Dear Fernando and Luis,

Your paper is very rich and very serious, and so I hope you will accept my 
slightly different perspective and see it as a basis for further foundational 
work, rather than just criticism. I will first make just two comments here:

1. Matter is potentiality, actuality and form. This is true, but the 
relationships between the three need to be further specified, since the terms 
themselves correspond to real physical properties. To come out with only 
epistemological categories (knowledge and praxis) is too limiting. Real change 
involves movement from potentiality to actuality (Aristotle) but also actuality 
to potentiality, often at the same time (Aristotle missed this).

2. Decisions to create informational values can be represented as a series of 
0's and 1's. This is also true, but it and your initial examples create a 
binary framework that seems to refer primarily to quantitative value. This 
approach is computationally tractable, but might fail  to capture qualitative 
aspects of 'vital acts'. In fact, you present vital acts in terms of power and 
competitive (survival) success, modernization as mechanization. In my opinion, 
informational values include but are not limited to these.   

I look forward very much to comments by you and others on these points.

Best,

Joseph

Joseph E. Brenner, Ph.D.
Les Diablerets, Switzerland
International Society for Information Studies, Vienna, Austria
International Center for the Philosophy of Information, Xi'An, China
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Pedro C. Marijuan 
  To: 'fis' 
  Sent: Wednesday, July 22, 2015 2:33 PM
  Subject: [Fis] Information Foundation of the Act--F.Flores & L.deMarcos



  The informational foundation of the act
  Fernando Flores
  Lund University
  fernando.flo...@kultur.lu.se

  Luis de-Marcos
  University of Alcalá
  luis.demar...@uah.es

  See the whole text at: http://fis.sciforum.net/resources/



  Our introducing paper (35 pages) presents a theory that quantifies the 
informational value of human acts. We argue that living is functioning against 
entropy and following Erwin Schrödinger we call this tendency "negentropy". 
Negentropy is for us the reason behind "order" in social and cultural life. 
Further, we understand "order" as the condition that the world reaches when the 
informational value of a series of acts is low. Acting is presented as a set of 
decisions and choices that create order and this is the key concept of our 
understanding of the variation from simplicity to complexity in human acts. The 
most important aim of our theory is to measure non-economic acts trying to 
understand and explain their importance for society and culture. In their turn 
such a theory will be also important to understand the similarities and 
differences between non-economic and economic acts. 
  We follow the classical concept according to which informational value is 
proportional to the unlikelihood of an act. To capture the richness of the 
unlikelihood of human acts we use the frequency theory of probability developed 
by Ludwig von Mises and Karl Popper. Frequency theory of probability allows us 
to describe a variety of acts from the must most "free" to the least "free" 
with respect to precedent acts. In short, we characterize human acts in terms 
of their degree of freedom trying to set up a scale of the information and 
predictability carried out in human decisions. A taxonomy of acts is also 
presented, categorizing acts as destructive, mechanical, ludic or vital, 
according to their degree of freedom (complexity). A formulation to estimate 
the informational value in individual and collective acts follows. The final 
part of the paper presents and discuss the consequences of our theory. We argue 
that artifacts embed information and that modernization can be understood as a 
one-way process to embed acts of high levels of complexity in simple devices. 
However, our theory assumes that the total amount of information in the social 
and cultural world is constant and that Modernity only enables us to 
redistribute our informational potential. We also advocate for the development 
of a new science named "agnumetry", the science that quantify Modernity, 
measuring the obsolescence of an environment (from agnumy the Greek word for 
"break"). 
  In our study of human acts we found that acting can also be classified as 
productive, consumptive and as acts of exchange or economical. The 
informational value of acts can be the expression of any or all of these acting 
forms. We outline the relation between the informational value of production 
and the informational value of consumption (which we call "operative 
information"), and conclude that these acts define the non-economic value. 
Sometimes, and depending on the social level of informational value, the acts 
of exchange emerge defining the informational value of an item at the market, 
an informational value that assumes the shape of "price" justifying the use of 
money.

-- 
-------------------------------------------------
Pedro C. Marijuán
Grupo de Bioinformación / Bioinformation Group
Instituto Aragonés de Ciencias de la Salud
Centro de Investigación Biomédica de Aragón (CIBA)
Avda. San Juan Bosco, 13, planta X
50009 Zaragoza, Spain
Tfno. +34 976 71 3526 (& 6818)
pcmarijuan.i...@aragon.es
http://sites.google.com/site/pedrocmarijuan/
-------------------------------------------------


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