To a certain point, yes, but wouldn't true randomness contain no information at all?Or if you're using an appropriate definition of information, the more random a system is the higher information content. So even closed systems would tend towards higher information content.
Whether the universe is an open or a closed system is unimportant for the matter at hand, because the systems we are currently talking about (cells) are definitely open.A choice is before us. Does one presuppose material necessity or contingency? Is the matter-space-time continuum infinite or finite?
If it is an open system, it exists contingently.
If it is a closed system, it may exist necessarily. I am left to believe that the matter-space-time continuum is an open system that exists contingently.
Well played. Just looked the definition up, and it turns out you're technically right. However, I'm not sure this definition is the form of intelligence we're talking about.It's not? That's funny because I pulled that exact word from the link you gave me. Definition #3, Information. So I guess that it IS the definition of intelligence.
I think the fetus-example works here.Can you give me just one example of information coming from non-intelligence that can be utilized by something of nonintelligence to bring it to intelligence?
No, it can be used by any mechanism that can read the information. Fax machines do this, and they are hardly intelligent.Information can only be utilized by intelligence.
If you define anything that can respond to stimuli as intelligent, then there is no non-intelligence.
Why don't you give me examples of objects that you would classify as non-intelligent?
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