@riley While your argument seems complex it also seems to contradict my little experience using AI. While generally it is not very useful, it has proven helpful to me by giving me key terms I can then search for while trying to learn about concepts I have no idea about to begin with. I believe these key terms and connections that I can later "verify or disprove" are useful pieces of information.
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pitagor@mastodon.social
@pitagor@mastodon.social
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The notion of a broken clock being sometimes right is based on a gross misunderstanding of what information is. -
The notion of a broken clock being sometimes right is based on a gross misunderstanding of what information is.@riley Also, you mentioned that it would be too complicated to describe how information is different from mathematical proofs even though these usually reveal both the statement it's trying to prove but some of its connections to other concepts. If anything, aren't proof jammed packed with information? What is the definition of information for these calculations?
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The notion of a broken clock being sometimes right is based on a gross misunderstanding of what information is.@riley Could you elaborate more on the notion of "uncertainty volume" you speak of? How do you measure these volumes or the changes in them without a well defined space of information (we don't know what we don't know nor how much we don't know to begin with)?