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The processing of information leads to the creation of new information

The processing of information leads to the creation of new information

Chapter 04 — Processing • Paragraph 2 • §04.00.02.00

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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