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Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑May 2nd, 2021, 7:49 am An apposite article from the latest issue of the New Scientist: "Suzanne Simard interview: How I uncovered the hidden language of trees"."But Simard and her colleagues continue to challenge our preconceptions of how plants interact. Among other things, their research shows that the wood wide web is like a brain and can communicate information throughout the entire forest, that trees recognise their offspring and nurture them and that lessons learned from past experiences can be transmitted from old trees to young ones."
Consul wrote: ↑May 2nd, 2021, 1:41 pmThe intented distinctive quality between a signal and semantic information (meaningless vs meaningful) would merely be possible by the idea that plants are automata (machines) and not sentient, which is questioned by this topic, and thus such an idea would not be possible with the assumption of 'common sense' (e.g., that readers would automatically understand why a signal would be different from semantic information).Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑May 2nd, 2021, 7:49 am An apposite article from the latest issue of the New Scientist: "Suzanne Simard interview: How I uncovered the hidden language of trees"."But Simard and her colleagues continue to challenge our preconceptions of how plants interact. Among other things, their research shows that the wood wide web is like a brain and can communicate information throughout the entire forest, that trees recognise their offspring and nurture them and that lessons learned from past experiences can be transmitted from old trees to young ones."
It is highly doubtful that the information in question here is semantic information rather than mere signal-information. A genuine language essentially has a semantic dimension (meaning & reference).
popeye1945 wrote: ↑April 29th, 2021, 3:42 am Sy Borg,Yup, there's a lot of reality that we simply cannot access. Certainly there are, and have been, many simpler minds than ours that we cannot hope to understand. Also, imagine how much more consciousness is possible with future advanced beings emerging in the next trillion years.
Thanks for the heads up on it being available online. Wow, your insights as to the broadening of the perspective on how deep goes, is indeed mind-blowing. On a physical level, it might give us room to reawaken the elements of some of our animal ancestors qualities, like the regeneration of limbs, psychologically seems a bottomless well
popeye1945 wrote: ↑May 3rd, 2021, 2:54 pm Its an adventure, you are pretty good at expanding upon, open to the wonder, the cosmos, the future of being. We are our experiences, and throughs experiences seem greatly expanded, whats it like?We treat this "reality" of ours as all-encompassing, yet we are just the thinnest sliver of an organic hydrous system on a single planet's crust. Yet, subjectively, that sliver is basically all that exists to us in this grand simian soap opera. In a sense, subjective reality is inside out, as if the thin sliver of life on the Earth's surface is everywhere, and the rest of reality is reduced to a thin film around like a bubble.
Sy Borg wrote: ↑May 6th, 2021, 1:24 am It seems that plants are already being treated like animals, in that they are routinely displaced, farmed, killed and consumed.This sums up what is. But the topic is about what ought to be. And if these two contradict one another, as they do (IMO), the issue is a moral one. Are we capable of changing our behaviour if we determine that we ought to treat them better? Are we willing to change our behaviour if we determine that we ought to treat them better? I regret that the answer to both questions is "no", which makes me wonder what we can achieve here?
arjand wrote: ↑May 2nd, 2021, 7:24 pm When plants send signals to specifically their own off-spring, that is clear evidence of semantic information (meaningful interaction). While it may be possible to make a case how such interaction originates from meaningless machine-like processess, meaninglessness is not evident from the mere notion of such communication.Charles Peirce, one of the fathers of modern semiotics, presented several definitions of "sign": http://www.commens.org/dictionary/term/sign
Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑May 6th, 2021, 7:09 amSome of us are. Some try extraordinarily hard to do the right thing (much harder than I attempt).Sy Borg wrote: ↑May 6th, 2021, 1:24 am It seems that plants are already being treated like animals, in that they are routinely displaced, farmed, killed and consumed.Are we willing to change our behaviour if we determine that we ought to treat them better?
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