EEK,

Yes. I made the point back on the Ellis thread that no one should be conned into believing they're eavesdropping on the internal communications of DNA-RNA simply because we've identified some of the process and coded it in our own code.

It's like watching some fist fight in the Ukrainian parliament without sound or subtitles or even commentary. You can identify the big blond guy who's pounding on the big dark-haired guy whom you also recognize and you call them X and Y but really have no idea what the beef's about.

Dan,

The problem with the question is that unless we accept the "fabric of spacetime" as a causal agent and not just using the speed of light to correlate distance and duration, there is no theoretical foundation for the current cosmological model. Rather than go into my usual rant on this, here is an article by someone with firsthand knowledge of the situation.

That said, if we have a universe composed entirely of unbound electrons, the concept of temperature would be a more effective description of it. The concept of time really only comes into effective being when there is some degree of irregularity and complexity in those regular actions, otherwise there really is no sense of linear progression. The regular cycles are basically a method of fixing a ruler to this process of change. There would be no concept of past and future, only of spin. As you say, it's that background to the fixed cycle of a defined system, which gives the sense of the progression of time.

I think we under appreciate the concept of temperature, because as a statistical measure of non-linear processes, it is the noise out of which we try to detect the signal of the linear narrative of time(and thought). We overemphasize the nature of time, because it defines our reductionist understanding of life. We constantly try to distill everything into one descriptive narrative, then further reduce that to a bottom line result, but in trying to find that elusive quality, we loose contact with everything else and end up with nothing. Knowledge is inherently subjective, as I discussed in the essay. We are programed to focus in order to survive, not find nuggets of eternal meaning. The absolute would be the essence from which we rise, not an ideal from which we fell.

Sorry to get philosophical in a physics discussion, but the quest is for understanding and I follow where it leads.

Another point to keep in mind about information is that the dynamic creation and destruction of information is also information. The current blocktime notion that information is somehow permanently stored in the four dimensional geometry of spacetime results in a static determinism that is a big part of the problem of explaining probabilities.

    Thanks, nmann, for the references (Pattee and Zeilinger) which I will check out. And thanks to you Edwin for "jumping in". We three seem to agree that information is contextual. Further to that, here is a quote from something else I have been working on: "However biologists may objectify the genetic "code"--even to the extent of transmitting it by email--the organism's internal communications cannot be so objectified without losing the sense in which they form the basis of the agent's own point of view.

    A message between human beings may appear to exist objectively. It can appear as text, with an indisputable number of characters, a definite information content. This appearance depends crucially on human intersubjectivity. It may not be taken for granted when dealng with other creatures. Even the objectivity of the 'information' in DNA is not independent of somatic and environmental factors. The extent to which it can be manipulated reliably by human beings depends on fortuitous constancy and control of such factors, even when we don't know what they are. Above all, it is information for the organism, which has been appropriated by the genetic scientist."

    I can't agree that it is unhelpful to point to the subjective side of information. While information, like isomorphism (or structure in general), must be considered a feature of the real world, both must also be asserted by agents. It is always "information according to so-and-so", and similarly with isomorphism, which is the identification of a pattern or relationship. The agent is the aspect missing from treatment in physics so far. I hesitate to call it 'intentionality' because that term has so much baggage in philosophy. Same with the term 'panpsychism'. The concept of intentionality or agency must be broadened to include agency within organisms and nervous systems, not just the agency responsible for the molar behavior of the creature. Similarly, it must include agency within what is presently considered inert matter. I suspect this is key to further advances in cosmology, and perhaps to the resolution of conundrums such as the apparent and highly improbable fine-tuning of the universe to life.

    cheers, Dan

    In regard to the article by Brukner and Zeilinger:

    "...interference fringes arise if and only if there is no possibility, not even in principle, to determine which path the particle took. And, most importantly, it is not relevant whether or not we care to take note of that information [i.e. path information?]. All that is necessary is whether or not the information is present somewhere in the universe. Only if such information is not present do interference fringes occur.

    Indeed, the most interesting situations arise if the path information is present at some point in time, but deleted or erased in an irrevocable way later on. Then, as soon as that information is irrevocably deleted, the interference fringes can occur again." [Č. Brukner & A. Zeilinger, Quantum Physics as a Science of Information, in 'Quo Vadis Quantum Mechanics?', edited by A. Elitzur, S. Dolev, N. Kolenda, (Springer, 2005), p48]

    This is an example of the kind of muddied thinking that can happen when information is objectified. The first statement is correct, although I'm not sure what "even in principle" can actually mean. The wording that betrays the inbuilt assumption regarding information is "deleted or erased". This type of thought would never occur in classical physics (which existed before computers). Image trying to delete the "path information" of a planet! What 'path information' must mean to be physically real is some observable physical trace or record resulting from the changing location of an object. An observable causal effect of some sort--the wake of a boat, for example. In terms of a planet, it might be an influence on the paths of other planets. Or, it could be a series of observations of apparent position, from which orbital position is calculated on the basis of (Newtonian) theory--in both cases in regard to some (artificial) reference frame. What would it mean to "delete" or "erase" such information? Does it mean to erase the path itself, the influences it had, or the human record of it? In the computer age, we are used to deleting information from files. We are not obliged to think about the correlated physical changes occurring in the computer hardware, the physical "path" of that information.

    It is a mystery to me what the last statement can mean. If information means causal effects (rather than stored bits), even if it were somehow possible to undo these effects that have already occurred, this would not rewind time and undo the path that was actually taken by a given particle. We can change the circumstance for future particles (by opening of closing the slit), but this has nothing to do with information, unless it is the information about the state of the slit.

    --Dan

    Dan,

    Too true. Observation is change.

    One of the sources of some of my insights come from complexity theory and its dichotomy of order and chaos, with complexity as the mediation. I have adapted it somewhat though. To me it is more order and energy. It is just that energy tends to interact with order/structure at its weak points. The crack where the water and grass come through. The splits in the bark where the tree expands. The Tunisian fruitseller setting himself on fire. The places most studied and observed are also the most rigid and formalized. It the places where there is less organization and rigid structure which are most open to change and the energies initiating it. Once a system becomes so completely formalized that it cannot accept change and the energy manifesting it, that it therefore cannot continue to grow, that it becomes a closed set and can only lose energy.

    The past is inherently ordered, while the future is inherently chaotic, yet the energy moves onto future events, as the structure of the past fades away. The present is that complex intermediation of energy and order. Energy moves to the future, as information moves to the past.

    More on Brukner & Zeilinger:

    "In order to obtain interference fringes, one has to erase the information carried by the [scattered] photon in an irrevocable way. That can best be done by detecting the photon, not in the image plane, but in the focal plane of the lens... [since] a point in the focal plane of a lens corresponds to an incoming momentum (or direction) on the other side of the lens. Thus it follows that registration of the photon in the focal plane projects the state of the scattered photon onto a momentum eigenstate which does not contain any position information. Therefore, once the photon is registered in the focal plane, all position information is gone and the corresponding electron interferes with itself." [Brukner & Zeilinger, op cit, p50] It is true that a photon registering in the image plane (for example on a photographic plate) gives position information only, and no momentum (direction) information; whereas, the same photon, if registered in the focal plane, would give direction information only, and no position information. (This is true whether you think of photons or wave fronts.) In either case, however, in being registered the photon is absorbed and has no further path! The part about projecting into an eigenstate is standard quantum mumbo jumbo to describe this optical situation. However, it subtly adds in the notion of information as a kind of substance "contained" in the state or "carried" by the photon. This substance is then supposed to have the causal power to prevent or allow interference, depending on its presence or absence. Information is being treated somewhat as heat was before the kinetic theory (i.e. 'caloric'). I submit that this is nonsense. --Dan

    Final remarks on Brukner & Zeilinger:

    "It has not escaped our attention that our way of reasoning also leads to new possibilities for understanding why we have quantum physics. i.e., for answering Wheeler's famous question: Why the quantum? Identifying systems with the information they carry, we note that information is necessarily quantized. One can have one proposition, two propositions, three propositions, etc., but obviously the concept of, say, √2 propositions is devoid of any meaning. Therefore, since information is quantized that way, our description of information, which is quantum mechanics, also has to be quantized." [Brukner & Zeilinger, op cit, p59] This reasoning simply begs the question (why the quantum?). Information is quantized by definition, because that is how it has been defined (e.g. by Shannon). To say that the world is quantized because we have defined it to be so is hardly a physical answer to the mysteries of the micro realm. It is simply one more idealist cop-out, attempting to reduce physical reality to human terms. --Dan

    5 days later

    Major propositions in physics connected with notion"the same"

    for example:

    1.Einstein's relativity of simultaneity. The same time doesn't exist...

    2 Heisenberg's uncertainty. The same time can't to measure....

    3.Pauli's exclusion principle. The same energetic level only one fermion....

    It seems to me very interesting.

    Somebody thought of that?

    7 days later

    James Gleick's quote, that "The universe computes its own destiny." is true. A more interesting observation is that it appears to take just as long to perform this "prediction" as it does for the events to unfold. This has a direct bearing on the question of determinism and free will. Absolute determinism states that free-will cannot exist, since, in principle, all events can be predicted before they happen. But that conclusion is based on a false assumption. In order to make such a prediction, one needs to possess more than just the equations of physics, one also needs to know all the initial conditions. But the information content, and hence the storage requirement for the latter is astronomically larger than the former. Nothing in the universe, including the universe itself, has a large enough memory capacity to store this amount of information "symbolically". But the universe can do it "non-symbolically", by merely being itself. In other words, it is an analog computer, not a digital one. And it is its own analog. It "predicts" all its future activity by simply doing it. Thus, the prediction and the event are one and the same thing. Consequently, the prediction can never occur before the event, whenever the event in question actually requires all the information content of the universe in order to make the prediction; and only the universe itself has the capacity to do even that.

    Dear Robert McEachern,

    You say, "Nothing in the universe, including the universe itself, has a large enough memory capacity to store this amount of information "symbolically". But the universe can do it "non-symbolically", by merely being itself. In other words, it is an analog computer, not a digital one. And it is its own analog. It "predicts" all its future activity by simply doing it. Thus, the prediction and the event are one and the same thing"

    I have said almost exactly the same thing a number of times, so of course I agree with you completely.

    Edwin Eugene Klingman

    6 days later
    19 days later

    Greetings Dan,

    I thoroughly enjoyed your essay. We agree on many arguments you make. I too have concluded we simply cannot know the truth of 'what is' the Universe. And compared this with knowing another person truly. We can only know ourselves and our measurements of 'what is'. Any attempts to model 'what is' I characterize as 'metaphysical' and argue will ultimately fail!

    And because we agree, I ask you to read my essay, "The Metaphysics of Physics", to see for yourself! In it, I have included a reference to you. Please comment and rate!

    Best wishes,

    Constantinos

    Hi Dan,

    I really liked your essay, especially how you go about drawing the distinction between data and information. Many physicists have long decried the misappropriation of the word 'quantum' by mystics, etc. Isn't today's misappropriation of the word 'information' quite ironic then? I hear you.

    - Shawn