Nice info, Ardipethecus. Notice that AiG plays the shell game when it comes to 'information'. They pick and choose what they will consider information and ignore anything else. Come to think about it, why are we surprised? That's the modus operendi for the professional creationists in general.
JEP: I resemble this. And, oh no. Another interesting topic. Ive got so much going right now that I cant get any work done in my studio, but I cant resist this one because all of us in here seem to think so much alike, just from different perspectives.
What's really frustrating is that we have a good, solid, unambiguous definition of "information", which they won't use because mutations *obviously* add information.
JEP: Mutations do not add information, they change information. And what you guys are discussing as Shannon information could technically be a correct term. But I think a better terminology would be Shannon-Weaver entropy:
http://www.ex.ac.uk/Psychology/docs/courses/2012/lundy/shannon.html
Yes. This is another area of thermodynamics. Claude Shannon picked up on one of the father of thermodynamics statements, Ludwig Boltzmann of the 1890s, in that entropy is the opposite of information. Shannon then took this astute observation to new levels.
Shannon proposed mathematically that loose information; that is, information that is not fixed such as info on a CD or printed on a book or document, will degrade as it is passed around unless you add energy to the system to stabilize it. Information entropy will increase.
I used to have some fun with my kids when I taught this in high school. I would write down a paragraph on a piece of paper and let the first kid in the class read it. I then grabbed the note and made her whisper the message to the kid in back of her. This would go all around the class to the last kid who would then write the message on the board. The results were always hilarious because the final message would be so degraded as to not even resemble the original. A funny thing would also occur. The final message would be longer. This seems to be an attempt for the information to use more words in attempt to communicate the correct original.
Shannon called this phenomenon the addition of noise.
I discovered a perfect example of this on the net. Its at altavista.com and is their translator. Im going to steal SEEBS short post and pass this information around through a few different languages. If Shannon was correct, and since this is loose information, this information should degrade rapidly as it is passed around increasing informational entropy. Here is the original post: What's really frustrating is that we have a good, solid, unambiguous definition of "information", which they won't use because mutations *obviously* add information. Thank Claude Shannon for this insight; it revolutionized several industries.
Here is English to Spanish, back to English, then English to French, French to German; and finally from the German back into English. Here is what we now have: définition nous de bonne d'une d'avons de que d'est de frustre de qui de vraiment de le los?What, solidly, d'"information de clair ", mutation de les de que de parce de pas de n'emploieront de qu'ils * évidentes * l'information ajoutent. Est par de pénétration de cette de Claude Shannon reconnaissant; IL industries de plusieurs d'un révolutionné?
Yes, this is actually English. But informational entropy has so increased that it is now just garbled non-sense. Informational entropy is at maximum as this no longer makes a lick of sense.
Now to genes. As this genetic information randomly mutates through the generations and genetic information is passed around, this information will tend to degrade. It finally so degrades that the genome is so disorganized it can no longer keep the organism alive. The organism then enters mutational melt down and goes into extinction. So much for evolution over time. Try devolution. Because that is what, in reality, actually happens. And we went from 33 words to 55 words. Theres your Shannon noise.