Talk:Information

Definition: A meaningful reply to a question. Not to be nitpicky, but the question itself is information, too, and sometimes it's harder to find the right question than to find the right answer. It would be nice if information would be as simple to define, but a proper definition of the word might actually be one of the hardest scientific questions of our time. Information theory is still fairly isolated from the rest of physical theory, sort of like a ghost-matter division. Wikipedia can't solve scientific problems, only report their current state, so we should try to come up with attributed concepts of information here. --Eloquence 12:36 Nov 9, 2002 (UTC)

This definition has a flaw - information not always is a meaningful reply to a question. I suggest the following definition. "Information is data about entities.", more precisely, definition would be "Information is data or a datum which describes entities, an entity or a part of it, in relation to other entities like factual objects, actual positions and/or imaginary constructs like ideas, plans, goals, etc." -Inyuki 20:35, 11 Nov 2004 (UTC)

I thought I could not make contribution according to the pre-existing format, though the format was interesting. I moved it to below, so that others can work on it and replace my contribution, or merge with it. Tomos

Contents

Definition


A meaningful reply to a question. The contextual value of an equation or an integration or a database. Information content may be implicit or explicit.

History of the term information

.........

Statistical view

Information transmission has been studied from a statistical and coding viewpoint by Claude E. Shannon.

Computer science view

Data that is put into a context.

Linguistic view

Context written to a format of a particular character base. .......

Psychological view

Cognitive integration of thought. .......

Economic view

Business information etc.


I am new to wiki and wikipedia, but am very interested in concepts of information. A new field of inquiry for this is called Philosophy of Information, dealing with the nature and meaning of information. I am slowly compiling a bibliography of sources, by authors such as Floridi, Herold, Machlup, and so forth. Should wikipedia entries for this go on this page or should a new page under the Philosophy category be added? See also http://orgs.unt.edu/asis/POI.htm

Jrcastledine


Here is something to absorb into your studies. Imagine a blind man about to step off the pavement into a roadway and a racing cyclist is coming up fast, relatively quiet, head down. Somebody shouts in Swahili, "Don't cross there is a bicycle coming". Unfortunately the blind man does not understand Swahili.

Point : One man's information is another man's noise.

Truth

E.g. one dimension is "truth" (some definitions of "information" require that a message must contain a truthful message before it can be said to convey information); - Peak (from User talk:Bensaccount)

Information does not have to be true. Information quite often doesn't correspond with reality. Bensaccount 13:30, 15 Apr 2004 (UTC)

The argument you would make is "is untrue information still information?". The answer is yes, and I can give many examples to prove it if you want me to. Bensaccount 13:33, 15 Apr 2004 (UTC)

[Peak:] You are missing the point. "Information" has multiple meanings. (Have you actually really understood the article yet?) One of the primary meanings is related to the idea of adding to someone's knowledge. One has to employ some rather devious arguments to get from a false message to an increase in knowledge. Ergo back we go. Peak 16:17, 15 Apr 2004 (UTC)

No you are out of context. Information is not knowledge. When relating to something or somebody information is knowledge. This information can be untrue, yet still be information. Bensaccount 16:23, 15 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Also, do you know what a circular definition is? Bensaccount 17:00, 15 Apr 2004 (UTC)

[DavidCary:] I think I would like to see a couple of examples of information in the form of false facts. I think I agree with Peak. I agree that some people use "information" to refer to true facts, while others use it to refer to any sort of message, true or not. So both definitions need to be mentioned in the article.

Fahrenheit 9/11 - there is your example. Lots of information in that movie, very little truth. KeyStroke 17:15, 2004 Oct 19 (UTC)

Negentropy

Negentropy is an incorrect near synonym for information. It is supposedly the opposite of the thermodynamic property entropy. Bensaccount 23:01, 15 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Information and Physics

Perhaps the article should explain the relationship a bit more?

Information is supposedly some kind of superficial state existing within our minds, but apparently knowledge and information can be affected by quantum physics, and speed of transmission cannot exceed the speed of light, even if it were procuring information from clues that are in space, very far apart.

There is also the theory that emerges in the field of quantum computing that destroying information yields heat, (ie. merging two paths which have values of 1 and zero each, into a single path of 1) as though information is like energy, not a mere recognition of facts, nor the state of our minds. Then there is information entropy, as well.

What exactly IS information then? Why would it be affected by physics if it was just a superficial state? And if it isn't superficial, it can't be a mere message, pattern or sensory input, now can it?

Would anyone with expertise on this write about this a bit more?

I put in a few lines which might clarify things, including a link to Maxwells demon. I took out the text about interference and quantum computers as I don't think it is the heat generated that causes interference, but simply that a quantum operation has to be reversible (in other words information cannot be lost), otherwise it stops being a quantum operation. That is why AND gates are not permitted. Entropy and heat generation of AND gates are seperate non-quantum ideas, though the two concepts are closely linked. Couldn't think of a way to put this clearly, so I took the easy way out and left it for the Quantum computer page to explain.
I also put in a reference to Alg Inf Theory alongside shannon theory, but if the "Measuring information" section is a part of "Information as a message" rather than a seperate section this is probably out of place. Rattle 00:26, 24 May 2005 (UTC)

Do we need an article on Bekenstein bound, or is the brief mention in other wikipedia articles ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Search?search=Bekenstein&fulltext=Search ) sufficient ?

Information, matter and energy

Tom Stonier envisions information to be a property of the universe, as real a property as matter and energy. See "Information and the Internal Structure of the Universe”, Springer, London, 1990, [1] (http://www.google.com/search?hl=cs&q=Stonier+Tom+information&btnG=Hledat&lr=), [2] (http://sochi.net.ru/~maxime/doc/Stonier.shtml), .... --Michal Jurosz

Vandalism?

My recent edit on this article was hardly vandalism...could you bring it directly up to me first?!

Information DOES have a relation with quantum physics, mind you. -- Natalinasmpf 19:33, 6 Mar 2005 (UTC)

Etymology

Note: I am moving the section on the etymology of the word "information" in English from the article on "physical information" to this main article - it seems a more logical place for it. --Mpfrank, 6/14/05

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