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What Does "Physical" Really Mean?

Nous

Well-Known Member
Premium Member
The adjective “physical” is often tossed around as a term by which to distinguish or classify phenomena, or to describe some general aspect of things. As such, “physical” would useful for purposes of metaphysics. Does it succeed at that purpose? Can one articulate that meaning?

One digression-worthy example of this use of the word occurs in Rolf Landauer's series of articles where he stated and argued that “information is physical”. He initially drew this conclusion in a 1961 paper on the basis “that devices exhibiting logical irreversibility are essential to computing. Logical irreversibility, we believe, in turn implies physical irreversibility, and the latter is accompanied by dissipative effects.” His reasoning is made more explicit (and slightly revised) in his 1996 paper, where he begins:

1. Information is physical

Information is not a disembodied abstract entity; it is always tied to a physical representation. It is represented by engraving on a stone tablet, a spin, a charge, a hole in a punched card, a mark on paper, or some other equivalent. This ties the handling of information to all the possibilities and restrictions of our real physical word, its laws of physics and its storehouse of available parts.​

More succinct restatements his equivalence of logical and physical irreversibility (e.g., erasure of a bit of information increases thermodynamic entropy) have become known as Landauer's Principle. While the principle has been widely accepted in the past 40 years, numerous scientists have energetically criticized associating information entropy and thermodynamic entropy, which entails an exorcism of Maxwell's Demon (e.g., Morowitz 1986; Norton 2005 and 2011; Earman and Norton 1999; and Shenker 2005). A study published last year by Lopez-Suarez et al. provides experimental evidence indicating that Landauer's Principle is in error:

The claimed linkage[11] between logical and physical irreversibility has animated a long debate[12]. Although recent studies[13] have contributed to clarify this aspect from a purely theoretical point of view, it remains widely controversial and is still missing experimental verification. Our experiment rules out the presence of a finite ‘minimum dissipated heat’ due to logical irreversibility, an argument often invoked when the reduction of input–output information is considered. We stress here that our experiment does not question the so-called Landauer-reset interpretation, where a net decrease of physical entropy requires a minimum energy expenditure[10,14]. What we have here is a logically irreversible computation, that is a generic process where a decrease in the amount of information between the output and the input is realized with an arbitrarily small energy dissipation; this shows that logical reversibility and physical reversibility have to be treated on independent bases[12].​

An article at phys.org ends with the comment “Though Landauer famously said 'information is physical,' it turns out that information is not so physical after all.” Surely that means one can hold out hope that information will turn out to be at least slightly physical.

Oddly I have come across few, if any, discussions that have made a big deal about what seems to me an important point: the fact that the phenomena of heat generation which premises Landauer's conclusion that “information is physical” is actually the product of computation or processing by a device, rather than some intrinsic characteristic of the quantity information. Information isn't a necessary element in Landauer's scenario.

In any case, the topic of this thread concerns what “physical” means. Does Landauer's assertion that “information is physical” contradict Norbert Wierner's statement in Cybernetics, “Information is information, not matter or energy”?

Of course, it depends on what is meant by “physical”. Perusing dictionaries, one finds that some definitions bespeak a contradiction in defining "physical" in terms of matter and energy:

the definition of physical

2. of or relating to that which is material:
the physical universe; the physical sciences.

3. noting or pertaining to the properties of matter and energy other than those peculiar to living matter.​

Definition of PHYSICAL

2 a :having material existence: perceptible especially through the senses and subject to the laws of nature
“everything physical is measurable by weight, motion, and resistance” —Thomas De Quincey

b: of or relating to material things​

Physical definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary

1. of nature and all matter; natural; material​

On the other hand, all dictionaries also include a definition in which “physical” is just the adjectival form of “physics,” meaning “of or relating to physics.” Undeniably information relates to physics (though this is not what Landauer meant by “information is physical.”)

But to say that something is “of or relates to physics” is acutely uninformative of the intrinsic nature of the thing. Physics is a broad field of inquiry, without strict boundaries for what might “relate to” it, and the popular ideas and theories of physics change radically over time. Going by a keyword hits among the physics papers at arXiv.org, one can conclude that muskrats and maple syrup do not relate to physics and therefore are not physical according to such definition. Giraffes do relate to physics, but not the animal. Infinite sets and all algebraic structures I could think of relate to physics, thus meeting this definition of physical.

Obviously “physical” is not a scientific term. Neither physics nor any other scientific discipline defines the adjective or utilizes it to classify phenomena. There is no method for testing a hypothesis about whether something is “physical” or not. It's interesting that many people who declare their allegiance to science have an attachment for this adjective.

One might think that an intelligible concept of “physical” would be found in the scholarly expositions of the metaphysical thesis of physicalism. But one would be woefully wrong. In the Encyclopedia of Philosophy article on physicalism, Professor Macdonald addresses the issue upfront and immediately wades into the problem of Hempel's Dilemma:

Any formulation of physicalism raises the question, What is meant by "physical"? It is difficult to formulate a conception of the physical that is neither too strong, making physicalism obviously false, nor too weak, making physicalism trivially true. For example, what is physical may be simply identified through the language of physics. However, a problem arises over the conception of physics appealed to. Current physics seems too narrow because future extensions of physics would not count as physical; but the idea of a completed physics is too indeterminate because there is no clear idea of what that physics might include.​

She quickly dismisses this predicament by merely asserting that “nevertheless what is physical is all and only what a completed physics countenances.” In other words, no one can possibly know what the adjective “physical” refers to at any given point in time. Moreover, the very idea of “a completed physics” is of questionable coherence, as there are no criteria for determining when “physics” will cease to enjoy further discoveries or ideas.

In the SEP article, Professor Stoljar exhibits the same sort of faint bravery when he eventually confesses that “Without any understanding of what the physical is, we can have no serious understanding of what physicalism is.” Then he proceeds to state two definitions of “physical property” that provide no understanding of what “the physical” is, both of which are blatantly circular (e.g., “A property is physical iff: it . . . is the sort of property required by a complete account of the intrinsic nature of paradigmatic physical objects . . .”), which he acknowledges to be circular and assures us it is not problematic. It's vacuous. Nevertheless, under this definition one could never claim that consciousness is a “physical property”. Consciousness is obviously not “the sort of property required by a complete account of the intrinsic nature of paradigmatic physical objects”.

So what does “physical” really mean? Give your definition.

Does the adjective serve any productive purpose in the context of metaphysics, that is, as descriptive of some intrinsic or general characteristic of phenomena?
 

siti

Well-Known Member
...“nevertheless what is physical is all and only what a completed physics countenances.” In other words, no one can possibly know what the adjective “physical” refers to at any given point in time. Moreover, the very idea of “a completed physics” is of questionable coherence, as there are no criteria for determining when “physics” will cease to enjoy further discoveries or ideas.
I think her definition is OK and I'm happy with that. Your position here seems to be that because we do not have a full account of what might ultimately be included in the "catalogue" of phenomena that are "physical" (i.e. amenable to explanation by a more complete physics) that consciousness will never be amenable to explanation by a more complete physics. We just don't know that. But we do know that there are claimed phenomena (like Jesus walking on water or the resurrection of the dead...etc.) that are forever beyond explanation by physics no matter how much more complete it may become. Its irrelevant to the discussion whether they really happened or not - there is (and can be) no physical explanation for them as real events no matter how complete the physics.

Its a bit disingenuous to suggest that because we cannot know all that the adjective 'physical' refers to at any given point it is not a useful adjective because there are very many phenomena that we can know that the adjective refers to. Think about other adjectives like 'red' or 'human' for example - is it possible to know precisely the limits of what those adjectives refer to at any given time? But that doesn't mean they are not useful in describing some of the uncountably many 'red' things there are or some of the uncountably many 'human' characteristics we might yet discover as a more complete account of what it means to be 'human' becomes available.

Anyway, all that apart, even if information were to turn out to be a "disembodied abstract entity" - we still have the problem of how we could possibly interact with it without the unquestionably 'physical apparatus' required to receive and interpret the information.

My best guess is to go with Whitehead's inextricably intertwined mental/physical bipolar explanation. There is, as far as I can see, no information (that we can possibly know about) that is not either embedded or encoded in a physical 'substrate' (although I suppose one could argue that it is the physical that is embedded in a mental substrate). It is a leap of faith to suggest that there will, under some scheme similar to this (Whiteheadian metaphysics), ultimately be a perfectly adequate physical account of how bits of mental/physical reality relate - many-to-many - to produce consciousness (and to say that is more or less what I mean by 'physicalism'). But, by the same token, I think its just as much a leap of faith to suggest that consciousness will forever remain beyond the explanatory power of physics on the grounds that we are currently ignorant of what a future physics might look like.
 
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shunyadragon

shunyadragon
Premium Member
Information is not physical. Information is descriptive of the physical.

The definitions provided are ok, but limited.
 

suncowiam

Well-Known Member
Information is not physical. Information is descriptive of the physical.

The definitions provided are ok, but limited.

Actually information is physical. It travels at the speed of light.

Can information travel faster than light?

All the information we are communicating to each other has a finite speed. It is definitely physical. From the neurons in your brains firing, to the nervous system commanding you to type, to the copper wires and optic fibers sending the binary coded message over the internet.

It's all physicalllllllllllll.
 

Revoltingest

Pragmatic Libertarian
Premium Member
Actually information is physical. It travels at the speed of light.

Can information travel faster than light?

All the information we are communicating to each other has a finite speed. It is definitely physical. From the neurons in your brains firing, to the nervous system commanding you to type, to the copper wires and optic fibers sending the binary coded message over the internet.

It's all physicalllllllllllll.
There's no way you can win this.
In the material world....natural world...physical world....whatever it's called,
every phenomenon has physical aspects, eg, thoughts being held by neurons.
So it's possible to argue that everything detectable is "physical". Only the
supernatural would lie outside of it. This view isn't of much use to materialists.

I prefer using "physical" to make a distinction between information & other things.
Information is about communication representable by patterns in matter of many
forms, & transferable to other forms, where the forms themselves have no
significance, but the the information does.
Contrast this with forms of matter where it's all about a physical process, &
not about communication.
Example....
Information in a book isn't physical. It can be transferred to our brains.
The information remains unchanged throughout the processes involved.
But the paper, ink, thread, glue & leather cover are physical. Electromagnetic,
electrical & chemical means means of transfer to our neurons are also physical.
The material & the processes are physical. But the info transferred is not physical.

This is hard to convey.
(It's late...my eyes are tired.)
How'm I do'n?
 
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suncowiam

Well-Known Member
There's no way you can win this.
In the material world....natural world...physical world....whatever it's called,
every phenomenon has physical aspects, eg, thoughts being held by neurons.
So it's possible to argue that everything detectable is "physical". Only the
supernatural would lie outside of it. This view isn't of much use to materialists.

I prefer using "physical" to make a distinction between information & other things.
Information is about communication representable by patterns in matter of many
forms, & transferable to other forms, where the forms themselves have no
significance, but the the information does.
Contrast this with forms of matter where it's all about a physical process, &
not about communication.
Example....
Information in a book isn't physical. It can be transferred to our brains.
The information remains unchanged throughout the processes involved.
But the paper, ink, thread, glue & leather cover are physical. Electromagnetic,
electrical & chemical means means of transfer to our neurons are also physical.
The material & the processes are physical. But the info transferred is not physical.

This is hard to convey.
(It's late...my eyes are tired.)
How'm I do'n?


Information reaches humans via different mediums: sight, sound, touch. Each medium has a basic component like photons, electrons, cascading molecules... information is a pattern of these basic components. A picture is sent to the eyes by a reflection of light off the picture. This composition a very large number of photons with specific color frequencies that hit the eye nerves to form a pattern. Sound waves are specific air vibrational patterns. It is organized and discernable. That is information.

This is why we know what is happening from our early universe billions of years ago from light that has travelled billions of light years.

This is how information travels and is already defined by science as I've shown in my link. Information cannot be faster than the speed of light just like any other physical object in our universe.
 

Revoltingest

Pragmatic Libertarian
Premium Member
Information reaches humans via different mediums: sight, sound, touch. Each medium has a basic component like photons, electrons, cascading molecules... information is a pattern of these basic components. A picture is sent to the eyes by a reflection of light off the picture. This composition a very large number of photons with specific color frequencies that hit the eye nerves to form a pattern. Sound waves are specific air vibrational patterns. It is organized and discernable. That is information.

This is why we know what is happening from our early universe billions of years ago from light that has travelled billions of light years.

This is how information travels and is already defined by science as I've shown in my link. Information cannot be faster than the speed of light just like any other physical object in our universe.
I don't disagree with any of that....except that I use the word, "information", to refer to
something we've encoded. Light & other emanations from celestial objects coming to
us are physical phenomena from which we interpret, thereby creating information.
Examples....
Words from your post are information.
Light from the star, Betelgeuse, is not information.
 

suncowiam

Well-Known Member
I don't disagree with any of that....except that I use the word, "information", to refer to
something we've encoded. Light & other emanations from celestial objects coming to
us are physical phenomena from which we interpret, thereby creating information.
Examples....
Words from your post are information.
Light from the star, Betelgeuse, is not information.

That is information. We can discern from the light if that is a star, what type of star, how big of star and so on...

Here's the chicken/egg question then. Is it information if it can't reach the destination? Is it information if the words I'm typing now never reach you? What use is there if none of my thoughts or typing fails to reach you?
 

Revoltingest

Pragmatic Libertarian
Premium Member
That is information. We can discern from the light if that is a star, what type of star, how big of star and so on...
Again, this is a different definition of "information".
I'm defining it as artificially encoded.
Here's the chicken/egg question then. Is it information if it can't reach the destination? Is it information if the words I'm typing now never reach you? What use is there if none of my thoughts or typing fails to reach you?
Information not read is still information....as I use the term.
 

suncowiam

Well-Known Member
Again, this is a different definition of "information".
I'm defining it as artificially encoded.

Information not read is still information....as I use the term.

I understand your definition although I disagree with it because information is composed of inform. There is an innate property of action to convey the details.

Information that does not reach anyone or things just isn't practical. It might as well not exist in the first place.
 
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Revoltingest

Pragmatic Libertarian
Premium Member
I understand your definition although I disagree with it because information is conposed of inform. There is an innate property of action to convey the details.

Information that does not reach anyone or thing just isn't practical. It might as well not exist in the first place.
Info being useless is another issue.
(I'm now thinking of many posts here on RF.)
 

Kapalika

Well-Known Member
Premium Member
I'm not sure what is meant by "information" here since essentially information is values we assign to things for the purposes of arbitrary measurement and/or communication. To say it's physical because it's tied to representation would be to say that language is akin to physical phenomena. Which I can't agree with.

I would say that physical is simply any substance, energy or matter that has locality. I believe ideas, and "information" is non-local, seeing as we can cause awareness of it and/or a duplication of it it with arbitrarily assigned meanings to sounds (language) and no other means.

That's a little more wordy, but basically ideas/"information" = not local/physical. Actual stuffs/matter/energy = physical.

I'm a bit of a minimalist when it comes to these topics though, I'll admit. I think the over complication of these topics is a result of people thinking in language, which is arbitrary and dualistic, when reality in of itself is concrete, objective and nondual. So even as "it really is" is a little hard to describe with that in mind. I'm just saying people start to take the arbitrary and dual nature as reality itself.

So, physical is having locality, to me. That's my view on it.
 

blü 2

Veteran Member
Premium Member
The adjective “physical” is often tossed around as a term by which to distinguish or classify phenomena, or to describe some general aspect of things. As such, “physical” would useful for purposes of metaphysics. Does it succeed at that purpose? Can one articulate that meaning?
Physics gets its name from Greek φύσιϛ, meaning 'nature', 'universe', and since it also means 'birth' you could add 'creation'.

So physics is the study of nature / the world external to the self / all things that exist independently of the concept of them in a brain / the material world.

And it can also refer to objective reality in contrast to the imaginary.

And 'physical' means 'of physics' / 'existing in nature' / 'real' (as distinct from 'imaginary'), having objective existence.

Information is that which informs brains, or brain-like things (eg computers capable of making choices; perhaps too the Jacquard loom). Despite recent romantic attempts to add to the word an inference that all of nature is sentient, only a tiny part of nature is sentient, Platonism doesn't apply, and in physics 'information' is another word for data.

(However, in Information Theory, 'information' is information, properly so called, expressed in a particular form, bits. Or at least, that was the idea at the start.)
Does the adjective serve any productive purpose in the context of metaphysics, that is, as descriptive of some intrinsic or general characteristic of phenomena?
Off the top of my head, if the phenomena are subjective phenomena within the brain eg the experience of alcohol or more colorful drugs as distinct from the biochemistry generating the experience, then the experience is the subjective part and the biochemistry is the physical part.

That's really a variation on the theme of contrasting 'real' and 'imaginary'.
 
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It Aint Necessarily So

Veteran Member
Premium Member
For me, physical refers to space-time, and the various manifestations of energy within it including matter, force, and form, where form can mean the shape of an asteroid, the pattern of photons heading across space that, if apprehended, will reveal starlight, or the degree of vibration in molecules that if touched, will be experienced as heat.

If there are other aspects of nature inside or outside of our universe not yet known and therefore not included in the description of physical reality above - perhaps unseen dimensions of space - they are also part of physical reality.

Whether consciousness should be considered part of physical reality as opposed to being something else observing physical reality is a difficult problem. I lean toward a yes answer, but understand that this is now trying to answer an as yet unanswerable question.

----

Wordy, but I didn't know how to be thorough and clear in fewer words:

I find that the best way to deal with the issue of information is to limit the term to the apprehension of external forms, that is, when form informs us.

There really is no disagreement about what happens when a tree falls in the forest and there is no ear to apprehend that fact. It generates waves of a certain frequency and amplitude in the atmosphere around it that travel out in all directions at a characteristic speed, attenuating with distance.

That is what I understand has happened, and I would suggest that most people reading these words would agree. Where we might differ is regarding what to call that. Shall we call it a noise?

It doesn't really matter what we call it. Call it Keith.

As I indicated, a lot of these semantic knots unravel if we simply make a distinction between unapprehended phenomena and their conscious perception, saving one set of terms for the former and another for the latter. So for me, it's not sound or a noise until and unless it is heard by a conscious agent. We might call it sound waves to indicate that if perceived, it will be perceived as sound, but we don't consider it sound until heard.

At that point, form - ripples in the ambient atmosphere that when unheard are without meaning - comes into a theater of consciousness and informs it of the presence of something happening in the vicinity, at which point it is information of a specific type: sound.

Notice that none of this is about what is real or true, just what to call it.

By this reckoning, DNA does not carry information until it is apprehended, at which time its form - its double helix shape, its sequence of codons and their atomic arrangements within the molecule - becomes information. This didn't happen until relatively recently.

But while going about its work unapprehended, it can be thought of as a form - a template - which generates other forms like mRNA, which then it turn with the help of matter formed into what is now called a ribosome, another form is generated: a polypeptide, perhaps an enzyme.

The enzyme assumes a characteristic conformation (there's the syllable form again), which along with its pattern of charges, also form, interacts with matter of a characteristic form (the enzyme's substrate) converting it to another form, and so on.

All of this goes on outside of consciousness - form transforming (there's that syllable again) into other forms, not being information until a mind apprehends it.

I realize that as with all matters of nomenclature, that this is an artificial construct, but one with increased value relative to alternate formulations because with it, many semantic riddles evaporate away. There is no more need to think about whether a tree falling in a forest unheard makes a sound. If a sound is defined as energy apprehended by a particular sense organ, the ear, then there is no issue any longer.

Consider Revoltingest's comment,

I use the word, "information", to refer to something we've encoded. Light & other emanations from celestial objects coming to us are physical phenomena from which we interpret, thereby creating information. Examples.... Words from your post are information. Light from the star, Betelgeuse, is not information.

This seems to approximate what I said, but I'm not sure. Words from another are information in his head while he is conceiving them, form when transmitted electronically, then information again when apprehended remotely by a reader. Photons from Betelgeuse traveling thrrough space toward you are form until they impact the retina of sighted, conscious individual, at which time they inform him of the star's continuing stream of photons. We can call them light waves, but I reserve the word light for the apprehension of these photons as vision. No need to consider the matter further.

Consider Suncowiam's question, Is it information if it can't reach the destination? Is it information if the words I'm typing now never reach you?

What shall we call Suncowiam's typed words that are never read? This question is now quite easy to answer. There is no good reason to continue to grapple over this matter using other formulations, since nothing changes however one answers. So why not pick something that makes the questions all disappear?
 
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Polymath257

Think & Care
Staff member
Premium Member
The adjective “physical” is often tossed around as a term by which to distinguish or classify phenomena, or to describe some general aspect of things. As such, “physical” would useful for purposes of metaphysics. Does it succeed at that purpose? Can one articulate that meaning?

One digression-worthy example of this use of the word occurs in Rolf Landauer's series of articles where he stated and argued that “information is physical”. He initially drew this conclusion in a 1961 paper on the basis “that devices exhibiting logical irreversibility are essential to computing. Logical irreversibility, we believe, in turn implies physical irreversibility, and the latter is accompanied by dissipative effects.” His reasoning is made more explicit (and slightly revised) in his 1996 paper, where he begins:

1. Information is physical

Information is not a disembodied abstract entity; it is always tied to a physical representation. It is represented by engraving on a stone tablet, a spin, a charge, a hole in a punched card, a mark on paper, or some other equivalent. This ties the handling of information to all the possibilities and restrictions of our real physical word, its laws of physics and its storehouse of available parts.​

More succinct restatements his equivalence of logical and physical irreversibility (e.g., erasure of a bit of information increases thermodynamic entropy) have become known as Landauer's Principle. While the principle has been widely accepted in the past 40 years, numerous scientists have energetically criticized associating information entropy and thermodynamic entropy, which entails an exorcism of Maxwell's Demon (e.g., Morowitz 1986; Norton 2005 and 2011; Earman and Norton 1999; and Shenker 2005). A study published last year by Lopez-Suarez et al. provides experimental evidence indicating that Landauer's Principle is in error:

The claimed linkage[11] between logical and physical irreversibility has animated a long debate[12]. Although recent studies[13] have contributed to clarify this aspect from a purely theoretical point of view, it remains widely controversial and is still missing experimental verification. Our experiment rules out the presence of a finite ‘minimum dissipated heat’ due to logical irreversibility, an argument often invoked when the reduction of input–output information is considered. We stress here that our experiment does not question the so-called Landauer-reset interpretation, where a net decrease of physical entropy requires a minimum energy expenditure[10,14]. What we have here is a logically irreversible computation, that is a generic process where a decrease in the amount of information between the output and the input is realized with an arbitrarily small energy dissipation; this shows that logical reversibility and physical reversibility have to be treated on independent bases[12].​

An article at phys.org ends with the comment “Though Landauer famously said 'information is physical,' it turns out that information is not so physical after all.” Surely that means one can hold out hope that information will turn out to be at least slightly physical.

Well, the information here was still a state of a physical device. It is still true that information is 'tied to a physical representation'. The crucial fact here is that information isn't simply negative entropy. And that is a very significant fact. It may well open things up to 'zero-energy' computation.

Oddly I have come across few, if any, discussions that have made a big deal about what seems to me an important point: the fact that the phenomena of heat generation which premises Landauer's conclusion that “information is physical” is actually the product of computation or processing by a device, rather than some intrinsic characteristic of the quantity information. Information isn't a necessary element in Landauer's scenario.

On the contrary, that is precisely what is at the heart of his scenario: the question is the difference between logical irreversibility and physical irreversibility. The latter does always produce an entropic effect. The former is now know not to in some cases.

In any case, the topic of this thread concerns what “physical” means. Does Landauer's assertion that “information is physical” contradict Norbert Wierner's statement in Cybernetics, “Information is information, not matter or energy”?[/QUOTE]

Weiner was considering a mathematical analysis and divorced himself from the physical aspects in order to do his analysis. There will still be the question of how information is produced or exists in the real world.

Of course, it depends on what is meant by “physical”. Perusing dictionaries, one finds that some definitions bespeak a contradiction in defining "physical" in terms of matter and energy:

the definition of physical

2. of or relating to that which is material:
the physical universe; the physical sciences.

3. noting or pertaining to the properties of matter and energy other than those peculiar to living matter.​

Definition of PHYSICAL

2 a :having material existence: perceptible especially through the senses and subject to the laws of nature
“everything physical is measurable by weight, motion, and resistance” —Thomas De Quincey

b: of or relating to material things​

Physical definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary

1. of nature and all matter; natural; material​

On the other hand, all dictionaries also include a definition in which “physical” is just the adjectival form of “physics,” meaning “of or relating to physics.” Undeniably information relates to physics (though this is not what Landauer meant by “information is physical.”)

But to say that something is “of or relates to physics” is acutely uninformative of the intrinsic nature of the thing. Physics is a broad field of inquiry, without strict boundaries for what might “relate to” it, and the popular ideas and theories of physics change radically over time. Going by a keyword hits among the physics papers at arXiv.org, one can conclude that muskrats and maple syrup do not relate to physics and therefore are not physical according to such definition. Giraffes do relate to physics, but not the animal. Infinite sets and all algebraic structures I could think of relate to physics, thus meeting this definition of physical.

Obviously “physical” is not a scientific term. Neither physics nor any other scientific discipline defines the adjective or utilizes it to classify phenomena. There is no method for testing a hypothesis about whether something is “physical” or not. It's interesting that many people who declare their allegiance to science have an attachment for this adjective.

One might think that an intelligible concept of “physical” would be found in the scholarly expositions of the metaphysical thesis of physicalism. But one would be woefully wrong. In the Encyclopedia of Philosophy article on physicalism, Professor Macdonald addresses the issue upfront and immediately wades into the problem of Hempel's Dilemma:

Any formulation of physicalism raises the question, What is meant by "physical"? It is difficult to formulate a conception of the physical that is neither too strong, making physicalism obviously false, nor too weak, making physicalism trivially true. For example, what is physical may be simply identified through the language of physics. However, a problem arises over the conception of physics appealed to. Current physics seems too narrow because future extensions of physics would not count as physical; but the idea of a completed physics is too indeterminate because there is no clear idea of what that physics might include.​

She quickly dismisses this predicament by merely asserting that “nevertheless what is physical is all and only what a completed physics countenances.” In other words, no one can possibly know what the adjective “physical” refers to at any given point in time. Moreover, the very idea of “a completed physics” is of questionable coherence, as there are no criteria for determining when “physics” will cease to enjoy further discoveries or ideas.

In the SEP article, Professor Stoljar exhibits the same sort of faint bravery when he eventually confesses that “Without any understanding of what the physical is, we can have no serious understanding of what physicalism is.” Then he proceeds to state two definitions of “physical property” that provide no understanding of what “the physical” is, both of which are blatantly circular (e.g., “A property is physical iff: it . . . is the sort of property required by a complete account of the intrinsic nature of paradigmatic physical objects . . .”), which he acknowledges to be circular and assures us it is not problematic. It's vacuous. Nevertheless, under this definition one could never claim that consciousness is a “physical property”. Consciousness is obviously not “the sort of property required by a complete account of the intrinsic nature of paradigmatic physical objects”.

So what does “physical” really mean? Give your definition.

Does the adjective serve any productive purpose in the context of metaphysics, that is, as descriptive of some intrinsic or general characteristic of phenomena?

I see the term 'physical' as being defined inductively: start with any particular material thing (like the chair in my room). Declare that to be physical. Then, anything that interacts with something physical is also defined to be physical. So, light, neutrinos, bosons, etc are all physical.

I see information as being our description of a physical situation. When the system changes, so does our description, and hence the information does also. Furthermore, we assign certain physical states to have meanings *we* give to them: in the experiment mentioned above, the information was the amount of twist in a piece of material. In modern computers, the information is the voltage in certain electrical lines.

Finally, the phrase 'useful purpose in the context of metaphysics' is self-contradictory: metaphysics is never useful.
 
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