Uncommon Descent Serving The Intelligent Design Community

L&FP, 70: Exploring cosmological fine tuning using the idea of a 3-D, universal printer and constructor (also, islands of function)

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Last time, we looked at how Kolmogorov Complexity can be used to quantify the information in functionally specific complex organisation, by using the formal idea of a 3-D universal printer and constructor, 3-DP/C:

. . . it is but a short step to imagine a universal constructor device which, fed a compact description in a suitable language, will construct and present the [obviously, finite] object. Let us call this the universal 3-D printer/constructor, 3-DP/C.

Thus, in principle, reduction of an organised entity to a description in a suitably compact language is formally equivalent in information terms to the object, once 3-DP/C is present as a conceptual entity. So, WLOG, reduction to compact description in a compact language d(E) is readily seen as identifying the information content of any given entity E.

For, d(E) is a program though it can simply be a functional organisational specification, as, causally in this logic-model world:

d(E) + 3-DP/C + n ==> E1, E2, . . . En.

Obviously, n is an auxiliary instruction setting the number of copies to be made . . . .

We thus have a formal framework to reduce any entity to a description d(E), which is informational and has as metric

I = length[d(E)],

where a chain of Y/N q’s will yield I in bits, on the Kolmogorov assumption of compactness. I use compact, to imply that we can get a good enough estimator of I by using something compact. We do not have to actually build a most compact language.

This can also be used to explore the idea of fine tuning, e.g. let us use Barnes; chart:

Barnes: “What if we tweaked just two of the fundamental constants? This figure shows what the universe would look like if the strength of the strong nuclear force (which holds atoms together) and the value of the fine-structure constant (which represents the strength of the electromagnetic force between elementary particles) were higher or lower than they are in this universe. The small, white sliver represents where life can use all the complexity of chemistry and the energy of stars. Within that region, the small “x” marks the spot where those constants are set in our own universe.” (HT: New Atlantis)

Now, let us start at X, conceived as a summary of the cosmology of our observed universe, as d(E) fed into the 3-DP/C, with E here being say a simulation of the cosmos and its history:

d(E) + 3-DP/C + n ==> E1, E2, . . . En. n here would be a population of runs assuming a random element.

Now, instead, feed d(E) into a noisy channel so we begin a random walk in the space of cosmologies,

d(E) –> lossy, noisy medium –> d*(E) + 3-DP/C + 1 ==> E*1

d*(E) –> LNM –> d**(E) + 3-DP/C + 1 ==> E**1

etc.

Here, we can readily see how we can construct a map of possible outcomes, much as Barnes did and illustrates. Though of course one can also explore border zones algebraically etc.

The obvious result is that we see how our observed cosmos sits at a fine tuned operating point for a cosmos that is viable for life. (This also extends to exploring islands of function in configuration spaces in general.)

We see here how islands of function can have fitness landscapes allowing local hill climbing, but of course the issue of loss of function and locking into a peak arise:

So, now, we can use the 3-DP/C formalism to draw out what is involved in the idea of fine tuning, including of course, how intensely informational such a pattern is.

John Leslie is thought provoking:

One striking thing about the fine tuning is that a force strength or a particle mass often appears to require accurate tuning for several reasons at once. Look at electromagnetism. Electromagnetism seems to require tuning for there to be any clear-cut distinction between matter and radiation; for stars to burn neither too fast nor too slowly for life’s requirements; for protons to be stable; for complex chemistry to be possible; for chemical changes not to be extremely sluggish; and for carbon synthesis inside stars (carbon being quite probably crucial to life). Universes all obeying the same fundamental laws could still differ in the strengths of their physical forces, as was explained earlier, and random variations in electromagnetism from universe to universe might then ensure that it took on any particular strength sooner or later. Yet how could they possibly account for the fact that the same one strength satisfied many potentially conflicting requirements, each of them a requirement for impressively accurate tuning?” [Our Place in the Cosmos, The Royal Institute of Philosophy, 1998 (courtesy Wayback Machine) Emphases added.]

AND:

“. . . the need for such explanations does not depend on any estimate of how many universes would be observer-permitting, out of the entire field of possible universes. Claiming that our universe is ‘fine tuned for observers’, we base our claim on how life’s evolution would apparently have been rendered utterly impossible by comparatively minor alterations in physical force strengths, elementary particle masses and so forth. There is no need for us to ask whether very great alterations in these affairs would have rendered it fully possible once more, let alone whether physical worlds conforming to very different laws could have been observer-permitting without being in any way fine tuned. Here it can be useful to think of a fly on a wall, surrounded by an empty region. A bullet hits the fly Two explanations suggest themselves. Perhaps many bullets are hitting the wall or perhaps a marksman fired the bullet. There is no need to ask whether distant areas of the wall, or other quite different walls, are covered with flies so that more or less any bullet striking there would have hit one. The important point is that the local area contains just the one fly.” [Emphasis his.]

This fly on the wall metaphor has been famous, and aptly captures the issue of locality of fine tuning.

A modern watch movement, an example of both functionally specific, complex information and irreducible complexity of well-matched core functional parts

Where, too, we see that fine tuning leading to islands of function is a broad phenomenon, the bits and pieces of a complex system need to fit and work together for the whole to work.

This of course, brings us full circle to Paley’s famous watch.

Paley, in his time, could describe the intricate nature of contrivance leading to an artifact, a system well adapted to the purpose of time keeping. But, he had not the means to quantify the information involved, that would have to wait for over a century until we first found the idea of surprise and reduction of uncertainty leading to negative log probability metrics and informational entropy. Where, too, Jaynes et al were able to follow Szilard et al and draw a connexion between informational and thermodynamic entropy. In effect, the entropy of a macro observable entity is the average wanting information to specify microstate, given a description on macro observable state.

Then came Kolmogorov, and we can therefore use the formalism of a 3-DP/C to understand information content, functionality based on information implicit in organisation, and islands of fine tuned function amidst seas of non function, thus blind search challenge.

Paley, in his Ch 2, had a further contribution that has been even more underestimated. He saw that the additionality of self-replication vastly increased the complex functionality to be explained. This means that origin of life is even more complex than many acknowledge, and that origin of sustainable, novel body plans is even more challenging.

Coming back to focus, fine tuning at cosmological scale, the Nobel equivalent prize holder, Sir Fred Hoyle, has some choice words:

[Sir Fred Hoyle, In a talk at Caltech c 1981 (nb. this longstanding UD post):] From 1953 onward, Willy Fowler and I have always been intrigued by the remarkable relation of the 7.65 MeV energy level in the nucleus of 12 C to the 7.12 MeV level in 16 O. If you wanted to produce carbon and oxygen in roughly equal quantities by stellar nucleosynthesis, these are the two levels you would have to fix, and your fixing would have to be just where these levels are actually found to be. Another put-up job? . . . I am inclined to think so. A common sense interpretation of the facts suggests that a super intellect has “monkeyed” with the physics as well as the chemistry and biology, and there are no blind forces worth speaking about in nature. [F. Hoyle, Annual Review of Astronomy and Astrophysics, 20 (1982): 16.] . . .

also, in the same talk at Caltech:

The big problem in biology, as I see it, is to understand the origin of the information carried by the explicit structures of biomolecules. The issue isn’t so much the rather crude fact that a protein consists of a chain of amino acids linked together in a certain way, but that the explicit ordering of the amino acids endows the chain with remarkable properties, which other orderings wouldn’t give. The case of the enzymes is well known . . . If amino acids were linked at random, there would be a vast number of arrangements that would be useless in serving the puposes of a living cell. When you consider that a typical enzyme has a chain of perhaps 200 links and that there are 20 possibilities for each link,it’s easy to see that the number of useless arrangements is enormous, more than the number of atoms in all the galaxies visible in the largest telescopes. [ –> 20^200 = 1.6 * 10^260] This is for one enzyme, and there are upwards of 2000 of them, mainly serving very different purposes. So how did the situation get to where we find it to be? This is, as I see it, the biological problem – the information problem . . . . I was constantly plagued by the thought that the number of ways in which even a single enzyme could be wrongly constructed was greater than the number of all the atoms in the universe. So try as I would, I couldn’t convince myself that even the whole universe would be sufficient to find life by random processes – by what are called the blind forces of nature . . . . By far the simplest way to arrive at the correct sequences of amino acids in the enzymes would be by thought, not by random processes . . . . Now imagine yourself as a superintellect working through possibilities in polymer chemistry. Would you not be astonished that polymers based on the carbon atom turned out in your calculations to have the remarkable properties of the enzymes and other biomolecules? Would you not be bowled over in surprise to find that a living cell was a feasible construct? Would you not say to yourself, in whatever language supercalculating intellects use: Some supercalculating intellect must have designed the properties of the carbon atom, otherwise the chance of my finding such an atom through the blind forces of nature would be utterly minuscule. Of course you would, and if you were a sensible superintellect you would conclude that the carbon atom is a fix.

. . . and again:

I do not believe that any physicist who examined the evidence could fail to draw the inference that the laws of nuclear physics have been deliberately designed with regard to the [–> nuclear synthesis] consequences they produce within stars. [“The Universe: Past and Present Reflections.” Engineering and Science, November, 1981. pp. 8–12]>>

Food, for thought. END

Comments
There is no scientific theory of ID. Then what is ID, that creationism is not? why not just skip ID and go right to creationism? Creating a bacterium is trivial in the scheme of things. So pointing to it is stupid and irrelevant. Repeatedly pointing to it is incredibly stupid Again, it's unclear how this is relevant. I didn't say it was impossible. Unless something is prohibited by the laws of physics, the only thing that could prevent us from achieving it is knowing how. IOW, it's a question of knowledge. This would include bacterium. I said there would be necessary consequences to bacterium being designed, if we take that claim seriously, including the fact that bacterium replicate via von Neumann’s replicator-vehicle approach, etc. For there to be no necessary consequences, then you'd need to be more specific about ID's designer, like it's immaterial, somehow causes collapse in quantum mechanics, doesn't obey the laws of physics, etc. But that is nowhere to be explicitly found in ID. Nor do I expect it to any time soon. Why wouldn't that happen if ID wasn't a scientific theory?critical rationalist
March 31, 2023
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Jerry:
There is no scientific theory of ID.
Agreed. That is an issue for those wanting it taught as an alternative to biology with an evolutionary content.Alan Fox
March 31, 2023
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First, let’s see whether you can define ID.
Let's see if anyone can. Querius is, presumably, an ID proponent. What does Querius think "Intelligent Design" is about. Can he* offer a coherent definition? *I'm guessing Querius is male from all the mansplainin'. ;)Alan Fox
March 31, 2023
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First, I’m referring to ID, the supposedly scientific theory
There is no scientific theory of ID. ID is essentially logic applied to the findings of science. As such it incorporates some additional possible conclusions when the forces of physics is unable to explain some findings. If you don’t know this, you should restrict yourself to just asking questions until you understand what it is.
You do want people to take ID seriously, right? Or am I mistaken?
First, those that are critical of ID should put coherent thoughts together. Till that time, as I just said, they should restrict themselves to asking questions. ID is very logical. ID observes the fine tuning of the universe and concludes only an entity within immense intelligence and power could have done that. Creating life is trivial by comparison and could be done by some other intelligence besides the creator of the universe. But the universe was created in such a way to facilitate life as we know it. Creating a bacterium is trivial in the scheme of things. So pointing to it is stupid and irrelevant. Repeatedly pointing to it is incredibly stupidjerry
March 31, 2023
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Critical Rationalist @23,
First, I’m referring to ID, the supposedly scientific theory.
First, let's see whether you can define ID. I think that your doing so will answer your other questions. -QQuerius
March 31, 2023
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Asauber @13,
I think there are a few internet bullies dominating the playground right now. When they decide to go watch TV, the normal kids will come back and play.
Yeah, I noticed that, too. It seems like they need to post a new comment as soon as a random synapse fires with some random thought. The resulting flood of vacuous comments results in lowering the signal-to-noise ratio of the conversation. My ongoing suggestion is to stop feeding the trolls, scroll past them, and focus on substantive perspectives and new information rather than waste time objecting to their tripe. -QQuerius
March 31, 2023
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No, it is fairly absolute.
Then, by all means, enlighten us about what's stupid about it? Be specific.
Whatever created the universe is certainly capable of thinking through what is necessary to go in it to make it functional. Since life is a result of the universe, a logical person would assume that this was part of the original objective.
First, I'm referring to ID, the supposedly scientific theory. I don't think it claims whatever designed the universe also designed bacterium. It's agnostic about the designer, in that it could be, well aliens, right? Second, I'm saying there are necessary consequences of some designer having designed bacterium, not that a designer couldn't design bacterium. IOW, I'm taking the claim that bacteria were actually designed by a designer seriously for the purpose of criticism, including that a bacterium replicates via via von Neumann’s replicator-vehicle approach, etc. You do want people to take ID seriously, right? Or am I mistaken?critical rationalist
March 31, 2023
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There is no one more positive about ID here [than Jerry]
If that's true, no wonder ID is on the slide. ;)Alan Fox
March 31, 2023
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Be a bit more positive about ID
There is no one more positive about ID here. It would be interesting to hear what is not positive.jerry
March 31, 2023
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Make a comment about anti ID people never providing anything positive and they step right up to the plate and prove your point.
You set the example here, Jerry. Be a bit more positive about ID and... Nope, it won't happen.Alan Fox
March 31, 2023
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Speaking of waning interest and participation, what ever happened to “Caspian?”
Eric Hedin struck me as too gentle a soul for UD.Alan Fox
March 31, 2023
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Speaking of waning interest and participation, what ever happened to "Caspian?"chuckdarwin
March 31, 2023
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When they decide to go watch TV, the normal kids will come back and play.
Who are the normal kids? I have been going through comments from years ago to see what was said then vs now. It is like night and day. As an example, someone brought up the ideas of Rochelle Forrester who is from New Zealand. She has written a lot of things about history including the history of science. She has a couple articles on quantum mechanics. But she has also written about agriculture. She is not ID friendly, but it would be interesting for OPs to explore ideas like hers. But my guess it that they would get 10 comments before people here lost interest. https://hcommons.org/members/rochelleforrester/
what ever happened to “Caspian
You just noticed?jerry
March 31, 2023
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That’s a pretty vague statement.
No, it is fairly absolute.
I don’t think you’re thinking this through very well.
Stupid is as stupid does, someone once said. Whatever created the universe is certainly capable of thinking through what is necessary to go in it to make it functional. Since life is a result of the universe, a logical person would assume that this was part of the original objective. By the way gobbledygook and nonsense essentially mean the same thing. But both are so common here that using one vs the other is just a way of not using the same word all the time.
You’re right. It’s never got to that point.
Another completely stupid statement. Make a comment about anti ID people never providing anything positive and they step right up to the plate and prove your point.jerry
March 31, 2023
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When has ID been seriously challenged?
You're right. It's never got to that point.Alan Fox
March 31, 2023
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One of the more stupid statements ever on UD.
That's a pretty vague statement.
If some entity had the ability (intelligence and power) to create the universe, it would be extremely easy to include a replication process in something like a bacterium.
I don't think you're thinking this through very well. If some entity designed bacterium, before there were actually bacterium, then the design of bacterium had to be instantiated somewhere other than in a bacterium, which didn't exist yet. Right? Where was instantiated? In the designer? But, if the design actually plays a causal role in producing the bacterium, then it actually plays a physical role when transforming raw materials into a bacterium. Specifically, the design of the first bacterium must also include the recipe a bacterium will eventually use to reproduce itself. Right? Without it, bacterium cannot reproduce accurately (see von Neumann, etc.) Bacterium do not spontaneously appear out of no where or roll out of a bacterium factory. See the diagram linked in #5. Or are you suggesting all that FSCO/I threshold exceeding design "just appeared" when bacterium were created? If so, that would be the spontaneous appearance of that design. At which point, it's unclear what it means to say the designer designed bacterium. If the designs of a bacterium can "just appear" spontaneously, then why do we need a designer?critical rationalist
March 31, 2023
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"Is UD down to 4-5 commenters responsible for 98% of the words published?" Jerry, I think there are a few internet bullies dominating the playground right now. When they decide to go watch TV, the normal kids will come back and play. ;) Andrew PS I'm trying to remember what Friend of UD I tried to keep telling a while ago they were over-commenting. Maybe the name will come back to me today. Probably not.asauber
March 31, 2023
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can write their stuff unchallenged
When has ID been seriously challenged? I have never seen it. I have seen nonsense presented which certainly generates pixels. But no challenge ever that makes sense. Nothing serious. Aside: Said hundreds of times. I have only seen one honest anti ID commenter here in the entire history of UD. What drives people to constantly make stupid comments? Aside2: Is UD down to 4-5 commenters responsible for 98% of the words published?jerry
March 31, 2023
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It's a conundrum, Jerry. UD should circle the wagons so ID proponents can write their stuff unchallenged. I think it would be best, myself.Alan Fox
March 31, 2023
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So, to ask again, in the case of ID’s designer, where was the design of the first bacterium physically instantiated, which would include a translated version of the design the first bacterium would itself use to make copies of itself?
Doubling down on stupidity. Or should it be septupling down on stupidity (or maybe 7 x 7 is a closer estimate.) This is what UD gets by tolerating the trolls by answering them. When will they ever learn? UD even publishes OPs that take trolls seriously.jerry
March 31, 2023
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@KF...
CR, you are trying to discuss biology in a cosmology thread.
Huh? You talked about Paley's watch. And your comment was trying to discuss TCP/IP, for the Internet, in a cosmology thread? It's unclear what your point is.
... and as a further point, the very point of the model is that functional organization is informational, it contemplates describing an entity then feeding the description into a 3-DP/C, producing a copy that works like the original. Thus, the validity of “functionally specific, complex organisation and/or associated information,” what my actual abbreviation FSCO/I summarises.
You didn't intend for your argument to be used that way? I don't know how that's reliant to my question. I'm not referring to some future state of affairs, but in the case of bacterium. Supposed it was designed. So, to ask again, in the case of ID’s designer, where was the design of the first bacterium physically instantiated, which would include a translated version of the design the first bacterium would itself use to make copies of itself? I don't blame you for not wanting to answer this question, as opposed to the question you asked and answered. As for the rest, see this comment.critical rationalist
March 31, 2023
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being well adapted to serve a purpose
That is what ID is all about. It is just how it happens is the issue. Genetics makes minor adaptations easy but prevents major changes which would eliminate the ecology. It’s what the science verifies. Similarly, the laws of physics limit what can happen in the real world. The universe then adapts to these restrictions. What do we get - life as we know it. Maybe some other set of laws would lead to a different existence but it too would lead to adaptation. That’s just logic. Thus, the fine tuning of the universe and solar system also lead to adaptation but also definitely limits it.
Where was that translated program instantiated when it was used to construct the first bacterium? If it wasn’t present in the design of the first bacterium, in some translated form, then how did the program get into the bacterium?
One of the more stupid statements ever on UD. If some entity had the ability (intelligence and power) to create the universe, it would be extremely easy to include a replication process in something like a bacterium. Aside: Why is so much time wasted on inane discussions. Logic should have eliminated these useless discussions a long time ago.jerry
March 31, 2023
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CR, you are trying to discuss biology in a cosmology thread. That noted, it should be obvious that a molecular nanotech lab some generations beyond Venter et al would be able to create a bacterium. Where, an input to such would be a coded description, and as a further point, the very point of the model is that functional organisation is informational, it contemplates describing an entity then feeding the description into a 3-DP/C, producing a copy that works like the original. Thus, the validity of "functionally specific, complex organisation and/or associated information," what my actual abbreviation FSCO/I summarises. The information content of Wicken's wiring diagram [1979] is drawn out. So, we recognise that information can be implicit in organisation and can even lurk in a context, someone designs a programming language, an information rich process that does not appear in a simple program like a hello world but lurks in its background. Further, students of systems theory or computer architecture will tell us that system components or levels don't always appear in a chain of obvious neat little boxes with connecting lines, there are abstract levels. ; I recall for instance, pneumatic control system components that don't look like much but are full of subtle details and the famous ball and disk integrator looks more like a mechanical toy than a device to solve sophisticated differential equations, such as for gunlaying on battleships or tide prediction for coastlines. The gap between an electronics block diagram, a circuit diagram and on the board components is itself a significant learning challenge. And that is before one addresses software heavy layers. Hence, the layer cake architecture and discussion of a hierarchy of virtual machines or functional layers such as for TCP/IP, for the Internet. I have seen such a layer cake breakdown all the way back to the s/360 by IBM, 1964. KFkairosfocus
March 31, 2023
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CR, the formalism establishes information content of a functional entity and helps us further understand things like fine tuning. Where, of course, we can see through it, how a compact description language enables estimation of K-complexity, so a metric of information content, fleshing out what Orgel identified 50 years ago. That is a specific and significant result, drawing on algebra, not physics. As for kinematic self replicators, yes we have not yet built them as automated machines, but they have helped us understand what is required, and a more restricted constructor is something we see in the living cell, e.g. the ribosome. In this OP, I take the algebra and use it to explore cosmological fine tuning, indeed note what I did, in effect put it in simulation mode and showed how varying parameters etc for cosmology gives us results such as Barnes charted. This then goes further, showing how locally fine tuned functionality is involved in the islands of function in a configuration space challenge. Of course, algebra is not physics but it can be useful for physical issues. KFkairosfocus
March 30, 2023
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Here's a set of diagrams to illustrate this further... 1st Diagram Hypothetical non-self-reproducing bacterium . When it wears out, it must be reprinted. We do not see bacterium appearing out of thin air or being printed in bacterium factories. 2nd Diagram An actual bacterium that replicates via von Neumann’s replicator-vehicle approach. It contains a recipe (in its genes) that the bacterium uses to reproduce itself, before it wears out. This process repeats, etc. 3rd Diagram If, if ID is true, some designer must have designed the first bacterium. As in the second diagram, there is a design of the first bacterium and a printer that prints it. That design must contain the recipe the bacterium uses to reproduce it self via von Neumann’s replicator-vehicle approach. Note how the recipe is present (physically instantiated) in the first design, translated in such a way that it will be eventually present (physically instantiated) in the bacterium (in its genes) for future use, when it is printed. The bacterium recipe goes though an error correcting process when it is copied. 4th Diagram If the recipe is not present in the design of the first bacterium, then it would not be present in the first bacterium. For accurate reproduction, it must contain that recipe (in its genes). Without it, the bacterium could not reproduce. For the vehicle to copy itself without a recipe, it would need to be able to scan itself accurately at the atomic level. Even then, that would reproduce any damage in the vehicle that occurred after it was printed. This would result in an error catastrophe. 5th Diagram If the recipe of the bacterium exceeds the FSC/I threshold when physically instantiated in the bacterium itself, then the translated recipe would also exceed FSC/I threshold when physically instantiated in the design of the first bacterium. This is even more complex, because the design must be translated in such a way that, when printed, it will eventual end up in the bacterium in the form of genetic instructions the the bacterium can use to make copies of itself. So, to ask again, in the case of ID's designer, where was the design of the first bacterium physically instantiated, which would include a translated version of the design the first bacterium would itself use to make copies of itself?critical rationalist
March 30, 2023
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In regards to universal constructors / printers...
2.4 Von Neumann’s approach Before the discovery of the structure of DNA, von Neumann (1948) wondered how organisms can possibly reproduce themselves faithfully and evolve complex adaptations for doing so. He realised that an organism must be a programmable constructor operating in two stages, namely copying its program and executing it to build another instance. He tried to model this using simplified laws of physics – thus founding the field of cellular automata – but without success: it was too complicated. He also introduced an important constructor-theoretic idea, namely that of a universal constructor (3.11 below), but he made no further progress in constructor theory because, by retreating to cellular automata, he had locked himself into the prevailing conception and also abstracted away all connections between his theory and physics.
If you look at KF's diagram of a universal constructor, you'll see information physically instantiated on the left as an input to the constructor. If ID is correct, in that some designer designed bacterium, the design (program) used by constructor that constructed the the first bacterium must itself have included a translated version of the very same program that will eventually be executed by the bacterium in the first phase. As von Neumann pointed out, use of a program is necessary to explain how bacterium replicate with high accuracy. Where was that translated program instantiated when it was used to construct the first bacterium? If it wasn't present in the design of the first bacterium, in some translated form, then how did the program get into the bacterium?critical rationalist
March 30, 2023
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CR, ignoring the significance of informational complexity and measures based on K-Complexity sets up and knocks over a strawman. Paley was over 200 years ago and we now have means to measure the informational complexity of contrivance, based on arrangement of parts to provide function. KFkairosfocus
March 30, 2023
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A more fundamental way to look at it is: being well adapted to serve a purpose. All of those advances reflect the same fundamental criteria.
... those interactions and complexity reflects being well adapted to serve a purpose. It’s a more fundamental description of the vague “Functionally Specified Information”, etc. To quote Paley….
If the different parts had been differently shaped from what they are, of a different size from what they are, or placed after any other manner, or in any other order, than that in which they are placed, either no motion at all would have been carried on in the machine, or none which would have answered the use that is now served by it.
What Paley just described, fundamentally, reflects being well adapted to serve a purpose.
critical rationalist
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L&FP, 70: Exploring cosmological fine tuning using the idea of a 3-D, universal printer and constructor (also, islands of function)kairosfocus
March 30, 2023
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