mapping our spaces outer spacecyber space professional responsibilities
TRANSCRIPT
Introduction to Information
Studies
Poetry is information fireworks.
Edward Housman
Mapping our spaces
Outer Space Cyber Space
Professional Responsibilities
Creating Communities
Physical Info Interactions
Managing Information
Changing career paths
Caring and Building
Protecting and Preserving
Serving and teaching
Advocating Policy Development
Ethical Service to All
Self-reflective Analysis
Creating what’s needed
Scanning our Context
Social Values
International reach
UT iSchool Leaders
Nature of Information
by
Edward M. Housman
Information is the substance that passes between us when I tell you something.
Information persists for a time, then fades back into chaos.
Information cannot move without making noise.
Laughter is information dancing.
Information occupies space.
And time.
It takes energy to move information.
Information is necessary for life, for any organized activity.
Information is form without substance, substance without form. Both.
Information, like light, has weight; a gigabyte weighs less than a fingerprint.
Verse 2Information involves the displacement of
form through space and time.
An insight is information crashing into information.
Information implies structure.
Information can be in motion or frozen in time.
Information is crystalline order in a cloud of chaos.
Information is the satisfying, perhaps disturbing, answer to a question.
Verse 3
The weight of a stone, and the information needed to describe it, are equal.
Information is a substance, a form; like light, both wave and particle.
Information has a solid state; it freezes into rigidity (storage).
Information has a liquid state; it flows (communications).
Like matter, it slowly crumbles (entropy).
Information is sculpture, an idea encrypted into nature, a fact.
Somewhere information moves; the cosmos rumbles, roars out the fact.
In their egocentricity, humans think that information is for us alone. Not so.
Verse 4
There are two kinds of information: the physical and the biological.
The cosmos would be immobile darkness without them.
One is a sortie of bits; aircraft in-formation.
One is a star screaming, "I am here!"
One requires no observer.
Two is essential to life, its very fiber.
Two is a cat doping out its prey, a flower opening to the sun.
Information makes all objects in the universe, and teenagers, jitter.
It is the great mystical life force that drives us through wisdom, to death.
Verse 5
The same information can be expressed in different ways: a voice, a letter.
Unlike matter, information can be in many places at once.
A handshake is information. A nod. A look. A sigh.
Information is formed by rubbing two bit-streams together.
Information dwells in bit-streams, on paper, on stone, in a gesture.
Information craves a medium, a shard of tumbling time-space to dwell upon.
Verse 6
Information is easily confused with knowledge, certainty, wisdom, and data.
The meaning of a picture, a scene, a sensation, is information.
Information glows in a sea of randomness.
An organization is not physical; it's people bound by information.
An organization, any organized activity, is impossible without information
Verse 7
Noise and randomness are information's constant companions
Poetry is a tangle of bits on a pedestal, in the mind.
Poetry is information fireworks.
A poem is a hard, sparkling diamond of information.
Poetry is compressed insight, unstable and likely to explode.
Copyright The MITRE Corporation, 1999
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