The normal methods of explanation, and the standard definitions, for 'information', such as the 'resolution of uncertainty' are especially difficult to put into practice.
As these presuppose having knowledge already comprised, and/or formed from, a large quantity of information. Such as the concepts of 'uncertainty' and 'resolution'.
How does one know they've truly learned these concepts, necessary for recognizing information, without already understanding the nature of information?
This seems to produce a recursive problem, a.k.a, a 'chicken and egg' problem.
Additionally, the capability to recognize information and differentiate it from random noise must already exist, in order to recognize and understand any definition of information, in fact to understand any sentence at all. So it's a multiply recursive problem.
Since, presumably, most members of this forum can understand sentences, how does this occur?
And since presumably no one could do so at birth, how does this capability arise in the intervening period from birth to adulthood?
I don't see that in your first comment addressing my question. Reproduced below:
If you intended to point to the replies after this, nothing said afterwards could retroactively nullify or preempt the prior claims ('There seems to be a category error in your question') presented in the initial reply. You have to explicitly retract the prior claims.
Because the usual custom in discussions is to address points as they were presented chronologically, unless announced otherwise beforehand.