The Information Codexation Argument, or the Acquisition of Information Argument, posits that without acquiring information, the understanding of God would be impossible. This argument is based on the Theory of Codexation (Information Codexation), which states that to form a concept or idea, one must first acquire information by choice or by chance. Without any information codexation, god will never be known.
The Caveman in the Box is a scientific model designed to investigate the origin, creation, and evolution of inherent information. It aims to illustrate how the earliest humans learned to acqure information. The study was driven by several key questions:
- How did the earliest humans begin to understand information?
- Who provided our early ancestors with information?
- Where did this information originate from?
- Was the source of information God, extraterrestrials, or something else?
- How information are codified or materialized?
The experiment involved three distinct boxes, each housing a different subject in isolation.
In the first box, a caveman’s son was placed in isolation immediately after birth. The box was a high-tech lab that automatically provided food, water, and other necessities for survival, growth, and development. This setup was akin to how a fetus receives sustenance in the womb or how humans live and survive within Earth’s biosphere. In this box, the boy was never allowed to see or hear anyone for his entire life. He was completely isolated from the physical world from birth until adulthood.
In parallel to this setup was another box housing his father, the first human on Earth. He was also isolated from birth until adulthood. The primary difference between this box and his son’s box was that he lived alongside the natural world — surrounded by living and non-living things such as plants, animals, water, sky, stars, objects, and other natural elements.
A third box was also part of the experiment — housing a dog named Zero, an Alaskan malamute puppy. He was also isolated from birth until adulthood. His environment was similar to his master’s, living alongside the natural world. The only difference between him and his master was that he was an animal — a lower form of life.
From these three isolation scenarios, additional questions arose: Who among the three will gather more information? How much? Who will not gather any information? Who will realize that they are alive? Who will become conscious? Whose mind will remain empty? If instincts are real, what were these instincts initially? How did these instincts first develop?
The findings of this experiment concluded that:
- Information is acquired in two and only two ways: by choice or by chance.
- Mother Nature is the source of information.
- Everything from the outside world is a piece of information.
- No one can conceive an idea without associating it with something inherent.
- Without information, ideas will not flourish
- Ideas are circumstantial and thus are speculative.
- God is an idea and therefore a guesswork.
#originemology, #codexation dilemma, #autognorics, #interim emergence, #inscription by design
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