Pragmatic Semiotic Information • 1
•
http://inquiryintoinquiry.com/2024/03/03/pragmatic-semiotic-information-1/
All,
Information • What's it good for?
The good of information is its use in reducing our uncertainty
about an issue which comes before us. But uncertainty comes
in many flavors and so the information which serves to reduce
uncertainty can be applied in several ways. The situations of
uncertainty human agents commonly find themselves facing have
been investigated under many headings, literally for ages, and
the categories subtle thinkers arrived at long before the dawn
of modern information theory still have their uses in setting
the stage of an introduction.
Picking an example of a subtle thinker almost at random, the
philosopher‑scientist Immanuel Kant surveyed the questions of
human existence within the span of the following three axes.
• What's true?
• What's to do?
• What's to hope?
The third question is a bit too subtle for the present frame
of discussion but the first and second are easily recognizable
as staking out the two main axes of information theory, namely,
the dual dimensions of “information” and “control”. Roughly the
same space of concerns is elsewhere spanned by the dual axes of
competence and performance, specification and optimization, or
just plain knowledge and skill.
A question of what's true is a “descriptive question” and
there exist what are called “descriptive sciences” devoted
to answering descriptive questions about any domain of
phenomena one might care to name.
A question of what's to do, in other words, what must be done
by way of achieving a given aim, is a “normative question” and
there exist what are called “normative sciences” devoted to
answering normative questions about any domain of problems
one might care to address.
Since information plays its role on a stage set by uncertainty,
a big part of saying what information is will necessarily involve
saying what uncertainty is. There is little chance the vagaries
of a word like “uncertainty”, given the nuances of its ordinary,
poetic, and technical uses, can be corralled by a single pen, but
there do exist established models and formal theories which manage
to address definable aspects of uncertainty and these do have enough
uses to make them worth looking into.
Regards,
Jon
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