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Objet : Re: [Fis] TR: Principles of IS
Dear list,
As Floridi points out in his Information. Oxford: Oxford University Press,
2010. A volume for the Very Short Introduction series. data is often taken to
be information. If so, then the below distinction is somewhat arbitrary. It
Dear list,
As Floridi points out in his Information. Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 2010. A volume for the Very Short Introduction series. data is
often taken to be information. If so, then the below distinction is
somewhat arbitrary. It may be useful or not. I think that for some
circumsta
Le 30/09/2017 à 08:38, Christophe Menant a écrit :
1) The "increasing complexity from the Big Bang to us humans" and this
increasing complexity is local structuration founded on the
functioning of non-isolated systems which use information as in Benard
cells. Is it necessary to explain ?
2) Y
0
À : christophe.men...@hotmail.fr
Cc : Foundation of Information Science
Objet : Re: [Fis] TR: Principles of IS
Dear Christophe and FIS Colleagues,
I agree with idea of meaning.
The only what I would to add is the next:
There are two types of reflections:
1. Reflections without meaning called D
Dear Christophe and FIS Colleagues,
I agree with idea of meaning.
The only what I would to add is the next:
There are two types of reflections:
1. Reflections without meaning called DATA;
2. Reflections with meaning called INFORMATION.
Friendly greetings
Krassimir
--
Dear FISers,
A hot discussion indeed...
We can all agree that perspectives on information depend on the context.
Physics, mathematics, thermodynamics, biology, psychology, philosophy, AI, ...
But these many contexts have a common backbone: They are part of the evolution
of our universe and of