Is the universe created from an "informationally-based" substance?

How does science work? And what's all this about quantum mechanics?

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Flannel Jesus
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Re: Is the universe created from an "informationally-based" substance?

Post by Flannel Jesus »

seeds wrote: Wed Mar 30, 2022 9:10 pm _______

(Note: This thread is an off-shoot from the "Christianity" thread in the "General Philosophical Discussion" forum.)
uwot wrote: Wed Mar 30, 2022 11:23 am ...More interesting, to me at any rate, is what exactly you mean by "an "informationally-based" substance". You don't like the duck pond analogy, how about an old 45? The information on a record is in the groove; when you first drop the needle, there is no sound, because the groove is smooth; it carries no information. And then: Wop bop a loo bop a lop bom bom! The way I see things is that the substance comes first; be that a duck pond, a record or the stuff the universe is made of.
What I mean by suggesting that the phenomenal features of the universe are created from an "informationally-based substance," is partially derived from Heisenberg referring to the unmeasured (superpositioned) quantum realm as existing as some kind of raw "potentia" whose (ghost-like) constituent properties evolve according to Schrödinger's equation, which is loosely represented by this Wiki gif...

Image

I'm talking about a substance that apparently consists of waveform patterns that adjust (or rearrange) themselves at some deeper...

(Bohm's "Implicate"/inaccessible/"non-local")

...level of reality in a way that causes the substance to conform to whatever it is our measuring devices are looking for. And thus, in a way, our devices kind of "create the reality" they are looking for by somehow inducing the necessary restructuring of the waveform patterns that comprise Heisenberg's raw potentia.
Absolutely the universe is made of information in some way, and the solid material we experience feeling, touching, seeing in our every day life is a high-level facade over the evolution of information.

However, I think it's worth nothing about this last paragraph: "causes the substance to conform to whatever it is our measuring devices are looking for" -- our measuring devices are made up of the same information-based substances that they're measuring. Our measuring devices, and our bodies and our eyes, are also made up of electrons and photons and neutrons, which are part of (and themselves arguably a higher-level facade over) the information-based layer of reality.
uwot
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Re: Is the universe created from an "informationally-based" substance?

Post by uwot »

Scott Mayers wrote: Thu Mar 31, 2022 3:58 pmThe 'structure' of some organ like the brain that creates the conscious phenomena are 'cellular' logical machines that collectively permit consciousness as being based upon a particular set of energy exchanges of these atomic units (the cells) during some functional event. As such, the 'energy' when the neurons are active AND in sync, create the conscious phenomena but masks or ignores the physical structure it is dependent upon. The conscious state is a dynamic logic that rides over its relatively non-dynamic structure but does not require 'feeling' the structure it is dependent upon.

So although consciousness is dependent upon its physical sub-structure, our sense of being conscious does not have to have the identical structure it relies on because it is the logic that makes the sensation of consciousness.
As far as I can tell Scott, you have given a description of how brains and other structures work, without addressing what David Chalmers calls the hard problem. Medical science can peer into brains and watch them working, so yes, we can describe brains and their functions, but while I can see how "the 'energy'" or "the logic" creates the sensation, I don't see how they are the sensation.
Scott Mayers wrote: Thu Mar 31, 2022 3:58 pmFor example, we can create a calculator that can be structurally made of component 'cells' based upon silicon transistors. But the same calculation can be made from a calculator based upon 'cells' based upon electrical relays or vaccuum tubes. The information of some particular calculation acts as a particular 'conscious' experience that does not require depending upon its cellular components and thus represents a type of dualistic interpretation rationally.
So what is "information" in this example? It's a slippery term. In one sense a calculation such as 2+2=4 is information and it is independent of matter, but I don't see that acting as consciousness. I'm describing information as any feature on or in a medium, a ripple on a duck pond, or an excitation in a quantum field, but again, I don't see that as consciousness.
The weird thing is that consciousness is the only thing we know necessarily exists. It is tempting, in the spirit of parsimony, to infer that it is the only thing that actually exists. Having said that, it is one of the few temptations I've had much success resisting. I still think the most plausible explanation for the conscious experience of a material world, is that there's a material world out there, which somehow we, as conscious beings, are connected to in a way we don't understand.
Scott Mayers
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Re: Is the universe created from an "informationally-based" substance?

Post by Scott Mayers »

VVilliam wrote: Thu Mar 31, 2022 11:57 pm
Scott Mayers wrote: Thu Mar 31, 2022 8:13 pm
VVilliam wrote: Thu Mar 31, 2022 7:16 pm Assuming consciousness is emergent of brain function and did not exist prior to brains, is something aligned with belief rather than logic.
How?
FOr starters, ack of supporting evidence. What evidence there is, can also be disputed...
I think you have a ack of supporting etters. Maybe your response was just too long that you missed it?

First off, you DO understand that 'knowledge' implies 'belief' but that 'belief' does not imply 'knowledge'? So your response isn't helping clear anything up about your opinion one way or the other.
seeds
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Re: Is the universe created from an "informationally-based" substance?

Post by seeds »

uwot wrote: Thu Mar 31, 2022 8:31 am I'll start with this:
seeds wrote: Wed Mar 30, 2022 9:10 pmAre you not a dualist?
To be a dualist is to assert that there are two separate substances, in this case mind and matter. Granted it is intuitively compelling, so when you ask:
seeds wrote: Wed Mar 30, 2022 9:10 pmIn other words, do you not see any appreciable difference between the living, self-aware "agent" (the "I Am-ness") that sits at the throne of your consciousness, and that of the inanimate "stuff" that you (the living agent) call matter?
The answer is yes, of course I see a difference. The thing is, I have no idea how to explain life, let alone consciousness; but to believe that they are somehow divorced from matter and only imbue themselves in particular structures, in my view, is a leap of faith. I mean yeah, it's a possibility.
In no way do I expect you to accept any of my theory (nor am I insisting that I cannot be wrong).

However, in regard to the bolded line above, have you not understood any of my blatherings over the years of our debating on this site?

Again, I am not insisting that I cannot be wrong, but if what you are alluding to in your subsequent post...
uwot wrote: Thu Mar 31, 2022 10:30 am Frankly, I haven't ruled out Bishop Berkeley's hypothesis.
...is indeed a possibility, then the implication of Bishop Berkeley's (and my) hypothesis is that absolutely everything in the universe...

(from the fusion cores of the stars to the remotest and most insignificant mote of space dust)

...is literally alive because it is thoroughly saturated with the living essence of the Entity of which Berkeley's hypothesis is referencing.

So the idea of life and consciousness being "divorced" from matter is nothing that I subscribe to, and is almost the equivalent (in quantum theory parlance) of imagining the "wave" being divorced from the "particle."

(Continued in next post)
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seeds
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Re: Is the universe created from an "informationally-based" substance?

Post by seeds »

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(Continued from prior post)
uwot wrote: Thu Mar 31, 2022 8:31 am With that in mind, back to the top:
seeds wrote: Wed Mar 30, 2022 9:10 pmWhat I mean by suggesting that the phenomenal features of the universe are created from an "informationally-based substance," is partially derived from Heisenberg referring to the unmeasured (superpositioned) quantum realm as existing as some kind of raw "potentia" whose (ghost-like) constituent properties evolve according to Schrödinger's equation...
Right, well what I gather you to be saying is that the constituent properties are directed, by the power of thought. I get the hologram analogies, but just how close are they to what you believe is actually the case? How are the knobs fiddled?
How are the "knobs fiddled" when you assert your will over the holographic-like fabric of your own mind and call-forth the image of a brown basketball, for example, and then willfully cause it to morph into the image of the blue earth?

Furthermore, how are the "knobs fiddled" when a lucid dreamer willfully grasps the holographic-like substances of her own mind and creates the vivid and dynamic (almost "real" seeming) scene of a tropical island paradise, as is depicted in one of my illustrations?...

Image

The point is that, in principle (if not in any scientifically definable way), we can see how the "knobs are fiddled"...

(i.e., how the informationally-based substance of reality obeys the willful commands of consciousness)

...by simply looking into our own minds and observing how our wills grasp and manipulate our own mental holography.
seeds wrote: Wed Mar 30, 2022 9:10 pm And the point is that according to Bohr and Heisenberg's Copenhagen Interpretation, so-called "electrons" that exist in a state of superposition (in Heisenberg's "ghostly" state of potentia), have no specific properties (such as position or angular momentum, etc.) until a measurement is made.
uwot wrote: Thu Mar 31, 2022 8:31 am Yer know, the best analogy I can think of is if you scuff a rug. The rug being the universe and the kicking thereof a bit of energy, or information if you prefer. Enough of a kick will cause the rug to wrinkle, analogous to a particle. That wrinkle will probably occur close to where the rug is kicked, but it could occur anywhere.
You keep using analogies...

(rugs, records, and duck ponds)

...as being some sort of prerequisite (wrinkleable/wavable) medium that had to be in place before any sort of informational processes (i.e., wrinkles and waves) could emerge, yet you offer absolutely no explanation as to the ontological nature or origin of this mysterious precursory medium.

So, what is the "mysterious precursory medium" made of, uwot?

And, no, the word "stuff" isn't going to cut it.
uwot wrote: Thu Mar 31, 2022 8:31 am I know you like pictures so you can see what I mean here: https://popgunsbubblesandmotorbikes.blo ... -guns.html
Beautifully done, uwot!

Is that the makings of a new book, or an expansion of the earlier one?

(Continued in next post)
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Last edited by seeds on Fri Apr 01, 2022 11:05 pm, edited 1 time in total.
seeds
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Re: Is the universe created from an "informationally-based" substance?

Post by seeds »

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(Continued from prior post)
seeds wrote: Thu Mar 31, 2022 3:17 am Image
uwot wrote: Thu Mar 31, 2022 10:30 am Well look, the common perception since Einstein's 1905 papers has been that special relativity proves that the universe is not made of any sort of stuff. We all know that special relativity was in part inspired by the null result of the Michelson-Morley experiment. What that proved is that what appears to be empty space is not a static medium that the Earth and other bodies drift through. However, Einstein's own general relativity a decade later, is premised on the idea that space is made of some sort of stuff that has mechanical properties. Quantum field theory concurs; in essence particles are excited states of fundamental fields - information, in the sense that particles are irregularities in otherwise smooth duck ponds, records, scuffed up rugs, quantum fields, pick your analogy. So what I mean is that the blue wave *[in the above gif]* is not separable from the white background.
Yes, uwot, I completely agree with that last (bolded) sentence.

Indeed, it is something that I tried to bring to light in my "What is gravity?" thread, beginning with this post, here: viewtopic.php?p=463270#p463270
uwot wrote: Thu Mar 31, 2022 10:30 am I like the way Derek Leinweber of the University of Adelaide depicts empty space:
Image
I find it rather silly to call whatever is being depicted in that illustration as being a representation of "empty" space.

Nevertheless, I am able to visualize it as simply being an alternate way of expressing what I have been suggesting in my laser hologram illustrations,...

Image

...in that what appears to be "empty space" between the three objects in the hologram is, in truth, simply an "illusion" created by the interpenetrating (superpositioned/entangled) field of information depicted in the middle square of the illustration in which there is no separation or space between anything; just a seamless "oneness" of the, again, "informationally-based substance" from which the three-dimensional features of what we call "reality" are formed.
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Scott Mayers
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Re: Is the universe created from an "informationally-based" substance?

Post by Scott Mayers »

Edits complete. [WARNING]Wait. I reread what I wrote below and see errors in syntax and grammar that don't make sense. So while you can respond to this if you follow what I'm saying as is, but I will be editing it for better clarity. Thanks Will.
uwot wrote: Fri Apr 01, 2022 10:10 am
Scott Mayers wrote: Thu Mar 31, 2022 3:58 pmThe 'structure' of some organ like the brain that creates the conscious phenomena are 'cellular' logical machines that collectively permit consciousness as being based upon a particular set of energy exchanges of these atomic units (the cells) during some functional event. As such, the 'energy' when the neurons are active AND in sync, create the conscious phenomena but masks or ignores the physical structure it is dependent upon. The conscious state is a dynamic logic that rides over its relatively non-dynamic structure but does not require 'feeling' the structure it is dependent upon.

So although consciousness is dependent upon its physical sub-structure, our sense of being conscious does not have to have the identical structure it relies on because it is the logic that makes the sensation of consciousness.
As far as I can tell Scott, you have given a description of how brains and other structures work, without addressing what David Chalmers calls the hard problem. Medical science can peer into brains and watch them working, so yes, we can describe brains and their functions, but while I can see how "the 'energy'" or "the logic" creates the sensation, I don't see how they are the sensation.
I disagree with Chalmers' hard problem. But disagreeing isn't disproving, right. So....

I initiated most of my interest to seek a physics theory due to thinking about consciousness. The question I had begun on was "How is it that I can I sense anything distinctly in many different points of space simultaneously, like the separated activity of the neurons in the brain, given it would require a form of 'entanglement' for all the active ones involved in whatever 'consciousness' may be?" Adding to this, there is no 'local' point or points that consciousness exists at as Decartes presumed (his pituitary guess that I know you know).

When conscious, we feel the sensation of awareness as one Being, even if the activity is in isolated remote parts of the brain in any moment. But given this true, it implies that consciousness has to be related to the very activity, the energy of information exchange, and not the neurons' physical 'structure' it depends upon. It's the change of position of something that is felt, not the thing itself.

This activity is NOT completely independent if the all the neurons in the brain were equally active at any given moment. That would be inefficient use of energy (and would likely be hallucinogenic too). In other words, the initial sensations of consciousness begins when the particular cell is actively exchanging information when in some frequent shared behavior. Yet, since we have 'proof' of downtime, sleep or unconscious periods, in which we have no present sensation of conscious activity in the brain during these times, this proves DEFINITIVELY that the neurons themselves ARE able to be distinct phenomena from the energy it exchanges.

The neurons require distinct functional activity at different times. Sleep, for instance, closes the highways, so-to-speak and goes into different operating modes or alternative cyclic routines that are needed to 'fix' short term memory markers into longer term ones or remove unused ones.

I learned most of the basics of neurology and thus learned the structural logic that you'd presume is the 'soft problem'. That last paragraph is an example of different functional modes I learned from that.

NOW, ...I am a twin, something you and others don't know about me. And we are identical too. Thus, I thought, given I have the same kind of neurons as my twin, how am I unable to 'feel' him as I do with the rest of my own consciousness? Then I learned of the brain damaged patients, especially those with epilepsy, who often had their two halves of the brain separated in a major way. The patients seemed to have two distinct conscious realities and for some, the side that lacks the contemporary direct control can get frustrated at what it cannot do and literally expresses this using its domain of control.

For instance, a patient may see only the left part of their vision (active communicative side) where the other side sees the right part of vision for each eye. But the 'proof' for the patient of this distinction comes about when the subdominant communicating half begins using the fist of the arm it has power over to punch his opponent half's side of the head....attempting to get the attention of the other side along with any frustration it has in communicating unsuccessfully.

This suggests that a connection for energy exchange MUST exist for conscious states between the active neurons. YET we already established that the brain can have ANY part of the brain 'conscious' in which for EACH neuron involved, it CAN be 'off'. But to 'feel' simultaneous events like we can even if the inbetween neurons are not YET able to exchange their energy, this implies that the links do not have to exist at the instant we are feeling but EXPECTED to exchange AFTER the simultaneous event.

I heard of some experiments that suggested the brain knows some things AHEAD of our apparent consciousness of it and then....from physics on wall clocks, it was discovered that clocks of the same exact form or structure can have its pendulums set swinging initially random. But after a time, they move in sync as the energy exchange of the wall they are on affects each other until they are in sync, but for two clocks, they are off phase. This suggests that IF the phenomena of consciousness has a unique frequency of activity, the neurons get in sync during their waking. Once they are in sync, even though separate in space, the separate neurons, like the clocks are in a ready-state for activity. The phasic factor can represent their unique 'position' in a similar way that quantum mechanics interprets points in space as having 'probabilities' at specific points in space.

Thus, I concluded that consciousness requires...
(1) A set of distinct atomic structures in common, like how "elements" are represented by particular atoms of the same kind.

(2) A uniquely shared background frequency of potentially 'active' neurons 'ready' to be engaged. This means that the cellular function of the neurons could have multiple kinds of conscious states using different frequencies similar to tuning into a radio station. Each wavelength may not require a simple sinusoidal beat but could be complex like a drum pattern beat. Note that where (1) refers to similar structure, (2) refers to similar cyclic behavior, something that can be combined similar to General Relativity's treatment of time as just another 'static' dimension. We'll keep them separated here but just note that (1) is the static structure while (2) is the dynamic structure.

(3) A delayed connection or LINK between neurons that assures the exchange of the energy will occur a moment after it is felt. This is like requiring a road EXIST between two places in which different people at each place can predict the anticipated reality of the other at the exact same moment but must be confirmed as existing through the road between them some time after. It is like branch prediction in computing if you understand that.

[For my brother and I as twins, we used to be 'in sync' in behavior when in each other's presense and this "connection", though weaker than the literal space between neurons, permits the exchange to be met. We might respond identical to someone else's question to us by saying the same thing in the same way and pitch without preconsidering how to react. [instinctive]

The dynamic frequency of the neurons have to match its atomic parts in sync during this period. Then EACH neuron can 'anticipate' what some neuron at a relative uniquely distanct space 'should be' when neutral. Each neuron cannot CONTROL the other without the link formally communicating a moment later. The shorter the interval of any two neurons is, the more 'conscious' control they share and feel.

This is in essence ALL that it is. And I extended this later to all of physical reality. That is, electrons, for instance, should have some form of 'conscious' capacity between them all but require the same factors already mentioned above for neurons. Thus, the heart, as an organ, has its own 'consciousness, for instance. It may be 'dumb' compared to our brain's version, but it is logically capable of this behavior too. So we cannot EXCLUDE them. Our living 'conscious' state then is only an interface activity between the collection of cells that make up the body and its environment.

This may be hard for some to believe. But I am sufficiently confident in it. One requires some time to get used to it in their head but then can later intuitively understand it as you combine various different experiences together.

uwot wrote: Fri Apr 01, 2022 10:10 am
Scott Mayers wrote: Thu Mar 31, 2022 3:58 pmFor example, we can create a calculator that can be structurally made of component 'cells' based upon silicon transistors. But the same calculation can be made from a calculator based upon 'cells' based upon electrical relays or vaccuum tubes. The information of some particular calculation acts as a particular 'conscious' experience that does not require depending upon its cellular components and thus represents a type of dualistic interpretation rationally.
So what is "information" in this example? It's a slippery term. In one sense a calculation such as 2+2=4 is information and it is independent of matter, but I don't see that acting as consciousness. I'm describing information as any feature on or in a medium, a ripple on a duck pond, or an excitation in a quantum field, but again, I don't see that as consciousness.
The weird thing is that consciousness is the only thing we know necessarily exists. It is tempting, in the spirit of parsimony, to infer that it is the only thing that actually exists. Having said that, it is one of the few temptations I've had much success resisting. I still think the most plausible explanation for the conscious experience of a material world, is that there's a material world out there, which somehow we, as conscious beings, are connected to in a way we don't understand.
I think that it is essential to understand what I just explained. The description of the phenomena makes sense, literally, and doesn't require thinking in terms of the dualism of the religious form. However, it doesn't mean that I sufficiently expressed this in a way that couldn't be improved upon. Much of my thinking took many hours in meditative thought without a need to take notes at the time. I was also not concered about whether other people could be convinced. That needs political/social skills that I am less confident now to believe could be done.
Last edited by Scott Mayers on Fri Apr 01, 2022 10:19 pm, edited 7 times in total.
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VVilliam
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Re: Is the universe created from an "informationally-based" substance?

Post by VVilliam »

Scott Mayers wrote: Fri Apr 01, 2022 5:29 pm
VVilliam wrote: Thu Mar 31, 2022 11:57 pm
Scott Mayers wrote: Thu Mar 31, 2022 8:13 pm
How?
FOr starters, ack of supporting evidence. What evidence there is, can also be disputed...
I think you have a ack of supporting etters. Maybe your response was just too long that you missed it?

First off, you DO understand that 'knowledge' implies 'belief' but that 'belief' does not imply 'knowledge'? So your response isn't helping clear anything up about your opinion one way or the other.
Folk assume consciousness is emergent of brain function and did not exist prior to brains, and the assumption is something aligned with belief rather than logic.

The assumption also carries with it the belief that the universe is unfolding mindlessly....
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Re: Is the universe created from an "informationally-based" substance?

Post by Sculptor »

NO

If you think otherwise then the evidence ought to be obvious. Please furnish us with the evidence.
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Re: Is the universe created from an "informationally-based" substance?

Post by Atla »

Why do people always have to mix THIS particular interpretation of QM with THIS particular understanding/misunderstanding of information.
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Re: Is the universe created from an "informationally-based" substance?

Post by Scott Mayers »

Atla wrote: Fri Apr 01, 2022 10:55 pm Why do people always have to mix THIS particular interpretation of QM with THIS particular understanding/misunderstanding of information.
Are you referring to my posts responding to a side issue regarding consciousness? If so, what is your concern? If not, maybe reference who or which posts you're referring to. It would help narrow down what you might be responding to.
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Re: Is the universe created from an "informationally-based" substance?

Post by Atla »

Scott Mayers wrote: Sat Apr 02, 2022 7:08 am
Atla wrote: Fri Apr 01, 2022 10:55 pm Why do people always have to mix THIS particular interpretation of QM with THIS particular understanding/misunderstanding of information.
Are you referring to my posts responding to a side issue regarding consciousness? If so, what is your concern? If not, maybe reference who or which posts you're referring to. It would help narrow down what you might be responding to.
Skipped your posts, aren't you one of those people who can't tell the abstract from the concrete, so you are lost about what is real, and that's what gets you into philosophy?
The 'structure' of some organ like the brain that creates the conscious phenomena are 'cellular' logical machines that collectively permit consciousness as being based upon a particular set of energy exchanges of these atomic units (the cells) during some functional event.
Looks like an example of being unable to tell abstract from concrete. Functionalism, emergence, bet you also reify abstract information.
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Re: Is the universe created from an "informationally-based" substance?

Post by seeds »

Flannel Jesus wrote: Fri Apr 01, 2022 8:18 am Absolutely the universe is made of information in some way, and the solid material we experience feeling, touching, seeing in our every day life is a high-level facade over the evolution of information.
Yes, I can agree with that assessment.

However, as one who resides in the Berkeleyan camp, I like to think of the universe as being constructed from a highly ordered (and highly resolved) version of the same fundamental substance from which our dreams are constructed.
Flannel Jesus wrote: Fri Apr 01, 2022 8:18 am However, I think it's worth nothing about this last paragraph: "causes the substance to conform to whatever it is our measuring devices are looking for" -- our measuring devices are made up of the same information-based substances that they're measuring. Our measuring devices, and our bodies and our eyes, are also made up of electrons and photons and neutrons, which are part of (and themselves arguably a higher-level facade over) the information-based layer of reality.
You're preaching to the choir, brother.

And that is all part and parcel of the question as to why everything in the entire universe doesn't simply merge together and always exist as one big superpositioned field of information with no inherent means to transform (collapse) its ever-moving (ever-evolving) quantum waves into positionally-fixed, three-dimensional phenomena.

Hence, the reason why it is suggested that consciousness may be involved in the process in a way that is "loosely" similar to how the laser in the laser hologram...

Image

...explicates the three-dimensional objects from the patterns of information encoded in the photographic emulsion.

In other words, it is the conjoined relationship between consciousness and that of the fields of quantum information (working together in tandem) that (to borrow from the Kantian script) transforms "noumena" into "phenomena."
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Re: Is the universe created from an "informationally-based" substance?

Post by Flannel Jesus »

The concept of decoherence is one possible approach to why superpositions seem to apparently 'collapse' - they don't REALLY collapse, their state just decoheres from the other superpositioned states to such an extent that they can no longer interfere with each other.
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Re: Is the universe created from an "informationally-based" substance?

Post by VVilliam »

seeds wrote: Sat Apr 02, 2022 6:21 pm
Flannel Jesus wrote: Fri Apr 01, 2022 8:18 am Absolutely the universe is made of information in some way, and the solid material we experience feeling, touching, seeing in our every day life is a high-level facade over the evolution of information.
Yes, I can agree with that assessment.

However, as one who resides in the Berkeleyan camp, I like to think of the universe as being constructed from a highly ordered (and highly resolved) version of the same fundamental substance from which our dreams are constructed.
Flannel Jesus wrote: Fri Apr 01, 2022 8:18 am However, I think it's worth nothing about this last paragraph: "causes the substance to conform to whatever it is our measuring devices are looking for" -- our measuring devices are made up of the same information-based substances that they're measuring. Our measuring devices, and our bodies and our eyes, are also made up of electrons and photons and neutrons, which are part of (and themselves arguably a higher-level facade over) the information-based layer of reality.
You're preaching to the choir, brother.

And that is all part and parcel of the question as to why everything in the entire universe doesn't simply merge together and always exist as one big superpositioned field of information with no inherent means to transform (collapse) its ever-moving (ever-evolving) quantum waves into positionally-fixed, three-dimensional phenomena.

Hence, the reason why it is suggested that consciousness may be involved in the process in a way that is "loosely" similar to how the laser in the laser hologram...

Image

...explicates the three-dimensional objects from the patterns of information encoded in the photographic emulsion.

In other words, it is the conjoined relationship between consciousness and that of the fields of quantum information (working together in tandem) that (to borrow from the Kantian script) transforms "noumena" into "phenomena."
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As far as the evidence goes, the idea we are currently within some type of Holographic Experiential Reality Simulation isn't so far fetched as to be off the table...
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