The processing of information leads to the creation of new information
The processing of information leads to the creation of new information
The creation of new information is achieved through the act of processing existing information (see also §01.00.07). There is, therefore, is no standalone processing, that is, all processing is a composite operation. All processing, that is, each action possible by Beings using information, is in fact a set of at least two separate operations: for example, to create new information one has to process older information; equally, to delete a dataset one has to access it first and so on (by way of a practical example, in the analogue world to use something one has to pick it up first). Evidently, processing is a composite operation from a Unique Human Observer Perspective only. Although breaking processing up into its constitutional parts is certainly possible and conceivable, there is no (Unique Human Observer Perspective) meaning in doing so: processing always has a purpose, that is, no processing operations takes place for its own sake. For example, there is no point in only accessing information; invariably its deletion or modification, or the creation of new information, is already in view when so doing—otherwise, why access it at all? Consequently, because all processing is in fact a composite operation, because from the Unique Human Observer Perspective there is invariably a purpose to it, there is Reason in each one of these operations (see §04.01.02]]).
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