(2021-10-07, 10:27 PM)David001 Wrote: I suspect the fault ultimately lies not with Stephenw, but with Luciano Floridi.
lol Even when Floridi is talking "stuff", he does so with elegant prose.
Let me stay on the path.
What is an information-based object? It is an analog to the meaning of the term -- physical object. A term hard to define as well, but with a deep innate understanding in the common sense. We just know that there is a kind of unity and we are ready to relate the parts and functions for usefulness. It will have substance and structure. It will be circumstantially in an environment with potential future interaction and carrying information about past interactions.
Calling a concept - what ITT uses as the causal structure - an information(al) object is natural. We have terms in language for all types of IO's such as a thought, an equation, a feeling and (used socially) an intention.
We just know what information objects (IO) are through all the terms of abstraction used to communicate them. As communication tools, they have their own science, Linguistics.
The idea here is that the evolution of information objects is as profitable to study as that of physical objects. Math has a deep knowledge-base of using these constructs and has a trail of how the logic is used to create equations and algorithms.
The implication here, is that subjective thoughts yield to objective analysis, just as does physical objects. Mind is moving these "objects" and changing their probable future states. These are measurable as to disputations and propensity, as to outcomes of behavior.
great article https://aeon.co/essays/materialism-alone...sciousness
Quote: Putting the perceiving subject back into physics would seem to undermine the whole materialist perspective. A theory of mind that depends on matter that depends on mind could not yield the solid ground so many materialists yearn for.
It is easy to see how we got here. Materialism is an attractive philosophy – at least, it was before quantum mechanics altered our thinking about matter. ‘I refute it thus,’ said the 18th-century writer Samuel Johnson kicking a large rock as refutation to arguments against materialism he’d just endured. Johnson’s stony drop-kick is the essence of a hard-headed (and broken-footed) materialist vision of the world. It provides an account of exactly what the world is made of: bits of stuff called matter. And since matter has properties that are independent and external to anything having to do with us, we can use that stuff to build a fully objective account of a fully objective world. This ball-and-stick vision of reality seems to inspire much of materialism’s public confidence about cracking the mystery of the human mind.
My wise-ass view is that Johnson didn't believe in information objects, because they weren't tacitly physical. On the other hand - the reality of a plan governing finances may have been an issue. Information objects have casual outcomes.
Quote: On 16 March 1756, Johnson was arrested for an outstanding debt of £5 18s. Unable to contact anyone else, he wrote to the writer and publisher Samuel Richardson. - Wiki