically separate from their hardware.

Any understanding of information will depend on one's epistemology, philosophy of mind and views on semiotics, and probably an understanding of ontology would help. There are lots of books of philosophy on those things. As to the most 'recent' books that will appeal to the OP, I have no clue. I don't think recent equates to better, and I don't think computer 'files' advance our understanding of abstract ideas in the slightest. They are just physical containers of information, like books.
 
  • #21
JoeDawg said:
Hammer is not a chemical or atomic property. Its either a functional definition, a category reference, or a given name reference. I guarantee I could buy two identical hammers, from a hardware store, and you wouldn't know the difference.
No, the object exists despite the label being applied. It is still an object even if we call it a handheld-thagomizer.



JoeDawg said:
Just like I could buy two copies of the same book. They are still different instances of the same story,
Thank you, yes. As you say yourself: "the same story".

JoeDawg said:
just like you can have multiple instances of 'hammer'.
Nope. You have an object that is labeled a hammer.

JoeDawg said:
They might 'seem identical' to you, but an original manuscript and a well-made fake would as well, if you were not an expert in manuscripts.
Two manuscripts, one story.

JoeDawg said:
Just like, similar digital images will look the same whether they are loaded from a flash drive or a regular hard drive. A computer technician could tell you how the 'files' are different, and could even tell you how identical files on the same hard drive are different.
Metadata is something I already addressed. Metadata is required because without it, files are identical. It is not required for two hammers because the existence of two objects in two locations is sufficient.
 
  • #22
DaveC426913 said:
No, the object exists despite the label being applied. It is still an object even if we call it a handheld-thagomizer.
I never said the object didn't exist. Its nature as a hammer is not part of its atomic structure.
Thank you, yes. As you say yourself: "the same story".
And it would be the 'same story' if it was written in french. Its simply a matter of where you choose to draw the line of relevance with regards to sameness.
Nope. You have an object that is labeled a hammer.
I can label a muffin as hammer, that doesn't make it useful as a hammer. Being a hammer involves being able to 'hammer'.
Two manuscripts, one story.
two very similar stories.
Metadata is something I already addressed. Metadata is required because without it, files are identical. It is not required for two hammers because the existence of two objects in two locations is sufficient.

Computer files have different locations on a hard drive. They have different locations, just like the hammers.
 
  • #23
DaveC426913 said:
No, the hammer is its atoms.

You are right about the writing thing though. I could copy every letter of a hand-written story onto a paper using a typewriter and it would be the same story. The story is not the medium it is represented with.

In the same manner, the file is an abstract, the medium used for presenting the file is not the file itself.
Hello Dave,
I have a question. Just using this simple and good example. What is the story behind the medium? Can we give a real life example to this example?
 
  • #24
Willowz said:
Hello Dave,
I have a question. Just using this simple and good example. What is the story behind the medium? Can we give a real life example to this example?
If I read the story out loud to you, the story you heard would contain no ink and no paper. These are not an intrinsic part of the story.
 
  • #25
JoeDawg said:
And it would be the 'same story' if it was written in french.
It would most definitrely not be the same story. While true, for the intent and purpose of reading it, some (but definitely not al) would say it's the same thing, how many times have you heard someone say "You're got to read it in its native language to apprecate it. Something is lost in the translation."?

There is big business in translation. There are as many ways of translating one language to another as there are languages. The translated version will be a simalcrum of the original, but it will not be "the same".

JoeDawg said:
I can label a muffin as hammer, that doesn't make it useful as a hammer. Being a hammer involves being able to 'hammer'.
Precisely. Its "hammerness" is not an intrinsic part of the object. Its "objectness" is.

JoeDawg said:
Computer files have different locations on a hard drive. They have different locations, just like the hammers.
Its location is not an intrinsic part of the file or the hammer.


The fundamental distinction I am pointing out is that the hammer is physical object, whereas the file is the information, which is not physical. A duplicate of a piece of information is, in practice and in principle, the same, not merely arbitrarily the same to a certain amount of measurement.

Looked at another way, if I recorded a hammer-muffin to an arbitrary level of detail and then attempted to copy it, and then played a shell game with the two of them, the duplicate would always be in principle distinguishable from its original. On the other hand, if I duplicated the information in my file (say, simply my birthdate: 13), and then played the shell game with those two numbers , there is no way even in principle to distinguish which number 13 was the original. 13 is exactly equivalent to 13. A hammer-muffin is not exactly equivalent to a hammer-muffin.


Perhaps our argument lies in the distinction between the manifestation of a file on a disk and the contents of a file. The contents of a file (the information) is duplicable. There are no contents of a hammer-muffin that can be duplicable, they can only be simulated to an arbitrary level of satisfaction.
 
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  • #26
This discussion is already bumping into consciousness and will soon hit an impenetrable wall. We cannot fully define the deep nature of information without defining us ourselves and the way we process the incoming information. In the words of the father of quantum theory Max Plank:

“Science cannot solve the ultimate mystery of nature. And that is because, in the last analysis, we ourselves are a part of the mystery that we are trying to solve.”I wrote a similar thread titled "What is information?" but deleted it as i deemed it hopeless that it would produce anything worthwhile.
 
  • #27
DaveC426913 said:
If I read the story out loud to you, the story you heard would contain no ink and no paper. These are not an intrinsic part of the story.
I get that, but what I'm asking is about the "placement", "description" of the story. It might sound funny trying to describe something that is undescribable, but who knows? Would you call it reality?
 
  • #28
WaveJumper said:
This discussion is already bumping into consciousness and will soon hit an impenetrable wall.
Consciousness has nothing to do with it. A computer program one line long can process information quite happily without the slightest need for consciousness. Your point - while interesting - is not relevant to this discussion.
 
  • #29
Willowz said:
I get that, but what I'm asking is about the "placement", "description" of the story. It might sound funny trying to describe something that is undescribable, but who knows? Would you call it reality?
Then I don't understand your question.
 
  • #30
DaveC426913 said:
Then I don't understand your question.
When I understand that example about the story and the medium, I think about the concept of the idea that creats the story. Though I would rather speak about objects that you touch and feel. When I look at a circle I don't think about a square. Let's not get into the barriers of language. Becasue you could call a square a circle and vica versa and still the "object" would not be changed. I'll try to sum it up. Now how would you call the object that gives meaning to the "idea", which eventually creats words to describe it...? When I mean idea I think about the curve you see in a circle, the characteristics that make it spesific. I don't think this is off topic because it's looking deeper into what makes information. More info: It's like math IMO, you don't invent it, you just discover it. What do you discover? Reality, logic...neeed mooore words, :/
 
  • #31
DaveC426913 said:
Consciousness has nothing to do with it. A computer program one line long can process information quite happily without the slightest need for consciousness. Your point - while interesting - is not relevant to this discussion.
What is information without consciousness? How do you know there is a computer that is processing, has processed or will process this line of information except through consciousness? There not a "slightest need" for consciousness, there is an absolutely imperative demand for consciousness. Without it, all the "information" in the universe is utterly meaningless(the inverted commas denote the lost status of information as such without a conscious mind, i.e. it stops being information).
 
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  • #32
DaveC426913 said:
It would most definitrely not be the same story. While true, for the intent and purpose of reading it, some (but definitely not al) would say it's the same thing, how many times have you heard someone say "You're got to read it in its native language to apprecate it. Something is lost in the translation."?
But this is what I mean, the translation example is not essentially different, it just makes it more obvious, because if you can't read the language you can't understand the information, and there will be subtle differences in the meanings of the words. It depends on how much you decide is sufficient for the story. I don't think you can separate 'information' from existence so easily. Information needs a medium, and while the difference in medium may seem irrelevant, that's only because, for your purposes, you don't require any more detail.

A handwritten book, a type-written book, and an audio-book, might not make people say the story is 'different', but it would effect their experience of the story, even to the degree that might result from reading a translation. The form contains information too.
Precisely. Its "hammerness" is not an intrinsic part of the object. Its "objectness" is.
But hammerness is a representation of an intrinsic aspect of the object. All things of a certain hardness could be used as hammers, but we don't classify them all as such, even though the intrinsic property is what allows us to define it so. The objectness is a type of information.
The fundamental distinction I am pointing out is that the hammer is physical object, whereas the file is the information, which is not physical. A duplicate of a piece of information is, in practice and in principle, the same, not merely arbitrarily the same to a certain amount of measurement.
It will seem to be the same, but it won't really 'be' the same.
Looked at another way, if I recorded a hammer-muffin to an arbitrary level of detail and then attempted to copy it, and then played a shell game with the two of them, the duplicate would always be in principle distinguishable from its original. On the other hand, if I duplicated the information in my file (say, simply my birthdate: 13), and then played the shell game with those two numbers , there is no way even in principle to distinguish which number 13 was the original. 13 is exactly equivalent to 13. A hammer-muffin is not exactly equivalent to a hammer-muffin.
Unless you knew the unique memory location where the original was stored. If you knew where the original was stored, you would know which was the copy.
Perhaps our argument lies in the distinction between the manifestation of a file on a disk and the contents of a file. The contents of a file (the information) is duplicable. There are no contents of a hammer-muffin that can be duplicable, they can only be simulated to an arbitrary level of satisfaction.
I'd say the same thing about the computer file, its just that you are more than satisfied with the level of duplication.
 
  • #33
WaveJumper said:
What is information without consciousness? How do you know there is a computer that is processing, has processed or will process this line of information except through consciousness? There not a "slightest need" for consciousness, there is an absolutely imperative demand for consciousness. Without it, all the "information" in the universe is utterly meaningless(the inverted commas denote the lost status of information as such without a conscious mind, i.e. it stops being information).
This is a reducto ad absurdum argument. By the same token, nothing in the entire universe is of any significance unless it is observed by some consciousness.

The fact is, the single-line program is quite capable of processing the data in the file without any consciousness. Perhaps every human on Earth has gone into suspended animation and the computer is designed to multiply the number 13 until it reaches a specific value before opening the sleep chambers. Who cares? Make up any situation you want. The program is acting upon the information with no need for consciousness.
 
  • #34
DaveC426913 said:
This is a reducto ad absurdum argument. By the same token, nothing in the entire universe is of any significance unless it is observed by some consciousness.
No, it is not. Defining "information' is neither that easy nor that straight-forward. We have hard data that shows the universe existed before the arrival of consciousness, whereas the abstraction we label 'information' exist only in our perceiving brains. And it only exists now, not in the past or in the future but only now.

The fact is, the single-line program is quite capable of processing the data in the file without any consciousness.

What information and in what program?? A program, in the sense you are implying is an abstraction. A computer, at its hardware level is not processing information per se, it's processing positive and negative electricity, that we dub 0's and 1's. It takes a conscious mind to perceive and understand what a computer is doing information-wise. Otherwise, a computer is simply nothing more than an electrical gadget.

Perhaps every human on Earth has gone into suspended animation and the computer is designed to multiply the number 13 until it reaches a specific value before opening the sleep chambers. Who cares? Make up any situation you want. The program is acting upon the information with no need for consciousness.
The computer becomes a computer when consciousness arrives. And not some kind of consciousness, but the human kind. Could my pekingese perceive as information what my computer is outputting now?
 
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  • #35
WaveJumper said:
No, it is not. Defining "information' is neither that easy nor that straight-forward. We have hard data that shows the universe existed before the arrival of consciousness, whereas the abstraction we label 'information' exist only in our perceiving brains. And it only exists now, not in the past or in the future but only now.



What information and in what program?? A program, in the sense you are implying is an abstraction. A computer, at its hardware level is not processing information per se, it's processing positive and negative electricity, that we dub 0's and 1's. It takes a conscious mind to perceive and understand what a computer is doing information-wise. Otherwise, a computer is simply nothing more than an electrical gadget.




The computer becomes a computer when consciousness arrives. And not some kind of consciousness, but the human kind. Could my pekingese perceive the information my computer is outputting now?

While all this may be true, it is not relevant to this particular discussion about digital files. The file containing the number 13 can indeed be processed by one line code with no consciousness involved in that processing.

At the risk of beating a horse I feel I've already killed:
What information and in what program?? A program, in the sense you are implying is an abstraction. A computer, at its hardware level is not processing information per se, it's processing positive and negative electricity, that we dub 0's and 1's.
So what? It is still processing the file.

It takes a conscious mind to perceive and understand what a computer is doing information-wise. Otherwise, a computer is simply nothing more than an electrical gadget.
So what? It is still processing the file.


I'll grant you one concession/retraction: information is tied to consciousness. Where I come from "information" is "data interpreted to provide meaning" and meaning does require consciousness. I will concede that everywhere I've used the word information I should have used the word data.

That being said, data in a file does not require consciousness. And it is a file of data we've been talking about since post #9.
 
  • #36
@JoeDawg you are doing the Wittgenstein, reducing the hammer to a word and how people perceive it.

There is a common trend in fuzzing definitions, and declaring everything to be relative to the speaker. I refuse to see these things as a great insight. These are all deviations from the normal understanding of words, and therefore look interesting, but it is not the usual understanding of the word hammer, to think of a frozen cucumber for hammering. There are various degrees of "metaphorism" and various degrees of misunderstanding, but declaring the meaning as void without context does not yield explanatory power.

I refuse to give up the concept of absolute truth and the concept of reality. The tree does fall and it does produce noise when you are not there. This was a great insight from childhood time, and we do not gain by giving it up (except for special cases of quantum mechanics).

If we build on this base, then there is reality. We perceive it through the filter of our senses, but we have figured out pretty much what we are really dealing with, and when our senses play tricks on us. We perceive matter as distinct objects and we give it names. Now the abstraction kicks in. But abstraction always produces errors.

If I point at a hammer and say "this hammer". We are already abstracting. There are electrons leaving and coming in constantly, we cannot say that the hammer consists of the same parts, and if we are exact we cannot even define well what this hammer is. Nonetheless the hammer is real it is a thing and we label it. Not having a definition does not take the reality away from the hammer.

Everything we are dealing with is an abstraction as physicist we are painfully aware of the underlying theories that will split the hammers iron into atoms, the atoms into particles, and the hadrons into quarks, and even destroy our notion of space or existence, still the hammer is a superb concept and "this hammer" even stronger.

We can also abstract more, and there is a common sense how something is more concrete and something more abstract. So we go from "this hammer" to "a hammer" to "three hammers" to "three objects" to "three" where mathematics is waiting for us asking what took us so long.

So maybe this all looks like a human construction, but this is where truth kicks in. Mathematics is very close to truth, and once the mathematical entities are defined well, no one will disagree that 2+2 will ever be different from 4.

And here comes my hope and search. Information is something that is somehow very close to reality. A ball has a position and a weight, you can somehow extract this information, it can change, it can be lost, but there are rules to this. These rules again are very close to mathematics. We can do reasoning according to these rules. Statistical physics and thermodynamics are whole disciplines of physics, dealing with information and ignorance about it.

Right now I don't really know what I want from my philosophy of information, but it's somewhere in there with files, bijective mappings, encryption, recoverability, wave function collapse and entropy.

And now I'll prepare my rant on Kant :devil:
 
  • #37
So where was Kant wrong? I'll start with some remarks on his style: his convoluted sentence structure is an apex of what the German language has to offer in terms of destruction of reading flow. His redefinition, and creation of words use of archaisms and Latin do not serve the purpose of clarification but the purpose shines through of using language as a weapon against less educated and a way of showing off.

After fighting with stomach cramps through "Die Kritik der reinen Verunft" and "Die Kritik der praktischen Vernunft" I feel reluctant to reread it but I'll try to find the main arguments that were wrong in respect to this subject. I would like to quote the passages, but translating would be too much effort.

"1. Die Transzendentale Ästetik"
Kant develops his Idea that time and space are "Erkenntnisse" (revelations/ideas/knowledge) that are known about at birth, and pretty much every thing that we think necessitates them. From a physical point of view I don't think that time and space are different from momentum or charge in any way, but also in a more natural way I don't see why space and time should be different from color, or sound, and if you are trying to find out why, his answer is more or less, because I cannot think of it in another way. The statements in the conclusion section are also mostly incorrect especially from a physics point of view.

In "1 Transzedentale Elementarlehre/zweiter Teil/erste Abteilung/erstes Buch/1. Haupstück/§9" he claims that the "functions of though" could all be put under four "Titles" with three "modules" each. Pure numerology, everything one can think can be written in a symmetrical diagram, this is not the only time that he does it, and I don't know which greek author he was copying.

Then many more needless and wrong generalisations follow:
"Alle Verhältnisse des Denkens in Urteilen sind die a) des Prädikats zum Subjekt, b) des Grundes zur Folge c) der eingeteilten Erkenntniss und der gesammelten Glieder der Einteilung untereinander"

Roughly "All relations of thought in judgments are a) that of predicate to object, b) that of cause to effect c) that of differentiated understanding and the collected parts of the differentiation"

And if you ask why this is false take a sentence like "The Earth spins." This is a judgment and none of the above. You might say it's not a relation, it depends on the exact Understanding of "Verhältnisse" which can be read as "how things behave". Even if we eliminate this b) is a special case of a) and well c) is whatever you make of it (and trust me it doesn't get more readable in German) it is either false or doesn't say much.

This is just a small example. He has many more of such statements before he starts with more numerology by putting all thinkable concepts in categories which again form a nice diagram with some nice number.

Well I could go on but as I mentioned it's a painful read. He basically doesn't understand mathematics, and how one can have ideas and form concepts without perception. He doesn't understand mathematical deduction of things like the commutativity of addition (which is not completely his fault as Peano came one century later). He categorizes needlessly in his fruitless attempt to understand abstraction, and finally he throws in everything he thinks he knows about the world and logic where he copies the Greeks. He would be the first to shout that light waves without aether are impossible.

So as nice as some as some of his ideas were, most of those concerned with what kind of objects we know and how we think has been surpassed by virtual objects, mathematics and a deeper thinking about the transfer of information.
 
  • #38
0xDEADBEEF said:
@JoeDawg you are doing the Wittgenstein, reducing the hammer to a word and how people perceive it.
I think, you are being unfair to W, regardless of whether one is an evil relativist, like myself, I think the man made some important observations, and I don't believe I am reducing it to a word. An experience is an experience, but 'hammer' is a concept linked to experience.

And understanding that context is important, is important to science. Words don't have any inherent meaning. We bundle concepts into words based on the circumstances we encounter. We develop language based on its usefulness to us, but it is this organic nature that creates problems. You dont' need to go into quantum weirdness to see that as an individual you have a limited perspective. Science uses the double-blind method specifically because we aren't very rational about experience.
I refuse to give up the concept of absolute truth and the concept of reality. The tree does fall and it does produce noise when you are not there. This was a great insight from childhood time, and we do not gain by giving it up (except for special cases of quantum mechanics).
Even if an absolute exists, I have yet to see a method for determining it, and we all have a concept of reality, mine simply differs from yours. As to the tree in the forest, that is a thought experiment designed specifically to get you thinking about the nature of sound, of perception, of reality. Its not a denial of reality.
If we build on this base, then there is reality.
Even a radical empiricist like Berkeley doesn't deny 'reality', he just doesn't agree with you on the nature and source of reality.
But abstraction always produces errors.
Abstractions are generalizations. Expecting a generalization to apply to every case, is an error.
If I point at a hammer and say "this hammer". We are already abstracting. There are electrons leaving and coming in constantly, we cannot say that the hammer consists of the same parts, and if we are exact we cannot even define well what this hammer is. Nonetheless the hammer is real it is a thing and we label it.
An electron is just as much an abstraction. We create abstractions, because experience is overflowing with details. Hammer is a simplification, based on sense data and our sense of purpose or utility. Experience is reality, but the causes experience, the explanation for experience, what Kant meant by Noumena, is different. Having an understanding of this can help prevent errrors.
Not having a definition does not take the reality away from the hammer.
Not having a definition, does not mean the source of the hammer experience necessarily stops existing. Ontology and epistemology are different.
still the hammer is a superb concept and "this hammer" even stronger.
Its useful if one wishes to build a house.
Mathematics is very close to truth, and once the mathematical entities are defined well, no one will disagree that 2+2 will ever be different from 4.
Current mathematics is close to experience because we developed mathematics over a very long period while constantly comparing it to experience. Mathematics is dependent, as is all logic, on useful premises. 1+1=2, is a good description of reality because we come across many 'objects' and situations where this is true. Human plus human often equals Human/Human, but it can also equal Human/Human/Human, if there is sex involved. 1+1=3
Mathematics is a series of generalizations, which uses logic developed from experience.
Right now I don't really know what I want from my philosophy of information, but it's somewhere in there with files, bijective mappings, encryption, recoverability, wave function collapse and entropy.
Of course it is, because those are the things you think you know best.
 
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  • #39
0xDEADBEEF said:
So where was Kant wrong? I'll start with some remarks on his style: his convoluted sentence structure is an apex of what the German language has to offer in terms of destruction of reading flow. His redefinition, and creation of words use of archaisms and Latin do not serve the purpose of clarification but the purpose shines through of using language as a weapon against less educated and a way of showing off.
Hahah, apex indeed, clearly you haven't read Heidegger yet, he's an even bigger treat.

Kant is evil, certainly, but he wasn't a stupid man. And he's essential reading, mainly because most philosophers since Kant, spend time criticising him.
 
  • #40
This has become a heated debate, but rather odd that no-one is basing their positions on familiar philosophy.

It is a very ancient thing to distinguish between form and substance. And then a very modern thing to distinguish between information and meaning. One was the burning issue of Aristotle's day, and the other the debate of today.

So a hammer - is it a substance or a form? Well a hammer's truth, its essence, has to be modeled using both concepts. They are in fact complimentary descriptions, one the local or bottom-up view, the other the global or top-down view.

A hammer is a form of course, defined by its global purpose or function. It has an organisation that allows it to do something. Bang in nails or any equivalent act.

But a hammer must also be substance. To have a local or actual example of "a hammer", there must be some substantial incarnation.

Even Plato (under the prodding of Aristotle) agreed that there is a world of possible form, but also chora, the formless stuff.

And note the different causality that applies to the local and the global, the substance and the form. Local stuff, like atoms, add together to construct some particular example of a form.

Form, by constrast, acts by downwards constraint. There is a global "idea" or state of organisation that defines what is sufficient to "be a hammer". This is a set of constraints. Then many things, many substantial incarnations existing located in some place, may be examples of "hammers". So a shoe could be a hammer if it does a hammer's job.

The debate here tries to say that a hammer either is this, or it is that. But the correct (and systems science) view is that reality is described by both the local and the global, by the complementary aspects that are the constructing substances and the global forms.

This is why physics does so well using the idea of local atoms constrained by global laws. One is the substance, the other the form.

So in the modern era, we have information and meaning. A new either/or quandry.

Information theory is the result of doing what Aristotle said we shouldn't do - breaking reality into just substantial atoms. Information is the atomisation of global form.

It is about countable microstates. Isolatable markings. The bit that can be seen to make a difference. So information said there is this aspect of reality called its global form, its general constraining organisation. Well we will just smash that form into the littlelist bits. We will model reality as a construction. We will use substance-like bits to construct the forms.

And this, as an arch-reductionist modelling trick, works wonderfully well. On many occasions. So long as we understand exactly what we have done, and so what we may have lost along the way.

What we lose of course is meaning. Smash the idea of form, of global organisation, of constraining context, and you lose the way in which arrangements of atoms actually construct something that has meaningful order, purpose, teleology.

So this is the modern dilemma. Information theory works. It is a great advance. But we have been left without a matching theory of meaning. Although if you study cybernetics, semiotics, systems science, hierarchy theory, you can see how meanings might be re-introduced to modern theorising.

And what of a computer file? Well computers are information theory taken to an extreme. And the limits of this exercise is a well trodden debate - Maxwell's Demon, Turing machines, the Landauer limit, etc.

In an ideal world, we can imagine replicating exactly the same form (the computer file) in multiple locations. And then there are practical limits that the world actually imposes on this imagined capability.
 
  • #41
apeiron said:
This has become a heated debate, but rather odd that no-one is basing their positions on familiar philosophy.
Maybe if someone would recommend books...
[...]
A hammer is a form of course, defined by its global purpose or function. It has an organisation that allows it to do something. Bang in nails or any equivalent act.

But a hammer must also be substance. To have a local or actual example of "a hammer", there must be some substantial incarnation.
Well this is an interesting concept and certainly useful in discussion. Although I disagree with this dichotomy. I see more shades of gray. Mathematical objects are defined by their defined properties, whereas real objects could be said to be defined by their appearance. But I don't think that a hammer is defined by the fact that you can use it for hammering. There is some kind of representation of a hammer in our mind. One of which do not understand how the brain stores it. If we try to communicate it we are forced to use a list of properties or point at perceptions. But using a list of properties is not capturing the whole thing. We can ask someone if hammers leak orange juice, and although they have never saved this information people will say "no", and if we find a hammer that does, it is still a hammer, it's not really important that all other hammers don't.

[...]This is why physics does so well using the idea of local atoms constrained by global laws. One is the substance, the other the form.
I hope you noticed that you changed your definition of form here, before you argued that atoms have a real (substantial) and an imaginary (form) part so to say, and now you argue that atoms are real and laws are imaginary, although we know laws manifest in reality.
So in the modern era, we have information and meaning. A new either/or quandry.

[...]
So this is the modern dilemma. Information theory works. It is a great advance. But we have been left without a matching theory of meaning. Although if you study cybernetics, semiotics, systems science, hierarchy theory, you can see how meanings might be re-introduced to modern theorising.
[...]
This is a great way of looking at it although, as you could guess, I don't see that "either or". But this is exactly what I am interested in. Something that is the same file although it is in two locations. Something that is the same file although it is compressed by some algorithm. If your computer processes information and you are not aware of it, how much do we have to regard the computer as an acting entity. To name some of the things that are closer to "interpretation" and further away from information processing. Maybe we are not that far apart after all.
 
  • #42
DaveC426913 said:
I'll grant you one concession/retraction: information is tied to consciousness. Where I come from "information" is "data interpreted to provide meaning" and meaning does require consciousness. I will concede that everywhere I've used the word information I should have used the word data.

That being said, data in a file does not require consciousness. And it is a file of data we've been talking about since post #9.

Given that framework, and going back to the example of a written story, would you still argue that the story read out loud is the same thing as printed, just in a different medium? A printed story consists of characters that can be treated as data, copied, parsed, compressed, etc without being understood by the machine doing the process, while the act of reading/listening is more of a process than a thing that requires human activity and understanding to function.
 
  • #43
0xDEADBEEF said:
But using a list of properties is not capturing the whole thing. We can ask someone if hammers leak orange juice, and although they have never saved this information people will say "no", and if we find a hammer that does, it is still a hammer, it's not really important that all other hammers don't.

Related, I suppose, would be the 'ship of Theseus' problem. If you start replacing parts on your hammer (maybe because it's leaking orange juice :-p ), is it still the same hammer?

Interesting discussion btw.
 
  • #44
0xDEADBEEF said:
We can ask someone if hammers leak orange juice, and although they have never saved this information people will say "no", and if we find a hammer that does, it is still a hammer, it's not really important that all other hammers don't.

.

Actually, this is part of information theoretic approaches. The suppression of noise. And also how brains are known to work.

So when you think of a hammer, you are actually suppressing memories of all non-hammer like information so as to have a high-contrast mental state of "hammer essence".

It is routine to demonstrate this with priming, attentional blink and other psychological phenomenon.

And we even have the popular phrase - give a person a hammer and every problem looks like a nail. Other meanings of the object are actively being suppressed.

And information discard is fundamental to the physical description of computing - again see Landauer.

Or a good popular science book was Tor Norretranders The User Illusion. A good introduction to this area, though not 100% reliable.

0xDEADBEEF said:
I hope you noticed that you changed your definition of form here, before you argued that atoms have a real (substantial) and an imaginary (form) part so to say, and now you argue that atoms are real and laws are imaginary, although we know laws manifest in reality.

.

No. The point is that both are "real". Or rather, both are models of the real. The real is both substance and form in interaction, and we then need to model this complex state using two different but complementary modelling perspectives.

So the physical world is real. We cannot know its truth directly, but we can get good at modelling it if we are willing to be systematic. The system we have been using is based on the ancient dichotomy - substance and form.

Both atoms and laws are fake in the sense they are just modelling constructs. And both are real in being really measureable aspects of reality.


0xDEADBEEF said:
If your computer processes information and you are not aware of it, how much do we have to regard the computer as an acting entity. To name some of the things that are closer to "interpretation" and further away from information processing. Maybe we are not that far apart after all.

What is different and disturbing about computation is the way that it is completely deterministic. The real world has what a systems scientist would call material creativity at the microlevel.

There is at the very least quantum uncertainty at the microlevel of reality. So while we can dream of identical processes being replicated, in reality there are problems. Quantum fluctuations could cause a bit to be flipped in one of your many replicated files. So in reality, computation can be highly determined - which is what makes it so artificial, so close to being "pure form" atomised. But there are asymptotic limits to this in theory.
 
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