- Page 3 and 4:
Werner GittIn the Beginningwas Info
- Page 5 and 6:
ContentsPreface ...................
- Page 7 and 8:
A2.1.2 Complexity and Peculiarities
- Page 9 and 10:
PrefaceTheme of the book: The topic
- Page 11 and 12:
Acknowledgements and thanks: After
- Page 13 and 14:
Figure 1: The web of a Cyrtophora s
- Page 15 and 16:
3. The Morpho rhetenor butterfly: T
- Page 17 and 18:
few days later another wonderful ev
- Page 19 and 20:
5. The organ playing robot: Would i
- Page 21 and 22:
PART 1: Laws of Nature
- Page 23 and 24:
aspects are not covered. Models are
- Page 25 and 26:
2.2 The Limits of Science and the P
- Page 27 and 28:
numerous mathematical theorems (exc
- Page 29 and 30:
mulated on earth, were also valid o
- Page 31 and 32:
F = G x m 1 x m 2 / r 2The force F
- Page 33 and 34:
The nine above-mentioned general bu
- Page 35 and 36:
R2: The laws of nature enable us to
- Page 37 and 38:
Conservation theorems: The followin
- Page 39 and 40:
Figure 6: Geometrically impossible
- Page 41 and 42:
ical bond. The half-life T is given
- Page 43 and 44:
PART 2: Information
- Page 45 and 46:
Since the concept of information is
- Page 47 and 48:
tents and because of the encoding p
- Page 49 and 50:
chemical quantities can be steered,
- Page 51 and 52:
and there are 468 Greek words. This
- Page 53 and 54:
Figure 10: The Rosetta stone.53
- Page 55 and 56:
As explained fully in Appendix A1,
- Page 57 and 58:
Theorem 5: Shannon’s definition o
- Page 59 and 60:
elementary sounds, but pictures are
- Page 61 and 62:
- Punched cards, mark sensing- Univ
- Page 63 and 64:
Get nymph; quiz sad brow; fix luck
- Page 65 and 66:
Theorem 7: The allocation of meanin
- Page 67 and 68:
Theorem 11: A code system is always
- Page 69 and 70:
Knowledge of the conventions applyi
- Page 71 and 72:
Sequences of letters generated by v
- Page 73 and 74:
system must have been created by an
- Page 75 and 76:
We can distinguish two types of act
- Page 77 and 78:
a) Concerning the sender:- Has an u
- Page 79 and 80:
no purpose or intent; he represents
- Page 81 and 82:
We still have to describe a domain
- Page 83 and 84:
5 Delineation of the Information Co
- Page 85:
Definition D5: The domain A of defi
- Page 88 and 89:
6 Information in Living OrganismsTh
- Page 90 and 91:
code with four different letters is
- Page 92 and 93:
Figure 17: The way in which genetic
- Page 94 and 95:
6.2 The Genetic CodeWe now discuss
- Page 96 and 97:
Figure 19: The theoretical possibil
- Page 98 and 99:
Figure 20: A simplified representat
- Page 100 and 101:
inevitable interactions ... The ori
- Page 102 and 103:
We now discuss some theoretical mod
- Page 104 and 105:
Genetic algorithms: The so-called
- Page 106 and 107:
“The final result of all my resea
- Page 108 and 109:
7 The Three Forms in which Informat
- Page 110 and 111:
and methods of transfer (e. g. the
- Page 112 and 113:
8 Three Kinds of Transmitted Inform
- Page 114 and 115:
languages, creating a programming l
- Page 116 and 117:
9 The Quality and Usefulness ofInfo
- Page 118 and 119:
vertently), deliberately falsified,
- Page 120 and 121:
10 Some Quantitative Evaluationsof
- Page 122 and 123:
such diverse topics as technology,
- Page 124 and 125:
11 Questions Often Asked Aboutthe I
- Page 126 and 127:
Q10: Natural languages are changing
- Page 128 and 129:
A19: Biological systems are indeed
- Page 130 and 131:
continually shifts in order to avoi
- Page 132 and 133:
A23: If we are talking about true l
- Page 134 and 135:
The information concept was discuss
- Page 136 and 137:
The close link between information
- Page 138 and 139:
13 The Quality and Usefulness of Bi
- Page 140 and 141:
iguously instructed to “Let the w
- Page 142 and 143:
Figure 27: God as Sender, man as re
- Page 144 and 145:
way its understanding is also a spi
- Page 146 and 147:
dom prepared for you since the crea
- Page 148 and 149:
would be known about his Person and
- Page 150 and 151:
Missionary and native: After every
- Page 152 and 153:
the case, as shown in Figure 29; no
- Page 154 and 155:
and defects of the information sent
- Page 156 and 157:
- Man did not develop through a cha
- Page 158 and 159:
15 The Quantities Used for Evaluati
- Page 160 and 161:
him: “Today salvation has come to
- Page 162 and 163:
16 A Biblical Analogy of the FourFu
- Page 164 and 165:
with God (Ephesians 5:18-20). The p
- Page 166 and 167: - energy is utilised, and- the cons
- Page 168 and 169: God’s testing fire; only fruit in
- Page 170 and 171: A1 The Statistical View of Informat
- Page 172 and 173: Figure 31: Model of a discrete sour
- Page 174 and 175: a) the factor n, which indicates th
- Page 176 and 177: ) Expectation value of the informat
- Page 178 and 179: A1.2 Mathematical Description of St
- Page 180 and 181: Figure 32: The number of letters L
- Page 182 and 183: A1.2.2 The Information SpiralThe qu
- Page 184 and 185: 184
- Page 186 and 187: 186
- Page 188 and 189: 188
- Page 190 and 191: Figure 34: The ant and the microchi
- Page 192 and 193: a degree of integration of 11.72 mi
- Page 194 and 195: 194
- Page 196 and 197: as expressing the highest possible
- Page 198 and 199: H syll = 8.6 bits/syllable. (16)The
- Page 200 and 201: Figure 36: Frequency distributions
- Page 202 and 203: 202
- Page 204 and 205: the voluminous data requirements, c
- Page 206 and 207: A2 Language: the Medium for Creatin
- Page 208 and 209: The words of a language are linked
- Page 210 and 211: (tongo), or from the same level (ba
- Page 212 and 213: It should be clear from these examp
- Page 214 and 215: A2.1.4 Written LanguagesThe inventi
- Page 218 and 219: “Speaking birds”: Parrots and b
- Page 220 and 221: Figure 41: Speechless.(Sketched by
- Page 222 and 223: we might realise. There are countle
- Page 224 and 225: - The impossibility of a perpetual
- Page 226 and 227: Figure 42: Three processes in close
- Page 228 and 229: 228
- Page 230 and 231: Figure 44: Ripple marks on beach sa
- Page 232 and 233: glucose is produced from 6 mol CO 2
- Page 234 and 235: individual catalytic enzyme reactio
- Page 236 and 237: nature: mechanical work is performe
- Page 238 and 239: All human nutritional problems coul
- Page 240 and 241: intricately constructed light proje
- Page 242 and 243: p = 0.006/h) to produce propulsion
- Page 244 and 245: leg they fly back to Canada over Ce
- Page 246 and 247: south-east and fly right across the
- Page 248 and 249: [E2] Eigen, M.: Stufen zum Leben- D
- Page 250 and 251: [G15] Gitt, W.:[G16] Gitt, W.:[G17]
- Page 252 and 253: Automatisierungstechnische Praxis 2
- Page 254 and 255: H. 12, pp. 68-87[W2] Weibel, E. R.:
- Page 256: Kemner, H. 146, 167Kessler, V. 11Ki