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Dear Terry and colleagues, <br>
<br>
I hope you don't mind if I send some suggestions publicly. First, thank
you for the aftermath, it provides appropriate "closure" to a very
intense discussion session. Second, I think you have encapsulated very
clearly an essential point (at least in my opinion): <br>
<br>
<i>"Among these givens is the question of what is minimally necessary
for<br>
a system or process to be interpretive, in the sense of being able to
utilize present<br>
intrinsic physical properties of things to refer to absent or<br>
displaced properties or phenomena. This research question is ignorable<br>
when it is possible to assume human or even animal interpreters as<br>
part of the system one is analyzing. At some point, however, it<br>
becomes relevant to not only be more explicit about what is being<br>
assumed, but also to explain how this interpretive capacity could<br>
possibly originate in a universe where direct contiguity of causal<br>
influence is the rule."<br>
<br>
</i>My suggestion concerns the absence phenomenon (it also has appeared
in some previous discussion in this list --notably from Bob's). You
imply that there is an entity capable of dynamically building upon an
external absences, OK quite clear, but what about "internal absences"?
I mean at the origins of communication there could be the sensing of
the internal-- lets call it functional voids, needs, gaps,
deficiencies, etc. Cellularly there are some good arguments about that,
even in the 70's there was a "metabolic code" hypothesis crafted on the
origins of cellular signaling. For instance, one of the most important
environmental & internal detections concerns cAMP, which means
"you/me are in an energy trouble"... some more evolutionary arguments
can be thrown. Above all, this idea puts the life cycle and its
self-production needs in the center of communication, and in the very
origins of the interpretive capabilities. Until now I have not seen
much reflections around the life cycle as the true provider of both
communications and meanings, maybe it conduces to new avenues of
thought interesting to explore...<br>
<br>
All the best!<br>
--Pedro<br>
<br>
Pedro C. Marijuan wrote:
<blockquote cite="mid55376A2E.2010302@aragon.es" type="cite">
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; ">
<pre>Dear FIS colleagues,
Herewith the comments received from Terry several weeks ago. As I said
yesterday, the idea is to properly conclude that session, not to restart
the discussion. Of course, scholarly comments are always welcome, but
conclusively and not looking for argumentative rounds. Remember that in
less than ten days we will have a new session on info science and library
science. best --Pedro<big><small>
<b>
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Retrospective comments on the January 2015 FIS discussion</b></small></big></pre>
<pre><small><big><small><big>Terrence Deacon (<a
class="moz-txt-link-abbreviated" href="mailto:deacon@berkeley.edu">deacon@berkeley.edu</a>)</big></small></big></small>
<small><big>During the bulk of my career since the early 1980s I studied brain</big></small>
<small><big>organization with a particular focus on its role in the production and</big></small>
<small><big>interpretation of communication in vertebrate animals and humans. One</big></small>
<small><big>core target of these studies was to understand the neurological</big></small>
<small><big>changes that led to the evolution of the human language capacity and</big></small>
<small><big>why it is so anomalous in the context of the other diverse</big></small>
<small><big>communication systems that have evolved. This work was largely</big></small>
<small><big>conducted using standard lab-based neuroscience tools—from axonal</big></small>
<small><big>tracer techniques, to fetal neural transplantation, to MRI imaging,</big></small>
<small><big>and more—and studying a diverse array of animal brains. Besides</big></small>
<small><big>evolutionary and developmental neuroscience, this path led me to</big></small>
<small><big>explore ethology, linguistics, semiotic theories, information theories</big></small>
<small><big>and the philosophical issues that these research areas touched upon.</big></small>
<small><big>Indeed, my first co-authored book was not on neuroscience but on the</big></small>
<small><big>design of the early Apple desktop computers. So I came at the issues</big></small>
<small><big>explored in my FIS essay from this diverse background. This has led me</big></small>
<small><big>to pose what may be more basic questions than are usually considered,</big></small>
<small><big>and to reconsider even the most unquestioned assumptions about the</big></small>
<small><big>nature of information and the origins of its semiotic properties.</big></small>
<small><big>I am aware that many who are following this discussion have a</big></small>
<small><big>career-long interest in some aspect of human communication or</big></small>
<small><big>computation. In these realms many researchers —including many of</big></small>
<small><big>you— have provided sophisticated analytical tools and quite extensive</big></small>
<small><big>theories for describing these processes. Though it may at first seem</big></small>
<small><big>as though I am questioning the validity of some of this (now accepted)</big></small>
<small><big>body of theory, for the most part I too find this adequate for the</big></small>
<small><big>specific pragmatic issues usually considered. The essay I posted did</big></small>
<small><big>not critique any existing theory. It rather explored some assumptions</big></small>
<small><big>that most theories take for granted and need not address.</big></small>
<small><big>I believe, however, that there remain a handful of issues that have</big></small>
<small><big>been set aside and taken as givens that need to be reconsidered. For</big></small>
<small><big>the most part, these assumptions don't demand to be unpacked in order</big></small>
<small><big>to produce useful descriptions of communicative and information</big></small>
<small><big>processes at the machine or interpersonal level. Among these givens is</big></small>
<small><big>the question of what is minimally necessary for a system or process to</big></small>
<small><big>be interpretive, in the sense of being able to utilize present</big></small>
<small><big>intrinsic physical properties of things to refer to absent or</big></small>
<small><big>displaced properties or phenomena. This research question is ignorable</big></small>
<small><big>when it is possible to assume human or even animal interpreters as</big></small>
<small><big>part of the system one is analyzing. At some point, however, it</big></small>
<small><big>becomes relevant to not only be more explicit about what is being</big></small>
<small><big>assumed, but also to explain how this interpretive capacity could</big></small>
<small><big>possibly originate in a universe where direct contiguity of causal</big></small>
<small><big>influence is the rule. Although, this may appear to some readers as a</big></small>
<small><big>question that is merely of philosophical concern, I believe that</big></small>
<small><big>failure to consider it will impede progress in exploring some of the</big></small>
<small><big>most pressing scientific issues of our time, including both the nature</big></small>
<small><big>an origins of living and mental processes, and possibly even quantum</big></small>
<small><big>processes.</big></small>
<small><big>In this respect, my exposition was not in any respect critical of other</big></small>
<small><big>approaches but was rather an effort to solicit collaboration in digging</big></small>
<small><big>into issues that have —for legitimate pragmatic reasons— not been a</big></small>
<small><big>significant focus of most current theoretical analysis. I understand why</big></small>
<small><big>some readers felt that the whole approach was peripheral to their current</big></small>
<small><big>interests. Or who thought that I was re-opening debates that had long-ago</big></small>
<small><big>been set aside. Or who just thought that I was working at the wrong level,</big></small>
<small><big>on the conviction that the answer to such questions lies in other realms, </big></small>
<small><big>e.g. quantum theories or panpsychic philosophies. To those of you who fell</big></small>
<small><big>into these categories, I beg your indulgence.</big></small>
<small><big>The issues involved are not merely of philosophical interest. They are of</big></small>
<small><big>critical relevance to understanding biological and neurological information.</big></small>
<small><big>So if there are any readers of this forum who are interested in the issue </big></small>
<small><big>of the whether reference and significance are physically explainable irrespective</big></small>
<small><big>of human subjective observation, and who have been quietly reflecting on my</big></small>
<small><big>proposals, I would be happy to carry on an email dialogue outside of</big></small>
<small><big>this forum.</big></small>
<small><big>For the rest, thank you for your time, and the opportunity to present</big></small>
<small><big>these ideas.</big></small>
<small><big>Sincerely, Terrence Deacon (<a
class="moz-txt-link-abbreviated" href="mailto:deacon@berkeley.edu">deacon@berkeley.edu</a>)</big></small>
<small><big>-- </big></small>
<small><big>Professor Terrence W. Deacon</big></small>
<small><big>University of California, Berkeley</big></small>
</pre>
<small><br>
</small><br>
<small><br>
</small>
<pre class="moz-signature" cols="72"><small>--
-------------------------------------------------
Pedro C. Marijuán
Grupo de Bioinformación / Bioinformation Group
Instituto Aragonés de Ciencias de la Salud
Centro de Investigación Biomédica de Aragón (CIBA)
Avda. San Juan Bosco, 13, planta X
50009 Zaragoza, Spain
Tfno. +34 976 71 3526 (& 6818)
<a class="moz-txt-link-abbreviated"
href="mailto:pcmarijuan.iacs@aragon.es">pcmarijuan.iacs@aragon.es</a>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="http://sites.google.com/site/pedrocmarijuan/">http://sites.google.com/site/pedrocmarijuan/</a>
-------------------------------------------------
</small></pre>
</blockquote>
<br>
<br>
<pre class="moz-signature" cols="72">--
-------------------------------------------------
Pedro C. Marijuán
Grupo de Bioinformación / Bioinformation Group
Instituto Aragonés de Ciencias de la Salud
Centro de Investigación Biomédica de Aragón (CIBA)
Avda. San Juan Bosco, 13, planta X
50009 Zaragoza, Spain
Tfno. +34 976 71 3526 (& 6818)
<a class="moz-txt-link-abbreviated" href="mailto:pcmarijuan.iacs@aragon.es">pcmarijuan.iacs@aragon.es</a>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://sites.google.com/site/pedrocmarijuan/">http://sites.google.com/site/pedrocmarijuan/</a>
-------------------------------------------------
</pre>
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