[Fis] [External]... miscellany

Pedro C. Marijuán pedroc.marijuan at gmail.com
Thu Feb 29 15:20:52 CET 2024


Dear All,

In the exchange below between Joseph and Lou, there is a comment: /"I 
repeat, concepts come along with percepts. Every percept you have is 
accompanied by concepts and by the possibility of new concepts that can 
inform it" /by Lou, that seems very adequate to reiterate by point on 
the underpinning of logics. First, concepts would be accompanied by a 
"shadow" of perceptions as well as by another germane shadow of 
"actions". The way our cerebellum contributes to organize the coherence 
between associated percepts & acts for our efficient stay in the world, 
is automatically translated to our assemblages of concepts and their 
sensori-motor associated shadows in language.  "True" is when an 
efficient closure can be achieved, versus "False" when the associated 
sensory-motor constellations do not match properly. This is the realm of 
natural logics, as expostulated  long ago by Aristotle. When this 
natural logics cross-fertilizes with our counting capability and with 
the invention of more and more abstract operations are added (with their 
subtle load of percepts/movements increasingly abstract as well), we 
land on the territories described by Karl and Lou. However, the extent 
to which the whole concepts, operators, algorithms, formal logics, etc. 
may approach nature's depths would have intrinsic and extrinsic limits. 
The intrinsic ones can be expanded via new abstract inventions... just 
to find new limits. This has been put very well by Lou and Carlos.

As for the extrinsic limits, Cosmology, the quantum and consciousness, 
as well as the "logics of life", represent perennial challenges. The 
"quantum consciousness", as discussed by Stuart conflating both realms, 
has been rarely discussed in this list (many years ago by von Baeyer and 
some isolated messages from Khrennikov). Indeed it would be quite timely 
to retake the theme one of these months. Cosmology too... as we now 
could count with Carlo Rovelli's possible contribution. Anyhow, excuse 
for the digression, going then to the classic book "La Logique du 
vivant" by Francois Jacob, we would not find a trace of the inner logics 
residing in the biological system (just dealing with history and his 
personal contributions to the mol.bio. revolution). What is the 
equivalent to the "well formed sentence" of syntax and the "true 
sentence" of natural logics? I was checking a series of fundamental 
points of biological information by J. Shapiro (2011)--quite 
unsatisfying, only going along the computer & informatic metaphor. In my 
own attempt to establish a parallel with the above comments on the 
cerebellum and our natural logics, addressed now to the "well formed" 
episodes of the cellular, and of the developmental, I confess the 
absence of sufficiently sound --information!-- principles... So, in my 
unfinished discussion with Joe Brenner on the biological sides of his 
LIR, Logic in Reality, I would like to concur with David Noble quite 
recent comment in Nature /"*sitting in uncertainty*, while working to 
make those discoveries, will be biology's great task for the 
twenty-first century"/ (vol. 626, 8 February 2024, pp. 254-5).

Best--Pedro
PS. I am putting in cc. to William Miller and František Baluška, 
inviting them, as they probably would respond far more meaningfully 
about the/logique du vivant/ theme--see their recent "The Sentient Cell" 
(2024).



El 29/02/2024 a las 10:41, joe.brenner at bluewin.ch escribió:
> Dear Louis,
>
> My entire approach could be summarized as trying to give meaning to 
> the expressions you just used - "actual instantiations" and 
> "accompanied by" referring to concepts and percepts. Some 
> considerations will apply to questions of chess, but as I believe you 
> imply, it is the mental processes behind the moves that are of 
> interest rather than their epistemic outcomes.
>
> Your last phrase, in my opinion, should read "the probability of new 
> concepts". Except for what are essentially pathological cases (all too 
> frequent, unfortunately), concepts are dynamic and can change.
>
> The principles of my logic do not apply to infinite sets, or to any 
> other equivalent mathematical (abstract) object. They are however 
> modeled by the Axiom of Choice, and I can repeat my argument if is of 
> interest.
>
> Finally, I would wish that Carlos, in his commendable restudy of 
> Being, might devote a bit or more of his energy to Becoming, to see 
> how that, also, would look today.
>
> Thank you and best wishes,
> Joseph
>
>
>     , "----Message d'origine----
>     De : loukau at gmail.com
>     Date : 29/02/2024 - 00:38 (E)
>     À : cgershen at gmail.com
>     Cc : stukauffman at gmail.com, fis at listas.unizar.es,
>     joe.brenner at bluewin.ch
>     Objet : Re: [Fis] [External] Re: " express matter and energy
>     in terms of information"
>
>     Dear Carlos,
>     When I write P = {n | n is a prime number} and assert the
>     existence of this set, I am asserting the existence of the CONCEPT
>     that the set expresses.
>     I am not asserting the existence in some realm of all of its
>     members. This is my way to handle the epistemology of set theory.
>     Set theory is a way to handle concepts. The concept of a prime
>     number is not problematical in relation to any questions of
>     existence.
>     The same is true of the concept 2^{N} = { S | S is a subset of the
>     natural numbers} and all the other sets that can be expressed in ZFC.
>
>     With this understanding it is fun to play with the fantasy that
>     the primes or the real numbers are “actually there” somewhere.
>     This is fun and helps in thinking about them.
>     When I prove that a specific knot is knotted it excites me to
>     realize that I have proved something about the infinity of
>     instantiations of this knot, only a finite number of which I shall
>     ever see. They all exist in potentia.
>
>     These rhetorical flourishes about potentia, possibles and adjacent
>     possibles are a similar incitement to fantasy as we get a feeling
>     about worlds unseen.
>     It is fun, but lets remember that just working with concepts and
>     percepts is the main line.
>
>     Some concepts, maybe most, are tied up with their realizations. So
>     if I am looking at Chess, I imagine the existence of all possible
>     chess games.
>     "All chess games” is a concept just like “all primes”.  That it
>     happens to be a finite set does not make it more accessible than
>     the infinity of the primes.
>     I can also indulge in the fantasy that I can “know” about “all
>     chess games” but the only way to know about it is through a big
>     sliice of experience with actual games and with
>     the hypotheses that people have made about general principles for
>     the game.
>
>     The same is true for mathematics. The nice thing about infinite
>     sets is that one has an open field for studying examples and
>     finding principles that govern these examples.
>     Concepts are not “just” abstractions. You need to find out how
>     they work in actual instantiations. I think the reason mathematics
>     works even though people could argue about potential versus actual
>     infinity forever, is that mathematics does not need to worry about
>     existence of anything except concepts and to hope that the arena
>     of concepts that it uses is consistent for the logic that is
>     adopted for dealing with them.
>
>     And again I repeat, concepts come along with percepts. Every
>     percept you have is accompanied by concepts and by the possibility
>     of new concepts that can inform it.
>     Best,
>     Lou
>
>
>>     On Feb 28, 2024, at 10:43 AM, Carlos Gershenson <
>>     cgershen at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>     About latent/Platonic information:
>>     I think we can agree that there are (infinite) primes that have
>>     never been written down. Do they exist? I think so, in a
>>     particular way. Perhaps, as it was mentioned, the difference can
>>     lie between information that has been observed, and that which
>>     has not. Like the tree falling in a forest with nobody there to
>>     listen (observe), I guess we can assume that ontologically the
>>     tree fell, even if epistemologically no observer can say anything
>>     about that. (I elaborate on this distinction between “absolute
>>     being” and “relative being” here
>>     https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://arxiv.org/abs/nlin/0109001__;!!D9dNQwwGXtA!RL08UOJZSmAxYqmbkWmqRMRYoUhhYd8O7euEfWzWimc8K_G6USU3sIrI1t2xsENw991LpnXCmzjGIuErl6kfiFTLMADt$ 
>>     <https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://arxiv.org/abs/nlin/0109001__;!!D9dNQwwGXtA!UTF2fg6sqvtQgQb_nuxoj5voh6N_Gw_p9V5p01SPx3bPOcoH28OuL7JzSKI1rsIztIhpoxXFZaIVGWmRwZo$> although
>>     this is from my undergrad years and for sure could be updated).
>>
>>     Gordana: Isn’t ChatGPT an observer? I mean, LLMs can be said to
>>     be trained through “observation".
>>
>>     Best wishes,
>>     Carlos
>>
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