the fur coat . . . . .{whoops; I'd left that phrase in my reply screen hours ago to remind me to come back to your metaphor. Later.}
Soupie, can you cite a formal explanation or description of this 'pattern of information'? What I've been looking for (for more than a hundred pages here and in many papers cited along the way) is a definition of 'information' that thinkers in science, philosophy, and other disciplines can agree upon. My sense of the essential role of information in the proliferation of the universe is that it originates in the quantum substrate (but drawing information from the zero point field, with apologies to marduk) and also having and generating its own energy, thus its proliferation of exchanges of information between and among quantum systems leading -- through increasingly complex and integrated systems -- to the production of fields, forces, and macro objects [planets, galaxies] in the natural world. {Any clarifications will be much appreciated.} Out of this complex interrelation of 'information' life is ultimately produced and then, in my view, protoconsciousness, consciousess, and mind. It seems to me that what happens in the evolution of the universe and of species arises in the expansion and evolution of information itself. It also seems to me that whatever information is, it is enormously productive, even inventive.
Except for us on earth (so far as we know) we are alone in developing a highly complex form of consciousness comprising many layers of information and out of it developing minds that can explore these layers, explore the tangible and visible world, and even reason our way to theorizing the nature of life, mind, and universe. Both complex consciousness and the flowering of mind have been required to produce all the works of art, culture, science, philosophy, and ethical thinking of which our history is the evidence. So it seems to me that the question we pursue here is not only what consciousness is and how it comes into existence in the world but also what should we do with our consciousness? What obligations are laid upon us by virtue of what we can understand, think, and do?
The above is just a way of expressing the viewpoint that 'information' so far as it's defined [?] and understood [?] in nature and mind is not equivalent to, nor can it be said to constitute, consciousness and mind and the works of mind for me. I also think that the energy required for active presence to the world and to others through conscious attendance to the world, while reliant on energy taken into and used by the body and brain, is not sufficient to account for the creativity of the mind -- which in my opinion draws energy from within itself in the inspiration it draws from its embodied presence to and attachments with the palpable world and with others we interact with. Phenomenology is a philosophy and method of inquiry into the experienced world -- the world as we and other creatures live and act in it, variously comprehend it, and change it -- and so is relevant and indeed necessary for obtaining answers to all the questions raised in these paragraphs.
Yes. But it's important to note that consciousness is not constituted of the neurons, but of the pattern of information neurons create. Or at least that's the hypothesis of the information philosophy of mind.
It's a subtle, but important, difference.
Soupie, can you cite a formal explanation or description of this 'pattern of information'? What I've been looking for (for more than a hundred pages here and in many papers cited along the way) is a definition of 'information' that thinkers in science, philosophy, and other disciplines can agree upon. My sense of the essential role of information in the proliferation of the universe is that it originates in the quantum substrate (but drawing information from the zero point field, with apologies to marduk) and also having and generating its own energy, thus its proliferation of exchanges of information between and among quantum systems leading -- through increasingly complex and integrated systems -- to the production of fields, forces, and macro objects [planets, galaxies] in the natural world. {Any clarifications will be much appreciated.} Out of this complex interrelation of 'information' life is ultimately produced and then, in my view, protoconsciousness, consciousess, and mind. It seems to me that what happens in the evolution of the universe and of species arises in the expansion and evolution of information itself. It also seems to me that whatever information is, it is enormously productive, even inventive.
Except for us on earth (so far as we know) we are alone in developing a highly complex form of consciousness comprising many layers of information and out of it developing minds that can explore these layers, explore the tangible and visible world, and even reason our way to theorizing the nature of life, mind, and universe. Both complex consciousness and the flowering of mind have been required to produce all the works of art, culture, science, philosophy, and ethical thinking of which our history is the evidence. So it seems to me that the question we pursue here is not only what consciousness is and how it comes into existence in the world but also what should we do with our consciousness? What obligations are laid upon us by virtue of what we can understand, think, and do?
The above is just a way of expressing the viewpoint that 'information' so far as it's defined [?] and understood [?] in nature and mind is not equivalent to, nor can it be said to constitute, consciousness and mind and the works of mind for me. I also think that the energy required for active presence to the world and to others through conscious attendance to the world, while reliant on energy taken into and used by the body and brain, is not sufficient to account for the creativity of the mind -- which in my opinion draws energy from within itself in the inspiration it draws from its embodied presence to and attachments with the palpable world and with others we interact with. Phenomenology is a philosophy and method of inquiry into the experienced world -- the world as we and other creatures live and act in it, variously comprehend it, and change it -- and so is relevant and indeed necessary for obtaining answers to all the questions raised in these paragraphs.
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