Dr. Trintignant
Muse
- Joined
- Mar 24, 2007
- Messages
- 745
And, as dogjones sort-of points out: The holes in the sponge might not be so random. Some arrangements could be more efficient at absorption than others, and the optimum arragement might even be different for different substances.
True enough, but just the same, there isn't a whole lot of information there--once you specify a distribution of hole sizes and such, the exact arrangement doesn't matter.
If, for some reason, it ever became useful to store the holes in a sponge as information, for humans we would ("Sponginformatics"?).
Indeed. In fact, there are storage schemes that essentially store bits by making holes in a malleable substance. But again, that information is (almost) independent of it being a sponge. Yes, if we decided to store all zeroes and ended up with a hole-free sponge, that would make for an impractical sponge. For a wide range of inputs, though, its sponginess would be unaffected.
(Though, the whole point of my exercise is to show that it is not the only way to view DNA.
Agreed. I just had a minor quibble with your original wording. I think "DNS stores information" is more than just an analogy--at least if "information" is something real in the first place. You're right that it's not the whole story, but just the same DNA largely functions as a store of digital code.
What if the more efficient hole structure wasn't calculated by humans, but instead by computer, using an evolutionary selection algorithm... Nervermind, the IDers would probably latch on to that one, as well, claiming "the computer program was designed with that specific purpose!"
Oh yes, I've had that experience already. Well, not with sponges, but little digital critters. You just can't win the argument.
- Dr. Trintignant