I think they are trying to turn into a not-very-interesting characteristic.  
Like astronomy before Kepler.  Or whatever.  

Myself, I am a realist about emergence, or I aint interested in it. 

N

Nicholas S. Thompson
Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Ethology, 
Clark University (nthomp...@clarku.edu)
http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/




----- Original Message ----- 
From: Russ Abbott 
To: nickthomp...@earthlink.net;The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee 
Group
Cc: Owen Densmore; Jim Gattiker; Frank Wimberly; Roger E Critchlow Jr; Chip 
Garner; maryl; nthompson
Sent: 10/5/2009 2:55:29 PM 
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] EMERGENCE SEMINAR V: Dennett et al; WAS: emergence 
seminar: what's next?


Quoting Nick,


For [Hempel and Oppenheim], a characteristic of on object is emergent relative 
to a theory and relative to a particular list of part attributes when that 
characteristic cannot be deduced from the part attributes using that theory.  
So, to say that a property is emergent is only to say something about the state 
of our theory with respect to the data we have already gathered.


That seems to mean that a characteristic is emergent or not depending on the 
theory and the part attributes considered. So based on this view any 
characteristic is emergent if one ignores all the part attributes. Is that a 
correct conclusion? Similarly no characteristic is emergent if one creates a 
theory that maps part attributes to it -- no matter how arbitrary and ad hoc 
that mapping may be.  Neither of these seem like very attractive positions. 
They make the notion of emergence subject to all sorts of manipulation.  

Or is the point simply to define the term "emergence" in terms of this sort of 
formalism? If that's the point, i.e., to define the term "emergence" formally 
like this, then what do they do with this definition once created?  Does this 
definition yield any insights, or is it just a definition?

-- Russ A



On Mon, Oct 5, 2009 at 1:00 PM, Nicholas Thompson <nickthomp...@earthlink.net> 
wrote:

Glen,

My colleagues have already told you what the assignment is, so what follows
is little more than spin.

In our attempts to understand what is going on in this tangled literature,
we have come up with only one way to characterize the different views of
emergence that seems to endure more than a week:  that is the
epistemological vs ontological distinction.  Hempel and Oppenheim fall
soundly on the epistemological side.  For them, a characteristic of on
object is emergent relative to a theory and relative to a particular list
of part attributes when that characteristic cannot be deduced from the part
attributes using that theory.  So, to say that a property is emergent is
only to say something about the state of our theory with respect to the
data we have already gathered.

Dennett seems to come down in the middle of our distinction.  His argument
concerns what beliefs are REALLY.  His answer -- that beliefs are really
features of the world as seen from a point of view -- implies a position on
the nature of emergence.  Like Hemple and Oppenheim, Dennett would concede
that seeing emergence requires one to take a point of view.... a STANCE, if
you will.  But taking that stance is like looking through binoculars ... it
may limit your field of vision, but it also tells you something that is
true of the world.  In fact, every stance tells you something that is true
of the world.

A personal note: those who tried to follow my ravings concerning Holt and
the New Realism this summer wont be surprized to hear me say that Dennett
is sounding awfully like a New Realist.

See you Thursday at 4pm.

Sorry for duplicate posting.

 N

Nicholas S. Thompson
Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Ethology,
Clark University (nthomp...@clarku.edu)
http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/




> [Original Message]
> From: glen e. p. ropella <g...@agent-based-modeling.com>
> To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <friam@redfish.com>
> Date: 10/5/2009 9:38:53 AM
> Subject: [FRIAM] emergence seminar: what's next?
>
>
> What's next on the reading list?
>
> --
> glen e. p. ropella, 971-222-9095, http://agent-based-modeling.com
>
>
> ============================================================
> FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
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