Hi, Owen,  

 

This would all be a lot easier if you would just say what you think.  

 

What was the “unkind way” that your message was “not in” ?

 

And what the dickens is an O.P.?   

 

Nick 

 

 

 

 

Nicholas S. Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology

Clark University

 <http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/> 
http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/

 

From: Friam [mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com] On Behalf Of Owen Densmore
Sent: Thursday, June 08, 2017 6:08 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <friam@redfish.com>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] tools, trollers, and language

 

No, my troll comment was meant for Nick's OP. Not in an unkind way, but ...

 

On Thu, Jun 8, 2017 at 4:05 PM, Steven A Smith <sasm...@swcp.com 
<mailto:sasm...@swcp.com> > wrote:

Glen -

I have found concept mapping tools to be helpful in this context, but usually 
in live-brainstorming sessions... with one (or more) operators clicking and 
typing and dragging and connecting while others chatter out loud, then shifting 
the mouse/keyboard(s) to another(s).

I know we have a mind-mapping ( I prefer concept-mapping) tool developer on the 
list...  I'm blanking his name, though I know he has been active off and on!  I 
hope he catches this and pitches in.  I believe he was heading toward 
web-enabled, simultaneous editing capabilities.   I did some tests and provided 
some feedback on an early version a few years ago..

My only significant experience in this is with CMAPtools and a few others 
driven by various project-lead's preferences, but never really adopted by 
myself.

I was in the process of developing some more formal tools with UNM for the NSF 
a few years ago, based on formalisms being developed by Tim Goldsmith (dept. 
Psychology) at UNM.   The presumption WAS (IS) that we all have reserved 
lexicons and for a collaborative group to develop a common one, there has to be 
a lot of discussion and negotiation.  Our example was a group of climate change 
scientists who (un)surprisingly used identical terms in very similar contexts 
with very different intentions and meanings in some cases.   It isn't too 
surprising when you realize that an ocean scientist and an atmospheric 
scientist are very interested in many of the same physical properties, but with 
different emphasis and within different regimes.   Pressure, density, humidity, 
salinity, vorticity all seem to have pretty clear meanings to any scientist 
using them, but the relative importance and interaction between them has 
different implications for each group.

Needless to say, we didn't finish the tools before the funding ran out.  This 
is now nearly 8 years old work... the ideas area still valid but without a 
patron and without SME's to "test on" it is hard to push such tools forward.   
My part included building the equivalent of what you call "mind maps" from the 
differing lexical elements, floating in N-space and "morphing" from each 
individual (or subgroup's) perspective to some kind of common perspective... 
with the intention of helping each individual or subgroup appreciate the 
*different* perspective of the others.

This is modestly related to my work in "faceted ontologies" (also currently not 
under active development) where "multiple lexicons" is replaced by "multiple 
ontologies"   or in both cases, the superposition of multiple 
lexicons/ontologies.

I haven't worked with Joslyn since that 2007? paper... but we *tried* a joint 
project with PNNL/NREL a couple of years ago, but it failed due to 
inter-laboratory politics I think.   He's an equally brilliant/oblique 
character as you...   take that for what it is worth!

I liked Frank's double-dog-dare to you.   I think that is one of the good 
things you bring out in this list, all kinds of others' feistiness!  It was 
also good that you could both call it for what it was.  It makes me want to 
read Kohut... I have special reasons for trying to apprehend alternate 
self-psychology models right now, though from your's and Frank's apparent 
avoidance(/dismissal?) of Kahut and my immediate phonetic slip-slide to Camus, 
I'm a little leery.

On 6/8/17 2:33 PM, glen ☣ wrote:

We quickly polluted that thread, too.  But it drives home the point that an 
email list is _not_ a (good) collaborative production tool.

Aha! I haven't heard from Cliff since my work for the 
PSL<https://www.psl.nmsu.edu/>.  He supposedly works up at PNNL.  Thanks for 
that article.

Yes, I took Owen to be calling Russ' post a trolling post.  But "troll" is like 
"complex", meaningless out of context.

I'm completely baffled why "layer" isn't understood ... makes me think I must 
be wrong in some deep way.  But for whatever it's worth, I believe I understand 
and _agree_ with Nick's circularity criticism of mechanistic explanations for 
complexity, mostly because of a publication I'm helping develop that tries to 
classify several different senses of the word "mechanistic".  The 1st attempt 
was rejected by the journal, though. 8^(  But repeating Nick's point back in my 
own words obviously won't help, here.

Yes, I'm willing to help cobble together these posts into a document.  But, 
clearly, I can't be any kind of primary.  If y'all don't even understand what I 
mean by the word "layer", then whatever I composed would be alien to the other 
participants.  One idea might be to use a "mind mapping" tool and fill in the 
bubbles with verbatim snippets of people's posts ... that might help avoid the 
bias introduced by the secretary. 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_concept-_and_mind-mapping_software I also 
don't care that much about the meaning of "complex".  So, my only motivation 
for helping is because y'all tolerate my idiocy.


On 06/08/2017 12:52 PM, Steven A Smith wrote:

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?

 

 

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