- May 25, 2007
- 37
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- Faith
- Atheist
- Marital Status
- In Relationship
- Politics
- US-Democrat
I, Frish, cannot take credit for these thoughts, they came from my friend Thinkenstein.
He's a hermit who lives on the top of a rainforested mountain in Puerto Rico.
And, he's an inventor, musician, plumber, carpenter, farmer, machine tool user, architect, sculptor, engineer, mason, etc. etc. etc.
Here's his story INDEX
and here: Thinkenstein
And one of my stories showing off his geodesic dome the built over the shed he lived in without running water or electricity and 1/2 mile from water, down the hill and back up the next...for 8 years!
Second Annual Pilgrimage to Thinkenstein's Casa and Cave July 2011
Please do comment, almost every word here is Thinks, I just agree wholeheartedly.
(As I re-read this, I've put in some comments, and reordered two lines. Did not change one word Thinkenstein shared with me, in 2005.)
_______
NO INTELLIGENT CREATOR -- intro
There is much warfare among men, and one of the main polarizing forces found in many conflicts is religion. The line of reasoning will help lead us toward world peace by eliminating this polarizing force. [Thinkenstein has good motivations, but is unrealistic, as we all know, the faithful will continue to be faithful, regardless of logic or argument presented...] I realize that you, as a religious person, will resist changing your beliefs, but please give this some thought. Sooner or later this idea is something that all religions will have to confront. Discuss it among your friends. It is not necessary to believe in a god to lead a moral life. [It's a little early in the argument to introduce that particular fact.]
Information needs a vehicle:
All intelligent beings process information and are capable of using memory, which is the storage of information for future access. All information is encoded on a physical vehicle of either matter or energy. [Two sentencesnipped and placed below, it was the conclusion, a little early]
An example of information would be a story that is encoded in written words on the pages of a book. The book is the vehicle for the information and has a tangible physical presence. The information does not. You can not see or touch the story. Even though information does not have a tangible physical presence, it can influence the physical world. Religious beliefs, for example, can influence how we behave, and are responsible for the effects of that behavior. Crusades and jihads are fought for such beliefs.
Information can be encoded for transmission on a traveling vehicle such as light or radio waves, or on waves such as sound waves that travel through water or air. For information to be accessible to a user at a later time, however, the vehicle can not be traveling faster than the user is. To permit memory, the physical vehicle has to be able to hold a coded pattern and stay where the user can find it later.
For all practical purposes, the solid state of matter is the only state of matter that meets the prerequisites for memory. It can hold a pattern that stores information, and it does not travel away from the user. Some examples of memory storage vehicles would be a book, a brain, a computer CD, or DNA that encodes genetic information. All of these use the solid state of matter.
Except for sound waves which can travel through them, liquids and gasses are not suitable vehicles for encoding information. Unlike solids, their molecules are in random motion. Any pattern encoded on them is lost when their molecules move. A message in alphabet soup is lost when the soup is stirred.
Information is not encoded in patterns on the entire physical universe. Very few physical objects are actually encoded with information. A rock, for example, is not encoded with information, nor is a cloud.
Potential Information:
Some people argue that all matter “has” information, which is whatever we observe about the physical world around us. I would say that it is only potential information, and it is our brains that create the actual information about such things. For example, to say that an object has a temperature, 98 degrees Fahrenheit, which qualifies as information about the object, we have to realize that numbers, degrees, and the Fahrenheit scale are all inventions of man, as is the more abstract concept of temperature. That information was not transmitted to us from the object. We created it.
Everything in the universe is related, if in no other way than by distance. There are an infinite number of information statements that can be said about any object in regard to its distance from an infinite number of points in space, but that information is not stored on the object, or transmitted to us from the object. Our brains create that information about the object.
Only encoded information qualifies as information and it did not exist in the physical universe before the beginning of life. Something similar to DNA was probably the first sign of life and also the first sign of encoded information. [To describe it simply, life is self replicating molecules, it is organized and contains information to replicate itself.] As life evolved and got more complex, brains eventually evolved, which allowed new kinds of information to be stored in neuron network patterns. The human brain then created writing and other kinds of code, which have blossomed into this information age.
There are many religions, and many conflicting beliefs among them. If there is an objective truth, no more than one of them can be 100% correct, and all of them can be wrong. The nature of information shows how no intelligent god could have created the universe. The universe is prerequisite to intelligence..
[from the snipped section above]
If God created the physical world, which is prerequisite for the use of information, then he could not have used information and been intelligent when he created it.
If God is intelligent, he did not create the physical universe, since the physical universe is a prerequisite for intelligence.
He's a hermit who lives on the top of a rainforested mountain in Puerto Rico.
And, he's an inventor, musician, plumber, carpenter, farmer, machine tool user, architect, sculptor, engineer, mason, etc. etc. etc.
Here's his story INDEX
and here: Thinkenstein
And one of my stories showing off his geodesic dome the built over the shed he lived in without running water or electricity and 1/2 mile from water, down the hill and back up the next...for 8 years!
Second Annual Pilgrimage to Thinkenstein's Casa and Cave July 2011
Please do comment, almost every word here is Thinks, I just agree wholeheartedly.
(As I re-read this, I've put in some comments, and reordered two lines. Did not change one word Thinkenstein shared with me, in 2005.)
_______
NO INTELLIGENT CREATOR -- intro
There is much warfare among men, and one of the main polarizing forces found in many conflicts is religion. The line of reasoning will help lead us toward world peace by eliminating this polarizing force. [Thinkenstein has good motivations, but is unrealistic, as we all know, the faithful will continue to be faithful, regardless of logic or argument presented...] I realize that you, as a religious person, will resist changing your beliefs, but please give this some thought. Sooner or later this idea is something that all religions will have to confront. Discuss it among your friends. It is not necessary to believe in a god to lead a moral life. [It's a little early in the argument to introduce that particular fact.]
Information needs a vehicle:
All intelligent beings process information and are capable of using memory, which is the storage of information for future access. All information is encoded on a physical vehicle of either matter or energy. [Two sentencesnipped and placed below, it was the conclusion, a little early]
An example of information would be a story that is encoded in written words on the pages of a book. The book is the vehicle for the information and has a tangible physical presence. The information does not. You can not see or touch the story. Even though information does not have a tangible physical presence, it can influence the physical world. Religious beliefs, for example, can influence how we behave, and are responsible for the effects of that behavior. Crusades and jihads are fought for such beliefs.
Information can be encoded for transmission on a traveling vehicle such as light or radio waves, or on waves such as sound waves that travel through water or air. For information to be accessible to a user at a later time, however, the vehicle can not be traveling faster than the user is. To permit memory, the physical vehicle has to be able to hold a coded pattern and stay where the user can find it later.
For all practical purposes, the solid state of matter is the only state of matter that meets the prerequisites for memory. It can hold a pattern that stores information, and it does not travel away from the user. Some examples of memory storage vehicles would be a book, a brain, a computer CD, or DNA that encodes genetic information. All of these use the solid state of matter.
Except for sound waves which can travel through them, liquids and gasses are not suitable vehicles for encoding information. Unlike solids, their molecules are in random motion. Any pattern encoded on them is lost when their molecules move. A message in alphabet soup is lost when the soup is stirred.
Information is not encoded in patterns on the entire physical universe. Very few physical objects are actually encoded with information. A rock, for example, is not encoded with information, nor is a cloud.
Potential Information:
Some people argue that all matter “has” information, which is whatever we observe about the physical world around us. I would say that it is only potential information, and it is our brains that create the actual information about such things. For example, to say that an object has a temperature, 98 degrees Fahrenheit, which qualifies as information about the object, we have to realize that numbers, degrees, and the Fahrenheit scale are all inventions of man, as is the more abstract concept of temperature. That information was not transmitted to us from the object. We created it.
Everything in the universe is related, if in no other way than by distance. There are an infinite number of information statements that can be said about any object in regard to its distance from an infinite number of points in space, but that information is not stored on the object, or transmitted to us from the object. Our brains create that information about the object.
Only encoded information qualifies as information and it did not exist in the physical universe before the beginning of life. Something similar to DNA was probably the first sign of life and also the first sign of encoded information. [To describe it simply, life is self replicating molecules, it is organized and contains information to replicate itself.] As life evolved and got more complex, brains eventually evolved, which allowed new kinds of information to be stored in neuron network patterns. The human brain then created writing and other kinds of code, which have blossomed into this information age.
There are many religions, and many conflicting beliefs among them. If there is an objective truth, no more than one of them can be 100% correct, and all of them can be wrong. The nature of information shows how no intelligent god could have created the universe. The universe is prerequisite to intelligence..
[from the snipped section above]
If God created the physical world, which is prerequisite for the use of information, then he could not have used information and been intelligent when he created it.
If God is intelligent, he did not create the physical universe, since the physical universe is a prerequisite for intelligence.