the laws of information

information is truth. it wants to be discovered.
the price of discovery is that sometimes things must die.

1. information as truth information reveals what's real. data is neutral — neither true nor false without context.
2. law of societal growth societies thrive when grounded in truth. they falter when false data replaces it.
3. law of inevitable decline prioritizing bad data over truth guarantees collapse.
4. law of evolutionary truth truth expands through failed societies. future ones learn from those deaths.

an enduring government fosters diverse subgroups to seek truth. it defends their independence, not a single viewpoint — knowing rigid truths lead to downfall.

how these laws align with thinkers' ideas

Andrew Targowski
Universal Laws of Information

ties societal complexity to a quality "information reservoir" — supports growth on truth vs. decline on bad data. the "information wave" creates ignorance and interdependence, validating collapse from false info.

tension: unforeseen consequences may mean not all "deaths" are necessary if mitigated ethically.
Melvin Vopson
Second Law of Infodynamics

info systems reduce disorder over time, pruning inefficient data — like societies dying to optimize truth. inefficiencies "die" to let reliable info expand.

no major tension; adds scientific backing to discovery's cost.
Werner Gitt
Laws of Universal Information

info is symbolic and purposeful, from intelligent sources — reinforces truth vs. neutral data. societies need true info for order; fits fostering diverse groups for discovery.

tension: links to creationism, which may not match purely evolutionary views.
Luciano Floridi
Philosophy of Information

info as reality's foundation, with ethical handling in the "infosphere" — echoes truth-data distinction and avoiding collapse via accuracy. supports open flows without imposed truths.

tension: emphasizes harm reduction, questioning if all discovery requires "death."

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