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Aurelio Smith’s Analysis of Active Information

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Recently, Aurelio Smith had a guest publication here at Uncommon Descent entitled Signal to Noise: A Critical Analysis of Active Information. Most of the post is taken up by a recounting of the history of active information. He also quotes the criticisms of Felsentein and English which have responded to at Evolution News and Views: These Critics of Intelligent Design Agree with Us More Than They Seem to Realize. Smith then does spend a few paragraphs developing his own objections to active information.

Smith argues that viewing evolution as a search is incorrect, because organisms/individuals aren’t searching, they are being acted upon by the environment:

Individual organisms or populations are not searching for optimal solutions to the task of survival. Organisms are passive in the process, merely affording themselves of the opportunity that existing and new niche environments provide. If anything is designing, it is the environment. I could suggest an anthropomorphism: the environment and its effects on the change in allele frequency are “a voice in the sky” whispering “warmer” or “colder”.

When we say search we simply mean a process that can be modeled as a probability distribution. Smith’s concern is irrelevent to that question. However, even if we are trying to model evolution as a optimization or solution-search problem Smith’s objection doesn’t make any sense. The objects of a search are always passive in the search. Objecting that the organisms aren’t searching is akin to objecting that easter eggs don’t find themselves. That’s not how any kind of search works. All search is the environment acting on the objects in the search.

Rather than demonstrating the “active information” in Dawkins’ Weasel program, which Dawkins freely confirmed is a poor model for evolution with its targeted search, would DEM like to look at Wright’s paper for a more realistic evolutionary model?

This is a rather strange comment. Smith quoted our discussion of Avida previously. But here he implies that we’ve only ever discussed Dawkin’s Weasel program. We’ve discussed Avida, Ev, Steiner Trees, and Metabiology. True, we haven’t looked at Wright’s paper, but its completely unreasonable to suggest that we’ve only discussed Dawkin’s “poor model.”

Secondly, “fitness landscape” models are not accurate representations of the chaotic, fluid, interactive nature of the real environment . The environment is a kaleidoscope of constant change. Fitness peaks can erode and erupt.

It is true that a static fitness landscape is an insufficient model for biology. That is why our work on conservation of information does not assume a static fitness landscape. Our model is deliberately general enough to handle any kind of feedback mechanism.

While I’m grateful for Smith taking the time to writeup his discussion, I find it very confused. The objections he raises don’t make any sense.

Comments
With Intelligent Design Evolution evolutionary processes are searches, actual active searches. With unguided evolution evolutionary processes are passive and if they happen upon a benefit, then so be it. All is well until they stumble upon whatever can eliminate them. Nature tends to the most simple. It peels away the unnecessary and leaves what it cannot peel away, or has not peeled away yet. IOW nature searches for the simplest solution. It doesn't stumble upon, nor can it build via accumulation, the information required for basic biological reproduction: The cell division processes required for bacterial life- living organisms are irreducibly complex all the way down.Joe
April 30, 2015
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I don't think evolution cannot be modeled as a probability distribution. Imagine a dart board in a dark room into which players throw darts. They throw the darts but without a target in sight to aim for. If the dart board does not move, you should be able to model the probable distribution of the darts, but if it does move, how do you factor in the movement of the unseen board? Most importantly, there is still a winner who has had no idea of the target's position.Carpathian
April 30, 2015
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Wierd statement: “fitness landscape”. I have never heard an IDer speak of “fitness landscape” except with the preamble of "dynamic". "Dynamic fitness landscape", ie, a landscape that is "chaotic, fluid ... a kaleidoscope of constant change."bFast
April 30, 2015
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