Information theory and consciousness.
- This writing is written by a person, and is read and interpreted by each individual imagination that reads from it.
- Knowledge is passed onto the reader or listener from the writers of speaker but not of the experience of the reality.
- The knowledge passed on from another persons experience is not knowledge gained from an experience in itself.
- Experience of gaining knowledge from other people is simply the experience of gaining knowledge of passed on information, unlike a person gaining knowledge from experiencing the universe themselves.
- Words written or spoken does not dictate the full passing on of understanding to an individual, and can be written purely based on ideas or fantasies, it does not provide proof of the truth.
- Words are written or spoke by a person, and a person can write or speak of an experience or choose to write or speak of a fantasy realm projected by the imagination.
- Knowledge is provided by fantasy and reality, where one experience can be true about the universe, the other can be an experience that is based purely on a fantasy realm and imaginings, which can lead to reimagining original materials with changed or additional information if recorded.
- The mind is able to simulate fantasy realms, fantasies can be built upon using reality as a basis, and can have very realistic elements, but are still just ideas, theories of what could possibly exist can also arise from this, but are still fantasy.
- Knowledge can be understood as real or artificial, an example of this is a story in absolute fantasy with its own deep imagined universe unlike our universe, or an actual story or game based on information from direct experience or recorded analytical or experimental data.
- Scientific ideas can be built upon with the imagination to generate new theories, theories are ideas yet to be proven, the mind is able mentality simulate these ideas, facts to an individual are generated by matching this internal simulation to the external reality.
- Even if something seems to be fact to an individual, it may not be a fact of the universe, and with further data gathering from the universe, a personal idea can be disproved and adjusted.
- When reading or listening, it does not mean a person experiences what is written or spoken, they experience reading or listening and their own imagination, the experience of something can not be put into a single communication form, such as spoken word or written expression.
- Written or spoken words can be experienced in different imaginations differently as each individual mind simulate what is heard or written, experiencing a real event provide more accurate knowledge with experience, than just knowledge communicated without experience.
- Written and spoken words can have multiple meaning, and can also be translated in multiple ways, the translation of information can lead to inaccuracy.
- Experience can effect a person directly, where passing on knowledge of an experience through explaining in various mediums creates knowledge of an experience, the receiver of the passed on knowledge using their own internal imagination to recreate a mental experience in their own mind based on knowledge can imagine differences to the original experience.
- In science, recorded knowledge of experience is much better than rewritten knowledge, knowledge passed on from person to person can diluted the original information.
- If the information was extracted from studying reality, further reworking of this information without further studying reality can distort what is known originally as facts, and can create new fantasies and theories.
- The knowledge of experience of an event directly is much closer to the truth of reality.
- Every individual persons reality and account of their memories are processed by each individuals brain structure.
- Reconstruction of a memory can be inaccurate due to the state of mind and focus when recording the event in the mind, the minds ability to construct memories based on senses can be tricked based on a single perspective.
- Memories also can be made inaccurate over time by how long ago a memory is recorded and how much a memory is recalled.
- The mind also has a habit of creating new information when reconstructing memories, filling in blank information with simulating missing information with imagination.
- Missing information can also be mentally added upon especially with suggestions from another person.
- Imagining another person's memory goes through a process of refining information from another person's memory to a narrow medium, such as speech, song, writing or act, to then be reconstructed into imaginary form by the observer or the listener of that medium.
- Passing information through a medium compresses the data down to communicate this information, the receiver mentally decompress the information with their imagination, the imagined data received may not be as accurate as the original data.
- All the information may not exist compared to the original experience when recorded in the memory, this can leave a person with miss remembered information not focused upon, and an exacerbation due to over focusing on certain information the memory record at the time.
- The rare element of things to yet be discovered and documented should not be ruled out.
- What is considered to be fact and truth can be updated at any point to be consider inaccurate, especially on detailed information.
- What we know as truth and fact has evolved over many year, where old theories and idea have been disproved or updated to more accurate ideas based on new information.
- New methods of acquiring more accurate information, and noticing finer details in experimental data can disprove theories, prove a theories, or provide new information to imagine new theories.