I'm not going to drag a rigid scientific framework to a place where it doesn't belong.
You wrote (WRT genes):
Earthborn said:
And in humans there are only about 20 000 of them, humans have more than 20 000 properties so the genes cannot be an intricate description of a human.
This is a syllogism of the form: A, therefore NOT B.
"A" being a claim towards the human phenotype exceeding a certain complexity.
If it wasn't the framework of Information Theory that you implied as the scientific foundation of your claim, one has to wonder what other scientific framework - addressing issues of information, complexity... etc. - was?
More like: "If a string has not been made by compressing a dataset, it makes no difference whether or not the dataset can be compressed to the string. It is irrelevant!"
O.k., I'll try to guess what you could have meant with the above statement: I assume you mean that if you know that a string has been generated by a presumably random process, you also know that it isn't compressible i.e.
complex
Apart from not being entirely true because you cannot prove randomness either - and even then only provable for half of the strings but not provable for any one
particular string - this would be a syllogism of the form:
NOT B, therefore A
i.e. "There are environmental factors during development, therefore the phenotype is not exclusively described by the genes, therefore the phenotype is more complex than the genome"
NOT B, therefore A
So far, so good. But then you go ahead and use the conclusion "A" that you have drawn from the premises "NOT B", when you write that:
Earthborn said:
And in humans there are only about 20 000 of them, humans have more than 20 000 properties so the genes cannot be an intricate description of a human.
IOW, you use "A", that you
derived from "NOT B" in order to
prove "NOT B"
This is what is commonly referred to as
circular logic.
It should also be mentioned that the human brain works rather differently from such a formalised mathematical construct like a Turing Machine. It is rather bad at "brute forcing" its way through all possibilities of compression algorithms. But it is rather good a deciding whether it is worth to try.
If leave that claim - essentially implying that the operation of the human brain for some fundamental reason
cannot be simulated in a TM - for others to have a go on. You are very much claiming to be able to prove a negative.
I cannot prove that are no two headed purple and green striped cows living on Pluto,
You've chosen the wrong analogy, last but not least because we have very good reason to assume that the property data of the human phenotype
is compressible.
Similarly I can try measuring myself down to atomic level and then try to find an algorithm that can compress all that information to the 750MB capable of being stored in human DNA. It is not that I can prove that this is impossible,
Yet you use this unproven assertion as premises when you write:
Earthborn said:
And in humans there are only about 20 000 of them, humans have more than 20 000 properties so the genes cannot be an intricate description of a human.
This is what I originally was going to point out to you.
You certainly don't explain why it makes any difference whether information about my phenotype is compressible or not.
Well, it does make a difference as far as the validity of your statement:
Earthborn said:
And in humans there are only about 20 000 of them, humans have more than 20 000 properties so the genes cannot be an intricate description of a human.
...which my objection originally has been about.