S
smcder
Guest
What we seem to be dancing around is what constitutes coherent information vs what is random noise. From that question arises (I think) whether information is inherently and qualitatively different from noise without the participation of an observer to crunch patterns into meaning.
To belabor the yellow helicopter example--for anyone passing this sight on the road but someone familiar with the yellow copter and cattle mutilation scenario, no particular meaning could be possible. Is the same thing true of more sophisticated means of encoding transfer of information between conscious minds? Obvious examples would be written language or binary code.
It seems to me that for transfer of information between two parties to occur there must be some kind of third or more referent, normally accepted by human consensus as something within the boundaries of the "normal", to which it corresponds. And in fact, we live immersed in a sea of such transfer, our brains probably engaged at least as much in the act of filtering what is not meaningful to the individual as in processing what is meaningful.
Much of what we refer to as paranormal is information vividly perceived by and meaningful to the experiencer, but not accepted by society as within the bounds of the possible or "normal."
The extraordinary thing is the inescapability of narrative.
If a mind is in the forest and no tree falls ... what does it mean?
AUTHORS of the Impossible
Highly recommended ...