I’ve noticed ‘Laws of Form’ but when I tried reading it, found it quite daunting. Maybe we should start a discussion group on it. — Quixodian
I'm not a logician, mathematician, or electrical engineer, but I am somewhat informed on the philosophical concept of
Form. Especially as it applies to essential or causal
Information --- To Enform : the act of creating recognizable forms : designs ; patterns ; configurations ; structures ; categories. Generic Information begins in the physical world as mathematical ratios (data points ; proportions, 1:2 or 1/2)
in a starry sky of uncountable multiplicity. Hence, we begin by clumping cosmic complexity into symbolic zodiac signs relating to local significance. In an observing mind, that raw numerical data can be processed into meaningful relationships (ideas ; words). Or, in a mechanical computer, those ratios are analyzed reductively into either/or (all or nothing) numerical codes of digital logic : 100%true vs 0%true. This is probably the most elemental form of categorization, ignoring all degrees of complexity or uncertainty.
The Wikipedia article on Brown's book,
Laws of Form, notes a primary requirement for the human ability to know (grasp intellectually) any Form in the world, first "
draw a distinction"*1. Rather than sketching an arbitrary encirclement,
this precondition seems to assume that the categorizing mind is trying to "carve nature at its logical joints". First a particular "form" (thing) must be selected (differentiated) from the universal background (the incomprehensible multiplex) of manifold Forms (holons) adding-up to a complete system (universe ; all-encompassing category). A
holon (e.g. steak) is a digestible bit or byte from a larger Whole Form (e.g. cow), a comprehensible fragment. Human Logic requires a rational (ratio-carving) knife & fork for its comestibles. But,
is the world indeed inherently logical in its organization, or do we have to use the axe-murderer approach : whack, whack?
Semiotician Gregory Bateson defined
Information as "the difference that makes a difference"; referring to personally significant meaning in the subjective mind. Plato's theory of Forms defined them, not as phenomenal objects, but as noumenal categories of thought : "
timeless, absolute, unchangeable ideas". Aristotle went on to classify human thoughts into distinguishable
categories*2. More recently, modern neuroscientists have attempted to discover how the human brain filters incoming sensations into recognizable "classes of things"*3 (e.g. dog vs cat ; apple vs orange).
Each of those categorical Forms is a meaningful distinction for the purposes of a hungry human mind.
Brown's book is over my head, but the notion of logical categories seems to be necessary for understanding how the human mind works as it does. And
that need for pre-classification may provide some hint as to why we tend to overlay the real world with an innate template, in order to begin to understand its complexity of organization. First, we draw a circle around a small part of the whole system. Then, with manageable pieces, we can add them up into broader categories, or divide them into smaller parts, right on
down to the sub-atomic scale, where our inborn intuitive categories begin to fall apart, becoming counter-intuitive. Hence, the weird notion of Virtual Particles. Is there a natural limit on our ability to encapsulate? Or can we go on imagining novel Forms forever?
*1.
Laws of Form :
"
The first command : Draw a distinction"
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laws_of_Form
Note --- In mathematics the distinctly-defined categories, of things that logically go together, are called “Sets”. However, so-called “set theory paradoxes” are not necessarily logical contradictions, but merely counter-intuitive.
Does that mean the human mind can imagine sets or categories that don't fit into the brain's own preformed pairings?
*2.
Aristotle’s Categories :
Hence, he does not think that there is one single highest kind. Instead, he thinks that there are ten: (1) substance; (2) quantity; (3) quality; (4) relatives; (5) somewhere; (6) sometime; (7) being in a position; (8) having; (9) acting; and (10) being acted upon
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/aris ... ategories/
Note ---
Perhaps the "single highest kind" of category is the universe itself.
*3.
Category Learning in the Brain :
The ability to group items and events into functional categories is a fundamental characteristic of sophisticated thought. . . . . Categories represent our knowledge of groupings and patterns that are not explicit in the bottom-up sensory inputs.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3709834/
Note --- Our incoming sensations are typically randomized by repeated interactions & reflections (e.g echoes).
So the brain/mind must sift out the grain from the chaff. Hence, evolution seems to have winnowed the winning organisms down to a few with the "right stuff" for correctly categorizing the fruits & threats of the game of life. Those inputs may include novel Forms that our ancestors have never encountered before in eons of evolution. So how can we make implicit Logical patterns explicit enough for categorical assimilation?