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6
The Nature of Information
The only meaningful way of interpreting the first category is to suppose that the
order was implicit in the initial state; hence, it is questionable whether information
has actually been generated. In the second category, the volume of ordering has
increased, but inevitably at the expense of more disorder elsewhere, because of the
physical exigencies of the copying process. 32 Note that copying per se does not lead
to an increase in the amount of information. The third category is of genuine interest,
for it illuminates problems such as that of the development of the zygote, in which
environmental information is given meaningful macroscopic expression, such that
we are indeed more complex than the zygotes whence we sprang.
Problem. Examine the proposition that the production and dissemination of copies
of a document reporting new facts does not increase the amount of information.
6.5
Summary
Information is that which removes uncertainty. It has two aspects: form (what we
already know about the system) and content, the result of an operation (e.g., a mea-
surement) carried out within the framework of our extant knowledge. Form specifies
the structure of the information. This includes the specification of the set of possible
messages that we can receive or the (design and fabrication of and way of using the)
instrument used to measure a parameter of the system. It can be quantified as the
length of the shortest algorithm able to specify the system (Kolmogorov informa-
tion). If we know the set from which the result of the measurement operation has to
come, the (metrical) content of the operation is given by the Shannon index (reducing
to the Hartley index if the choices are equiprobable). A message (e.g., a succession
of symbols) that directs our selection is, upon receipt, essentially equivalent to the
result of the measurement operation encoded by the message. The Shannon index
assumes that the message is known with certainty once it has been received; if it is
not, the Wiener index should be used.
Information can be represented as a sign or as a succession of signs (symbols). The
information conveyed by each symbol equals the freedom in choosing the symbol. If
all choices are a priori equiprobable, the specification of a sequence removes uncer-
tainty maximally. In practice, there may be strong syntactical constraints imposed
on the successive choices, which limit the possible variety in a sequence of symbols.
In order to be considered valuable (or desired), the received information must
be remembered (macroscopic information). Microinformation is not remembered.
Thus, the information inherent in the positions and momenta of all the gas molecules
in a room is forgotten picoseconds after its reception. It is of no value.
Information can be divided into three aspects: the signs themselves, their syntax
(their relation with each other), and the accuracy with which they can be transmitted;
32 The creation of disorder could be avoided by doing things perfectly reversibly, but that implies
doing them infinitely slowly and is, hence, scarcely of practical interest.