PM,

You/re doing a QED on my point.

It is a reality not in my mind that in any collection of patchworks the
next patchwork can have an infinity of parts at any point, and an infinity
of alternatives for the next member of the collection.

If you would like to instance a pattern that can have an infinity of
diverse parts at any point, a Koch curve say that can have not just a
triangle at the next point but also a bear or a flower or a circle or a
head of PM, be my guest. Which patterns are infinitely flexible, infinitely
transmogrifiable?

Similarly, it is a reality that all concepts - and all classes of real
world objects that they refer to - can take infinitely diverse forms. There
are infinitely diverse forms of CHAIR, for example, IOW the forms of chair
can be taken collectively as a collection of patchworks.

If you'd like to explain how those diverse forms of chair can be said to
form a pattern or be derived from a formula/algo, we'd love to hear.Here
you go, if you've forgotten:

http://www.google.co.uk/imgres?imgurl=http://static8.depositphotos.com/1178962/893/v/950/depositphotos_8939013-Modern-chair-vector.jpg&imgrefurl=http://jobspapa.com/stock-vector-chair-illustration-collection.html&h=950&w=950&sz=203&tbnid=nxpSVkEgz0NCLM:&tbnh=90&tbnw=90&zoom=1&usg=__uit5TprCBY1m-7XtMSfQm9LMpFU=&docid=85Xvc9P118MZ0M&sa=X&ei=0NaGUrnzBpSShgeLlIDACQ&ved=0CE4Q9QEwBQ

Except that you are quite incapable of reasoned argument by examples on
this matter, no? All you are capable here is of ad hominem arguments, no?


On 16 November 2013 00:45, Piaget Modeler <[email protected]> wrote:

> Constructionist viewpoint:
>
>    Is it the case that this distinction between pattern and patchwork only
> exists in Mike T.'s mind,
>    because he has constructed this concept himself (ergo, defined it for
> hemself) ?  Has he socialized
>    this concept to others, or was it socialized to him long ago from
> someone else who originally constructed
>    the concept some time ago?
>
>    Either originated or socialized, this idea of pattern and patchwork has
> been reconstructed in Mike T's mind
>    as a very specific thing.  The real question is how successful he is in
> socializing this idea to other AGI-ers.
>
>    Some may see pattern and patchwork as the same, some may see patchwork
> as a subset of pattern, or vice versa.
>
>    But this is all mental, not real.  The real thing out in the universe,
> whether a magazine cover, or bed of flowers,
>    or ocean waves has no name.  It is just that we, communicating to one
> another have assigned the name
>    pattern or patchwork to it and defined it for ourselves.
>
>    Do I know what you taste when you taste a lemon? Do I know what you
> mean when you say a patchwork?
>    For me it all depends on my pre-existing mental model.  Just as for you
> everything depends on your own
>    pre-existing mental model.
>
>   To say that others may never "get" what he's saying is probably quite
> accurate indeed, but for different reasons
>   than Mike T. thinks.
>
> ~PM
>
> ------------------------------
> Date: Sat, 16 Nov 2013 00:15:20 +0000
> Subject: [agi] The *legal" difference between patchwork and pattern
> From: [email protected]
> To: [email protected]
>
>
> What follows is the difference between not merely patchwork and pattern,
> but AGI and narrow AI.
>
> Getting AGI-ers to see that difference is a Herculean task - but looking
> at that difference in the light of the law may do it.
>
> Look at the two mag. covers in
>
>
> http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20110222/12002913212/is-copying-idea-magazine-cover-infringement.shtml
>
> They are obviously very close. AGI-ers would be tempted in other
> circumstances to see them as following a common pattern/formula.
>
> But if they were, the Russian mag would have no defence in law against the
> charge of plagiarism.
>
> Actually they are members of a collection of patchworks, and the Russian
> mag, does have a defence, (although it might still lose in some courts).
>
> Quite obviously, as the comments in the article make clear, there are many
> differences in the parts of the two covers/patchworks.
>
> And that's one of several differences between patterns and patchworks.
>
> Examples of a pattern share the SAME set of parts, while examples of a
> patchwork have EVERNEW and different,  EVERCHANGING parts.
>
> An example of a pattern can only have ONE specific part/form  at any given
> point, while a patchwork can have any of an INFINITY of diverse parts.forms
> at any given point. (That may be too subtle a difference for many AGI-ers
> to grasp - only one part vs an infinity of parts). The Russian mag, for
> example, has "substituted" a cock for a flower at the centre, but it could
> also have used a snake, bear, ball, plate etc... ad infinitum
>
> Patterns have RULES, patchworks have NO RULES.
>
> And then there's the v. different generative principles of
> patchworks/patterns.
>
> The Russian mag/patchwork clearly hasn't copied a *FORMULA*/algo, (even
> though AGI-ers believe that everything is generated by formulae/algos.)
>
> What the law and our wider culture tell us is that the mags/patchworks
> copy an IDEA . (You could also call it copying a *concept*).  And ideas can
> have infinitely diverse "expressions"/forms.
>
> AGI is not about rigid formulae or algos that can only generate a specific
> very limited set of patterns,but ideas that can generate a very general,
> unlimited and infinite diversity of patchworks. Think of how the idea/
> concept of *chair* can generate an infinite diversity of chair forms.  Or
> how GO TO THE KITCHEN can generate an infinite diversity of journeys/routes
> to kitchens.
>
>  What more precisely is the difference between idea and formula/algo?
> ANother time. But you should be able to start at least to see the
> difference.
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