On Tuesday, March 6, 2012 1:47:18 AM UTC-5, archytas wrote:
>
> The idea that information comes into being in a receiver sort of precludes 
>  the idea of radio. 


That still models information as an object. I'm suggesting that it doesn't 
'come into being' but rather comes into *a* being... if that being's body 
is equipped with the proper antenna and the being itself has the proper 
previous experience to make some sense out of it.

In the case of radio, we have no antenna to hear the vibration of the 
broadcast tower directly, but the receiver we are using does. The radio 
antenna imitates the tower, the tower imitates the amplifier, the amplifier 
imitates the microphone (or recorded microphone, computer chip, etc), the 
microphone imitates the vocal chords. We aren't hearing radio, we are 
hearing a speaker imitating vocal chord vibration - which means our inner 
ear is imitating vocal chords, and our neurons, in their way, are imitating 
the entire inner ear. It's not a model of 'information' or 'data', it's a 
concrete feeling that happens when the inner ear jiggles.
 

>  I know Wheeler said the Sun wouldn't radiate if there was nothing to 
> receive the radiation


Yes! I keep asking this question but nobody seems able to give me a 
straight answer:

"If I have two thermometers, one being hot and one being cold, and there is 
nothing else in the universe but a vacuum, will the temperatures average 
out the same eventually regardless of how far the thermometers are placed, 
or will some energy be lost (ie the total temperature of the two 
temperatures do not add up to 100% of the total of the average of the two) 
if you move them far apart?"

I suspect that the truth is that there is nothing lost in transit, and that 
no matter how far apart the two thermometers are, one cannot go down unless 
the other goes up, and that the total will always equal the same. 

, but this doesn't help me with the idea the Goon Show isn't on World 
> Service because I'm not listening to it or my radio is on in another room. 


We can't see how it works very well using our own experience as an example. 
Our ears and auditory cortex give us a particular range of 
whole-person-scaled experience. It doesn't mean that the tissues of our 
body or our entire skull as a whole can't pick up radio. Maybe sometimes 
our brain uses teeth as an ear? 
(http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/657/is-it-possible-to-hear-radio-broadcasts-through-your-teeth).
 

>  I accept my students may well get very different information from what I 
> intend or the actual content of what I'm saying-doing.  I don't  know what 
> the heat from dark matter is, but would no doubt warm my feet at its fire 
> if suitably adapted. 


I agree with Rupert Sheldrake that dark matter and dark energy are likely 
fictional. Their most amazing quality is to plug up the holes in a 
mechanistic worldview that we have found longer makes sense but refuse to 
consider the alternatives (http://vimeo.com/37792854  

Dispelling the Ten Dogmas of Materialism and Freeing the Spirit of Enquiry)

>  Molecules have managed to get into information exchange without us even 
> if we have found ways to explain some of this and change some of what 
> happens.  Affect one end of a molecule and different information appears at 
> the other end.  


Yes, everything in the universe has some kind of sense experience, 
independently of our own. In a single molecule, maybe it only occurs when 
something happens, or maybe it's every molecule of a certain type 
experiencing one vast macrocosmic experience.. who knows. We can't try to 
make sense of the experience of things quintillions of times more primitive 
than ourselves. I suspect there is a primordial sense of holding/receiving 
and releasing but that's only a guess. We can only know our version of 
something else's version. The only way we can know our native sense 
directly is internally.
 

> Jon Frum cargo cultists no doubt glean different information from a 
> convenient plane crash than I would.  We used to say it was all about 
> information exchange and the hard facts of observation were probabilities. 
>  Now we are 'detecting' stuff we can't sense as our 'reception devices' 
> become more driven by theory to ground the information in our understanding 
> - but our assumptions are still that the information was there before we 
> could get at it.  Maybe our understanding of what is 'out there' is still 
> too primitive and information is not something we can yet 'see' in 
> operation and will become a redundant concept.  
>

I don't think there is any information 'out there'. There is only 
experiences which enable us to make sense of out there 'in here'. Making 
sense of it means bridging the gap, connecting the dots, taking a leap of 
faith, making a guess, etc, and in our case it is happening on many levels 
by billions of entities at the same time. Educated guesses upon 
meta-educated meta-guesses. In this way the separation between the sense we 
make and the sense the phenomena makes is figuratively elided on one level. 
We are figuratively united with the thing, it becomes part of us, which I 
think is what under-standing means (comes from PIE root *nter, as in 
entero...a settling within). In another sense of course, we remain 
separated literally from everything about the phenomena which we do not, 
and cannot understand because we are ourselves and not a radio antenna. 
Think of information not as a positive object but as a negative hole in 
'everythingness'. Like scratching black wax to see the bright colors 
beneath. This is why precognition is not uncommon. We are informed through 
many scales of 'now', some large enough to seem like the future to our 
other, more tightly focused experiencers of smaller nows.


Craig

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