Glen -

I admit to being over my depth, at least in attention, if not in ability to parse out your dense text, and more to the point, the entire thread(s) which gives me more sympathy with Nick who would like a tool to help organize, neaten up, trim, etc. these very complex ( in the more common meaning of the term) discussions. My experience with you is that you always say what you mean and mean what you say, so I don't doubt that there is gold in that mine... just my ability to float the overburden and other minerals away with Philosopher's Mercury (PhHg) in a timely manner.

I DO think Nick is asking for help from the rest of us in said parsing... to begin, I can parse HIS first definition of "layer" is as a "laying hen"... a chicken (or duck?) who is actively laying eggs. A total red-herring to mix metaphors here on a forum facilitated by another kind of RedFish altogether... a "fish of a different color" as it were, to keep up with the metaphor (aphorism?) mixology.

I DON'T think Owen was referring to you when he said: "troll", I think he was being ironical by suggesting Russ himself was being a troll. But I could be wrong. Owen may not even remember to whom his bell "trolled" in that moment? In any case, I don't find your contribution/interaction here to be particularly troll-like. Yes, you can be deliberately provocative, but more in the sense of Socrates who got colored as a "gadfly" (before there were trolls in the lexicon?). Stay away from the Hemlock, OK?

I'm trying to sort this (simple?) question of the meaning (connotations) of layering you use, as I have my own reserved use of the term in "complex, layered metaphors" or alternately "layered, complex metaphors"... but that is *mostly* an aside. I believe your onion analogy is Nick's "stratum" but I *think* with the added concept that each "direction" (theta/phi from onion-center) as a different "dimension". Your subsequent text suggests a high-dimensional venn diagram. My own work in visualization of Partially Ordered Sets (in the Gene Ontology) may begin to address some of this, but I suspect not.

   https://arxiv.org/pdf/1312.4935.pdf

I may continue to dig into this minefield of rich ore and interesting veins, but it has gotten beyond (even) me as a multiple attender who thrives on this kind of complexity (with limits apparently!).

I think I heard you suggest that YOU would volunteer to pull in the various drawstrings on this multidimensional bag forming of a half-dozen or more branching threads... I'll see if I can find that and ask some more pointed questions that might help that happen?

I truly appreciate Nick's role (as another Socrates?) teasing at our language to try to get it more plain or perhaps more specific or perhaps more concise? Is there some kind of conservation law in these dimensions?

- Steve



On 6/8/17 10:40 AM, glen ☣ wrote:
You seem to be asking for people other than me to respond.  But I doubt anyone 
will try to explain a troll like me. >8^)

I don't have any idea what you mean by "a kind of hen".  So, I'll let that go.  Stratum 
is a good word, but like level, it implies a direction, namely up-down ("something laid 
down").  I do mean something very much like level and stratum, except without implying a 
(constant) direction.  Onion is a better analog than, say, genus or battalion.  There's still a 
symmetry in the directions from the center of the onion.  But at least you can vary the direction 
without changing layers.  More complicated layering would be something like doping a silicon chip 
or spray painting a complicated surface ... or perhaps sand blasting something, where you turn it 
within the directional gradient.

It's important to graduate from the naive concept of levels to the more sophisticated 
concept of layers because, e.g. in Russ' urban systems, there are all different types of 
flows and ebbs, gradients of different speeds, directions, types, etc. that 
"paint" things on the system in varied ways.  It's not a singular hierarchy in 
any sense.

If you grok the poverty of the concept of the "landscape" in evolution, then you should 
grok the poverty of the concept of "level" in cumulative structures.

That's the best I can do to explain it.  Sorry for my inadequacy.

On 06/07/2017 06:32 PM, Nick Thompson wrote:
Here is Glen's thoughtful post of January 20, reborn. To be honest, I don’t 
understand it.  Not a bit.  I am hoping that perhaps one or more of the rest of 
you can help me get it.  Let’s start with one baby step.  What is meant by 
LAYER in this text? The possible meanings open to me are, (1) a kind of hen; 
(2) a stratum in a substance; or (3) a level in a hierarchical descriptive 
scheme.  So, “genus” is a level as is “battalion”. Are any of these meanings 
relevant to Glen’s post?

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