Inforg

An inforg is an informationally embodied organism, entity made up of information, that exists in the infosphere. These informationally embodied organisms are also called natural agents.

Description

Inforgs was used by Luciano Floridi to describe what makes up an infosphere.[1] The usage of the word describes organisms that are made up of information rather than "standalone and unique entities". This description of inforgs allows them to exist in the infosphere as natural agents alongside artificial agents. Inforgs can be part of a hybrid agent that is, for example, a family with digital devices such as digital cameras, cell phones, tablets, and laptops.

Norbert Wiener describes organisms as entities defined by patterns of persisting Shannon information.[2] Shannon information, named after Claude Shannon, places information in the physical realm allowing it to be manipulated by the laws of nature and science. Thus, inforgs are composed of matter, energy, and Shannon information. An experiment that supports inforgs and the component of Shannon information is the use of DNA as a medium for data storage.[3] Encoding DNA, which is considered to be the building blocks of organisms, to hold binary information reinforces the idea that living organisms are "persisting patterns of Shannon information encoded within an ever-changing flux of matter-energy".[4]

The Shannon information that is found within an inforg also contains the identity of said organism. For example, A human being's identity is not matter or energy but rather encoded by patterns of Shannon information within his/her body.[5] While a person's body may change over time, his/her identity persists through time. The manipulation of Shannon information in an inforg is under what is called the metaphysical realm.

See also

References

  1. Luciano Floridi (1999), Philosophy and Computing: An introduction
  2. Norbert Wiener (1948), Cybernetics: Or, Control and Communication in the Animal and the Machine
  3. Weintraub, Karen (23 January 2013). "The newest data-storage device? DNA". USA Today. Retrieved 12 March 2013.
  4. Terrel Ward Bynum (2010), "The historical roots of information and computer ethics", The Cambridge Handbook of Information and Computer Ethics, p. 24
  5. Terrel Ward Bynum (2010), "The historical roots of information and computer ethics", The Cambridge Handbook of Information and Computer Ethics, p. 25
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.