Chat, could you make a movie trailer in the style of Jim Jarmusch of this 
journey?  Envision as a lucid dream and our protagonist as a weary but lethal 
John Wick.

On Mar 28, 2026, at 1:49 AM, Santafe <[email protected]> wrote:

 The passage EricC quotes below makes a good point about the non-stationarity 
of people’s knowledge and familiarities.

Once I am mindful of that, I have to admit that there is a much bigger 
non-stationarity of their worldviews. There are things about Darwin’s 
contemporaries that would have dictated what his project was, that I guess I 
can “understand”, but for which I am incapable of any empathy.

I don’t live in a world suffused by God.  When I hear God-talk around me, I 
don’t suppose that there is something they mean, and that I have any idea what 
that is.  I guess I experience them about like I would experience a pack of 
kids repeating 6-7  (if I knew the kids could suddenly become murderous on 
occasion, on signals I didn’t recognize).

I do hear a metaphor doing work (the Devil’s work): imposing human 
intentionality metaphorically on natural phenomena.  I can imagine I were faced 
with a world-hoard of such people, that they were incorrigible, and that there 
were no alternatives to be sought out among them.  It probably would make no 
sense to even hope to transition them into a kind of person that is not hard to 
find today: somebody like me, who can also hear all the same talk within 
informal categories, but hears in it only the most familiar and discouraging 
human narcissism.  If that transition were off the table, what options would be 
left to me?

I guess I would admit defeat, try to limit my losses, and resort to metaphors 
that (as a modern) I find cognitively bad-faith, because maybe I would consider 
that gambit better than accomplishing nothing at all.  I might say “Yeah yeah 
yeah, intention, breeders, design, etc., since I know you won’t be capable of 
hearing _anything_ I say in any other terms than those.  But could you at least 
bring yourselves to see natural circumstances as the designer?  Just allow 
nature a little thin bedsheet or veil, to interpose between the intentionality 
and the empirical events that make up sorting and retention/elimination?”

Maybe if I were myself one of these God-suffused people, doing empirical work 
and trying to find my way to some argument that was less empirically vacant 
than what we had all inherited, my path to the metaphors would be even more 
coerced into one channel, and maybe I wouldn’t parse it as one of the varieties 
of defeat.

Then I would probably volunteer a rhetoric closer to Nick’s, in which “we know 
what they/we-all are; now we’re just negotiating the price”.

For me as I actually am, fighting off the religious (and specifically 
Christian; my old Japanese friends tell me there was never the same resistance 
when Darwin was brought to the Buddhists) narcissism is the least-interesting 
thing Darwin did, even though I understand it was probably the most socially 
consequential in its European context.  Other things, most notably introducing 
a non-Philoponian notion of causation, are much more conceptually interesting, 
and very very modern, in the cognitive problem they solve, and the world for 
which they pave a way.  Since superstition had already been mostly expunged 
from colliding billiard balls and the like, I (again, in my modern and 
incorrigible Weltanschauung) am unable to see its persistence w.r.t. all 
biological phenomena as anything but a human motivational pathology, which 
pre-empts cognitive questions from even entering consideration.

EricS

On Mar 27, 2026, at 14:30, Eric Charles <[email protected]> wrote:

Tracking what EricS says re the "natural selection" metaphor... here is an 
excerpt from the incipient book....

Natural Selection – The Thing That Explains Evolution
Darwin explains evolution as a result of Natural Selection, which invokes the 
model of Artificial Selection, or as it was more simply called in Darwin’s day 
Selection. It is important to note the language of Darwin’s day, because it 
reminds us that Selection―the intentional breeding of organisms to produce 
descendants with desired traits―was a process that most people in Darwin’s time 
were quite familiar with.
You will recall that that a model is a situation we think we understand well, 
which is invoked to explain unseen aspects of a situation we think we 
understand less well. In Darwin’s day, there was much confusion over why 
organisms should be adapted to their natural environments, but there was little 
confusion about the process of selection and its effectiveness. This creates 
awkwardness when we try to teach about evolution today, because, when most of 
our students enter class, they know very little about how breeding programs 
work. We start with students who understand neither how breeders intentionally 
control the variation in generations of their stock, nor how organisms become 
adapted to their environments, and we try to make them familiar enough with the 
former to use it as a model in explaining the latter. This leads to two 
possible problems: First, we may fail to get our students familiar enough with 
the model itself. Second, even if we could be certain that the students 
understood artificial selection sufficiently, that would not guarantee that 
they understood Darwin’s application of the model.
......    [dairy cow example]  .....
We use the example of dairy cattle to illustrate the selection model, but what 
model did Darwin have in mind? Darwin was an avid pigeon breeder, and 
pigeon-breeding was probably the model he had in mind when he came up with the 
idea of natural selection. Alas, the cows make a better model for the modern 
reader, who will find it quite intuitive why one might want a dairy cow that 
produces more milk, but will likely find it mysterious why one would favor, for 
example, a skinny pigeon whose throat inflates into a globe large enough for 
the pigeon's beak to rest upon. (We authors find it mysterious as well, though 
the aesthetic is oddly pleasing.)
<image.jpeg>[i]<x-msg://54/#_edn1>

________________________________
[i]<x-msg://54/#_ednref1> By Karl Wagner (1864–1939) Public Domain, 
https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=30811756


Best,
Eric


On Fri, Mar 27, 2026 at 7:34 AM Santafe 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
This is a great note, in the sense of being helpful from endless going around 
in circles, and written to get somewhere.  I am always grateful when EricC 
visits from the Oort cloud and enables a conversation to go into some direction 
again.

I want, though (of course) to object to something.  And a paragraph below 
enables me to see the way I want to do it.  EC already understands the source 
of the objection, and I will include the final paragraph where it is flagged, 
though I want to beware oversimplifying to the point of having strawmen (which 
I don’t think is being done here).  But first; the objection:


On Mar 26, 2026, at 16:25, Eric Charles 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

There are at least three interesting things going on in the metaphor 
discussion. The least interesting aspect of it is squabbling over what does or 
does not count as a metaphor (vice simile, model, analogy, etc.). Not that that 
isn't a perfectly good discussion, it just that it's *just* a vocabulary 
discussion, not an ideas discussion.

1) What is an explicit metaphor, and to what extent do the constant implicit 
metaphors that permeate our language resemble them? Nick has a particular way 
of thinking about metaphors, based on the intent of the person invoking the 
metaphor. Metaphors always assert that two things are alike, not that they are 
identical, so that implies that all metaphors are imperfect, and that that is 
intentional, and does not invalidate a metaphor. Metaphors can thus be divided 
into intended implications and not-intended implication, etc., etc. .... and 
Nick is fairly obsessed with these, especially in scientific contexts where 
people seem to be using the metaphors in different ways and that leads to a 
deep underlying confusion in a seemingly functional field, e.g., Darwinian 
evolution by means of "natural" selection....

This is the poster child for a thing that to me is the ultimate non-issue, and 
has been shown to be the non-issue it is for many decades now.

Look up George Price:
<https://linkprotect.cudasvc.com/url?a=https%3a%2f%2fwww.sciencedirect.com%2fscience%2farticle%2fabs%2fpii%2fS002251938570149X&c=E,1,LiZkhWK0CnAKHiDnM8ymHlEYM9eaTmBl-Pm46o4LHF9tT1qCALbW2wD1gd9kTQ61lztSwx6mqH6Jl2cIwQYTc9L5TnqyLMY214d0jcgNVGhXh1n9RhA,&typo=1>
sciencedirect.com<https://linkprotect.cudasvc.com/url?a=https%3a%2f%2fwww.sciencedirect.com%2fscience%2farticle%2fabs%2fpii%2fS002251938570149X&c=E,1,W3dKl-ox5a6gYgmXV1mvxgdASoR140cWFzt9NvHUFiKFUn3joEJlLvSL7fLzEf5YBj-Xe9O6-xf4hKOulX9pl-bzOXzmfveGe3MErMWbrAE,&typo=1>
[X]<https://linkprotect.cudasvc.com/url?a=https%3a%2f%2fwww.sciencedirect.com%2fscience%2farticle%2fabs%2fpii%2fS002251938570149X&c=E,1,o_3R8DA08GbsWi615mxmIrmkg5AJSlZWAwzi7ZbVo0e9fahJVwHBzARBroebtxSPRzo4mFI6SOUyzEg80w0zj0k78_jqZSE7BK4DxxduhT-Oyrl_GrlnuOrZrg,,&typo=1>
https://gwern.net/doc/genetics/selection/natural/1995-price.pdf<https://linkprotect.cudasvc.com/url?a=https%3a%2f%2fgwern.net%2fdoc%2fgenetics%2fselection%2fnatural%2f1995-price.pdf&c=E,1,MGdnlNH-SlLkbCSWxv_RPzA-cDzDWUzan1XBhSedHDlNR_NiwPVoi_SuhK4dVIj-OttHnDT-h97CWbeg1wlpNVc782NjcStazE-k6Y-99SY_cw,,&typo=1>

Price lays out, to a perfectly acceptable degree, an operational description.  
Of sets of things, of partitioning, of some’s being retained and others’ being 
eliminated, from the ongoing history of sets that are the targets of 
description.  It’s a phenomenon that takes place in nature, in all sorts of 
forms.  We need some lexeme to refer to it.  What is a good one?  Selection 
seems about as apt as anything in English.   Quite beside the fact that Darwin 
wrote about animal breeding, this will still be perhaps the most apt word I 
have available.  Not merely “sorting”, because I need also the consequence of 
the sort that a retention/elimination step ensues.  Human intentionality is not 
imputed to the phenomenon itself at all, though there can be a subset of cases 
where it enters as part of the chain of causation.

When anybody resurrects this zombie of claiming that some terrible metaphor of 
human breeding-selection is indelible in the cognition of people thinking about 
evolution that leads them into confusion, my experience of the conversation is 
much like the experiences I have had with the Implicit Bias crowd.  It doesn’t 
take much time around many of them, before I am pretty firmly convinced that 
what they want is to condemn basically everybody (but, one by one, whomever 
they  are talking to).  (The nicest image that comes to mind is Aunt Ada’s “I 
saw something nasty in the woodshed” from Cold Comfort Farm, with about as much 
content.)  The motivation is the whole, and any conversation will take whatever 
sophistic form gives the performance of fulfilling the motivation.  To be clear 
about what really is going on, and to think well about it and improve the way 
we handle such problems in living, is incidental to why they do what they do.  
A kind of trojan horse of a kind we so often see: the existence of a legitimate 
justice aim becomes a vehicle for people who want to play domination games and 
to bully.  They don’t erase the legitimate justice aim, but by having little 
serious interest in it (or a secondary and self-serving one, at best), they 
move it out of scope for any interaction you can have with them.  At which 
point I don’t feel like feeding the trolls.  Talk to me about really 
understanding and really helping, and stop the performing and pretending, or 
leave me alone.

I do think one has to have some interest in knowing what people are doing, in 
context of the commitment to get thoughts clear and to solve some problems for 
which the solution has criteria, to keep such intuitions from turning into 
strawmen.


The paragraph I promised to acknowledge, which I think also sees all this, was 
this one:

I suspect that much of the frustration of Nick v others on this list is the 
instance of those others that any implications of the flavor text can be 
ignored once the mechanism has been mathematized, vs Nick's instance that if 
the flavor text is still being used it is almost certainly doing some 
metaphor-like work in the background of whoever is using, or hearing, the term 
(because otherwise, why not ditch it entirely).

Eric(S)


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