Information
Information is the capacity of patterns to affect node behavior through recognition and translation processes. In Node Theory, a pattern becomes informative when it enables or constrains pattern processing in other nodes. The same pattern might be meaningful information to one node and pure noise to another - meaning isn't inherent in the pattern itself.
Overview
Information emerges when nodes can recognize and use patterns to generate or modify other patterns. The genetic code in DNA is information because cells have the machinery to read it[1]. The colors of a flower are information because some insects have evolved to recognize them. Until a pattern can be recognized and used by a node, it remains potential information - noise waiting for a decoder.
Types of Information
Physical Information
At the most fundamental level, information manifests in quantum states, forces, and field configurations. Quantum systems encode information in superposition states and entanglement relationships. Classical physical systems carry information through states of matter and energy distributions[2].
Biological Information
Living systems process information through various mechanisms. Genetic information guides development and function through DNA sequences. Neural information flows through patterns of synaptic activity. Cellular signaling networks transmit information through molecular interactions[3].
Cultural Information
Human societies create and transmit information through symbolic systems, languages, and technologies. These cultural information systems enable the accumulation and transfer of knowledge across generations, though they remain dependent on nodes capable of recognizing and processing their patterns.
Information Processing
Nodes process information through recognition, transformation, and storage of patterns. This processing depends on the node's native pattern recognition capabilities and the context in which the information appears. Information can be transmitted between nodes, but such transmission always involves some form of translation between different pattern processing systems.
Limitations
Information processing faces several fundamental constraints:
- Recognition depends on node capabilities
- Context affects meaning and interpretation
- Perfect translation is impossible
- Storage requires energy and resources
- Processing capacity is limited
See also
References
- ↑ Watson JD, Crick FH. Molecular structure of nucleic acids; a structure for deoxyribose nucleic acid. Nature. 1953;171(4356):737-738.
- ↑ Wheeler, J. A. (1990). Information, physics, quantum: The search for links. Complexity, Entropy, and the Physics of Information, 8, 3-28.
- ↑ Alberts B, et al. Molecular Biology of the Cell. 4th edition. Garland Science; 2002.