Guy Threepwood wrote:
Divine Insight wrote:
Guy Threepwood wrote:
Id' say you inadvertently proved God:
Because creative intelligence is the only phenomena we know of, which can
transcend entropy,
create new systems, achieve what nature alone never can
Sorry, but it's not even possible to have a memory without entropy.
That's true, we are all
subject to entropy, I am getting old enough to know that. I even forgot it was trash day yesterday.. or did I??
Your claim that creative intelligence transcends entropy has no merit.
Creative intelligence can
create. truly new systems rather than simply react to them. Because it can operate according to
anticipation of future consequences
Everything in nature ultimately boils down to information and information systems. There is only one known source for these systems. Not to say chance is impossible, but other than being unverified, it gets mathematically problematic..
There are actually extreme problems with making the unverified assumption that abstract mathematics could somehow actually exist in some kind of mystical or spiritual "Platonic World".
Especially if you want to speak about "
Creativity". If all mathematical numbers are said to already "
exist", then nothing new could ever be "
created".
The reason is quite simply. Everything can ultimately be reduced to being described as a binary number. Even your entire physical body and brain configuration right down to the very thought you are having at this moment can be reduced to a number. A number that would then necessarily need to have "always existed" even before you were ever born.
This is easy to demonstrate with something as simple as a finite digital camera.
Let's consider a camera that stores images as 1 megabyte. This is 1 million bytes of information. This can represent any number from 0 to 2^(10^6).
The decimal number given by 2^(10^) is too big to write out, but if you'd like to write it out it would be a 1 with a million zeros after it.
No ever single integer number between 0 and (1 with a million zeros written after it) would represent a different photograph in this camera.
Also note that there is nothing you cannot use this camera to take a picture of. At least within the visible light spectrum. In other words, anything that you will ever see in your entire life this camera could be used to take its photo.
Not only this, but this camera will necessarily also be able to take a photo of countless things that you will never see. In fact, this camera must also be able to take pictures of countless things that never will exist.
I keep using the term "
countless" but obviously this camera can only take a finite number of photos so it's technically wrong to say that there are countless images this camera could take. None the less this camera must necessarily be able to take a photo of anything that could ever produce a visible light image. Therefore there cannot exist anything in reality that this camera could not take a picture of.
In other words, if you take your camera and go off into nature and find a bluejay and redbird perched on the horns of an albino deer and want to take a picture of this rare event, you're camera cannot complain that it doesn't have a "
number" available that will describe that image perfectly. In other words, the number that describes this seen must necessarily already exist somewhere in the list of integers between 0 and (1 with a million zeros after it).
In other words, if you knew the correct number you could just type that number into your camera and lo and behold an image of an albino deer with a bluejay and redbird perched on its horns would appear on your display. It would have to!
And that number has to already exist! Somewhere between 0 and 2(10^6) there must already exist a number that describes this picture in the format this camera was designed to use. Otherwise you wouldn't be able to take this picture. When you came upon this scene and when to snap the shot, your camera would need to display an error message (Sorry no number exists for that scene)
But that NEVER HAPPENS! Cameras don't even need to be programmed to do that because those numbers necessarily already exist.
But now you can see that once you allow that all number actually "exist" in some sort of imaginary spiritual or Platonic world you run into the problem that "Creativity" can never exist. How could it? You could never create anything that hasn't already been accounted for.
So to even allow that an abstract Platonic mathematical world exists already demands that creativity could never exist.
Yet here you are trying suggest that "chance" would somehow be mathematically problematic.
Well, if you hold mathematics up as somehow trumping reality,
(i.e. representing something beyond reality as in an imaginary pure Platonic supernatural world), then you can't claim that "Creativity" could ever be possible.
If mathematics exists in a purely Platonic way, then extreme determinism is all that could ever exist and nothing "
new" could ever be "
created".