This book is about the nature of information. It touches on many core issues of philosophy of the mind, ontology, and epistemology, and draws in several domain-specific concepts from physics, mathematics, thermodynamics, computer science, and biology. The terms used in this book, such as the mind, a conscious agent, meaning, and knowledge are used with very precise meanings because they can be easily misinterpreted. A proper understanding of these terms can be gained from the referenced literature. But more specifically, this book is about the concept of information as physical phenomenon.The book is a unique exposition of the concept of information as physical phenomenon. It provides the detailed analysis and synthesis of the current conceptualizations of information demonstrating the lack of common definition and their incompleteness. The detailed argument is provided why information may be defined as a physical phenomenon and why this type of information may be seen as fundamental to our understanding of this concept. Contents:
Introduction What is This Book About?
Visions of Ontological Information Conjectures
Visions of Ontological Information Studies
Ontological Information: Synthesis
Ontology and Epistemology: Two Perspectives on Information
Applications and Interpretations of Ontological Information
Final Comments What Next?
Readership: Research Academic and private commercial institutes, graduate schools, Advanced undergraduate and graduate students, researchers and practitioners in the fields of information processing, physics, computers. Computer science. Key Features:
The book is based on the most up-to-date studies
The book includes ideas and perspectives that have been proposed in the most recent work in physics, biology, philosophy of science, and ontology