Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism - modeling

2012-10-01 Thread glen
Sarbajit Roy wrote at 09/30/2012 10:28 AM:
 The Gita, however,  (as I'm fairly sure the Old Testament does too)
 expresses that once a man's side is determined, he is obliged by DUTY
 to do what is right, even if it involves heinous killings on a
 massive scale or even the killing of his close relatives. DUTY is one
 of the core elements of Dharma (the way of righteousness). Of course
 DUTY cannot be taken in isolation, because the essence of the Gita is
 the continuous weighing of choices between the Dharmic Law (kill /
 harm nobody) versus the inferior Niti (Penal) Law (slay all offenders
 on sight).  Gita 1:30, 2:31 etc.
 
 So DUTY would probably be compressible. I am an ant, so I'm duty bound
 to pick up every speck of sugar I can find and convey it back to the
 mother ship.


Yep.  I'm totally ignorant of Gita.  But this one clause suggests to me
that duty is compressible, by (my) definition:

Never consider yourself the cause of the results of your activities ...

Incompressible (components of) systems are initiators of cause rather
than passive transmitters of cause.  If a duty is defined by removing
one's _self_ from the situation, detachment, then it's definitely not
prima causa.

But I wonder, also, about the Dharmic Law, which sound like _rules_ to
me ... rules have an input and an output, mindlessly transmitting cause
from the former to the latter.  Is there any inherent be present, pay
attention, be attached, be the change you want to see, take
responsibility for your actions element to Dharmic Law?  If not, then
it, too, is compressible.

To promote an agent to an actor, we have to make it a prima causa, give
it the ability to _start_ a causal chain ... or at least affect someone
else's chain in a way that couldn't happen were it not present.

Note that an actor's influence on the propagation of events need not be
unique.  I.e. 2 different actors could produce the same result.  But in
order for it to actually be an actor rather than an agent, the result
cannot be optimized out, so to speak.  An actor can only be
(perfectly) replaced by another actor ... though an agent can
approximate/simulate an actor.

-- 
glen


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Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism - modeling

2012-10-01 Thread Prof David West
I hesitate to jump in as I was taught the Bhavagad Gita by a
professor/translator, not my mother or my local guru.

But, as I was taught ...  

duty has almost nothing to do with the philosophical lesson of the
story.  Arjuna's dilemma is not between kill and not kill, or deciding
between two contradictory laws - but between attached and non-attached
action.  Only the latter avoids the accrual of Karma (western spelling).
Non-attachment is definitively not detachment (detachment is an instance
of attachment). Non-attachment is acting with perfect knowledge that
the action is the right action in that context, with context being the
totality of the world. (A kind of omniscience, the possibility of which
is for another time and place.)

An action taken because it is my duty, blood will make me happy, I
believe the end result will bring about world peace, I am afraid,
but they are my kinsmen - is an attached action.  You act on the
delusional perception that doing so makes a difference and that you are
the causal source of that difference.  Only when you know that you are
merely the means by which a correct action expresses itself are you
truly non-attached and free from acquiring yet more Karma.

I stand ready to be corrected by those more knowledgeable.

And how this affects compressible/non-compressible I haven't a clue.

dave west


On Mon, Oct 1, 2012, at 03:24 PM, glen wrote:
 Sarbajit Roy wrote at 09/30/2012 10:28 AM:
  The Gita, however,  (as I'm fairly sure the Old Testament does too)
  expresses that once a man's side is determined, he is obliged by DUTY
  to do what is right, even if it involves heinous killings on a
  massive scale or even the killing of his close relatives. DUTY is one
  of the core elements of Dharma (the way of righteousness). Of course
  DUTY cannot be taken in isolation, because the essence of the Gita is
  the continuous weighing of choices between the Dharmic Law (kill /
  harm nobody) versus the inferior Niti (Penal) Law (slay all offenders
  on sight).  Gita 1:30, 2:31 etc.
  
  So DUTY would probably be compressible. I am an ant, so I'm duty bound
  to pick up every speck of sugar I can find and convey it back to the
  mother ship.
 
 
 Yep.  I'm totally ignorant of Gita.  But this one clause suggests to me
 that duty is compressible, by (my) definition:
 
 Never consider yourself the cause of the results of your activities ...
 
 Incompressible (components of) systems are initiators of cause rather
 than passive transmitters of cause.  If a duty is defined by removing
 one's _self_ from the situation, detachment, then it's definitely not
 prima causa.
 
 But I wonder, also, about the Dharmic Law, which sound like _rules_ to
 me ... rules have an input and an output, mindlessly transmitting cause
 from the former to the latter.  Is there any inherent be present, pay
 attention, be attached, be the change you want to see, take
 responsibility for your actions element to Dharmic Law?  If not, then
 it, too, is compressible.
 
 To promote an agent to an actor, we have to make it a prima causa, give
 it the ability to _start_ a causal chain ... or at least affect someone
 else's chain in a way that couldn't happen were it not present.
 
 Note that an actor's influence on the propagation of events need not be
 unique.  I.e. 2 different actors could produce the same result.  But in
 order for it to actually be an actor rather than an agent, the result
 cannot be optimized out, so to speak.  An actor can only be
 (perfectly) replaced by another actor ... though an agent can
 approximate/simulate an actor.
 
 -- 
 glen
 
 
 FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
 Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
 lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org


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Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
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Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism - modeling

2012-10-01 Thread glen

The only way I can imagine detachment being a form of attachment would
be that both attachment and detachment are limited to _partial_
[de|at]tachment.  I.e. non-attachment must be some sort of singularity
approachable from either direction.

   http://www.wuala.com/gepr/public/singularity.svg/?mode=list

But if that's the case, then we're guilty of equivocating on the word
attachment.  Perhaps replacing detachment with anti-attachment
might prevent the equivocation.

Prof David West wrote at 10/01/2012 04:21 PM:
 duty has almost nothing to do with the philosophical lesson of the
 story.  Arjuna's dilemma is not between kill and not kill, or deciding
 between two contradictory laws - but between attached and non-attached
 action.  Only the latter avoids the accrual of Karma (western spelling).
 Non-attachment is definitively not detachment (detachment is an instance
 of attachment). Non-attachment is acting with perfect knowledge that
 the action is the right action in that context, with context being the
 totality of the world. (A kind of omniscience, the possibility of which
 is for another time and place.)


-- 
glen


FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org


Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism - modeling

2012-10-01 Thread Russ Abbott
Think of attachment as: I must ensure that X comes to pass. I want it so
badly.
Think of detachment as: I must not want so badly that X comes to pass. I
must stay detached.
Think of non-attachment as: I may participate in the process whereby X comes
to pass -- or doesn't come to pass. If I participate I may go all out in my
participation. I may care very much whether X comes to pass. It it does, I
may feel very happy. If it doesn't I may feel very sad. But whether or not
X comes to pass I still have my laundry to do.

*-- Russ *


On Mon, Oct 1, 2012 at 5:40 PM, glen g...@ropella.name wrote:


 The only way I can imagine detachment being a form of attachment would
 be that both attachment and detachment are limited to _partial_
 [de|at]tachment.  I.e. non-attachment must be some sort of singularity
 approachable from either direction.

http://www.wuala.com/gepr/public/singularity.svg/?mode=list

 But if that's the case, then we're guilty of equivocating on the word
 attachment.  Perhaps replacing detachment with anti-attachment
 might prevent the equivocation.

 Prof David West wrote at 10/01/2012 04:21 PM:
  duty has almost nothing to do with the philosophical lesson of the
  story.  Arjuna's dilemma is not between kill and not kill, or deciding
  between two contradictory laws - but between attached and non-attached
  action.  Only the latter avoids the accrual of Karma (western spelling).
  Non-attachment is definitively not detachment (detachment is an instance
  of attachment). Non-attachment is acting with perfect knowledge that
  the action is the right action in that context, with context being the
  totality of the world. (A kind of omniscience, the possibility of which
  is for another time and place.)


 --
 glen

 
 FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
 Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
 lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org


FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org

Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism - modeling

2012-10-01 Thread Carl Tollander

It's sort of like being cool.

If you act like you're cool, and go around telling yourself how cool you 
are, you're not cool.

If you care about whether or not you're cool, you're not cool.
So if you get invested in how much you're not caring about whether or 
not you're cool, you're still not cool, you just think you are. And so on...
So it is a necessary (but not sufficient) condition of coolness to not 
care about how cool you are.


Same goes for hot.

Carl

On 10/1/12 6:40 PM, glen wrote:

The only way I can imagine detachment being a form of attachment would
be that both attachment and detachment are limited to _partial_
[de|at]tachment.  I.e. non-attachment must be some sort of singularity
approachable from either direction.

http://www.wuala.com/gepr/public/singularity.svg/?mode=list

But if that's the case, then we're guilty of equivocating on the word
attachment.  Perhaps replacing detachment with anti-attachment
might prevent the equivocation.

Prof David West wrote at 10/01/2012 04:21 PM:

duty has almost nothing to do with the philosophical lesson of the
story.  Arjuna's dilemma is not between kill and not kill, or deciding
between two contradictory laws - but between attached and non-attached
action.  Only the latter avoids the accrual of Karma (western spelling).
Non-attachment is definitively not detachment (detachment is an instance
of attachment). Non-attachment is acting with perfect knowledge that
the action is the right action in that context, with context being the
totality of the world. (A kind of omniscience, the possibility of which
is for another time and place.)






FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org


Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism - modeling

2012-10-01 Thread Sarbajit Roy
Attachment / de-attachment / non-attachment etc are distractions from
the 2 paths

A) The path of self knowledge for people on the threshhold of enlightenment.
B) The path of selfless service for the others.

I can't really explain these things because of language and societal
differences.

Most of what we are discussing here has already been resolved in the Gita,
a tolerably good simple English online version is here (please dont
treat the Gita as a religious book - its a societal book with rules)
http://www.ourpathtogod.com/bhagavadgita/index.htm
by about chapter 5 the answers should be clear.

Without giving anything away :

It is about man as an agent without memory (or rudimentary memory)
pre-programed by a higher evolved Being (with complete memory) to
act in the right way depending on circumstances and anticipation
of possible outcomes. [robots to terraform Mars]

Sarbajit

On 10/2/12, glen g...@ropella.name wrote:

 The only way I can imagine detachment being a form of attachment would
 be that both attachment and detachment are limited to _partial_
 [de|at]tachment.  I.e. non-attachment must be some sort of singularity
 approachable from either direction.

http://www.wuala.com/gepr/public/singularity.svg/?mode=list

 But if that's the case, then we're guilty of equivocating on the word
 attachment.  Perhaps replacing detachment with anti-attachment
 might prevent the equivocation.

 Prof David West wrote at 10/01/2012 04:21 PM:
 duty has almost nothing to do with the philosophical lesson of the
 story.  Arjuna's dilemma is not between kill and not kill, or deciding
 between two contradictory laws - but between attached and non-attached
 action.  Only the latter avoids the accrual of Karma (western spelling).
 Non-attachment is definitively not detachment (detachment is an instance
 of attachment). Non-attachment is acting with perfect knowledge that
 the action is the right action in that context, with context being the
 totality of the world. (A kind of omniscience, the possibility of which
 is for another time and place.)


 --
 glen

 
 FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
 Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
 lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org



FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
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Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism - modeling

2012-10-01 Thread Sarbajit Roy
Hi David

The only place I would somewhat differ with your analysis is on the
accrual of Karma.

My own view is that Gita refers to 2 control loops

The Outer (slower / higher) Loop is on semi-attached Ethical evolved
norms. Analogous to a Voltage loop

There is a faster Inner Loop acting on situational / contextual
attachments (feedback) analogous to the Current Loop.

In the context of Arjuna's dilemma, the Arjuna killing software
(programmed into the Kshatriya warrior caste) has encountered an
unprogrammed situation - can I kill my own analogs ?. The software
then breaks out of the inner loop (via error handler / maintenance
handler) and Krishna the Outer Loop reprograms Arjuna to continue
the killing .. you do your job because the others are doing theirs.

I recall a paper by Peter van Roy (no relation) on Overcoming
software fragility with inter-acting feedback loops and reversible
phase transitions which helped me understand some of it.

www.info.ucl.ac.be/~pvr/bcs08vanroy.pdf

Sarbajit

On 10/2/12, Prof David West profw...@fastmail.fm wrote:
 I hesitate to jump in as I was taught the Bhavagad Gita by a
 professor/translator, not my mother or my local guru.

 But, as I was taught ...

 duty has almost nothing to do with the philosophical lesson of the
 story.  Arjuna's dilemma is not between kill and not kill, or deciding
 between two contradictory laws - but between attached and non-attached
 action.  Only the latter avoids the accrual of Karma (western spelling).
 Non-attachment is definitively not detachment (detachment is an instance
 of attachment). Non-attachment is acting with perfect knowledge that
 the action is the right action in that context, with context being the
 totality of the world. (A kind of omniscience, the possibility of which
 is for another time and place.)

 An action taken because it is my duty, blood will make me happy, I
 believe the end result will bring about world peace, I am afraid,
 but they are my kinsmen - is an attached action.  You act on the
 delusional perception that doing so makes a difference and that you are
 the causal source of that difference.  Only when you know that you are
 merely the means by which a correct action expresses itself are you
 truly non-attached and free from acquiring yet more Karma.

 I stand ready to be corrected by those more knowledgeable.

 And how this affects compressible/non-compressible I haven't a clue.

 dave west


 On Mon, Oct 1, 2012, at 03:24 PM, glen wrote:
 Sarbajit Roy wrote at 09/30/2012 10:28 AM:
  The Gita, however,  (as I'm fairly sure the Old Testament does too)
  expresses that once a man's side is determined, he is obliged by DUTY
  to do what is right, even if it involves heinous killings on a
  massive scale or even the killing of his close relatives. DUTY is one
  of the core elements of Dharma (the way of righteousness). Of course
  DUTY cannot be taken in isolation, because the essence of the Gita is
  the continuous weighing of choices between the Dharmic Law (kill /
  harm nobody) versus the inferior Niti (Penal) Law (slay all offenders
  on sight).  Gita 1:30, 2:31 etc.
 
  So DUTY would probably be compressible. I am an ant, so I'm duty bound
  to pick up every speck of sugar I can find and convey it back to the
  mother ship.


 Yep.  I'm totally ignorant of Gita.  But this one clause suggests to me
 that duty is compressible, by (my) definition:

 Never consider yourself the cause of the results of your activities ...

 Incompressible (components of) systems are initiators of cause rather
 than passive transmitters of cause.  If a duty is defined by removing
 one's _self_ from the situation, detachment, then it's definitely not
 prima causa.

 But I wonder, also, about the Dharmic Law, which sound like _rules_ to
 me ... rules have an input and an output, mindlessly transmitting cause
 from the former to the latter.  Is there any inherent be present, pay
 attention, be attached, be the change you want to see, take
 responsibility for your actions element to Dharmic Law?  If not, then
 it, too, is compressible.

 To promote an agent to an actor, we have to make it a prima causa, give
 it the ability to _start_ a causal chain ... or at least affect someone
 else's chain in a way that couldn't happen were it not present.

 Note that an actor's influence on the propagation of events need not be
 unique.  I.e. 2 different actors could produce the same result.  But in
 order for it to actually be an actor rather than an agent, the result
 cannot be optimized out, so to speak.  An actor can only be
 (perfectly) replaced by another actor ... though an agent can
 approximate/simulate an actor.

 --
 glen

 
 FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
 Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
 lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org

 
 FRIAM Applied Complexity 

Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism - modeling

2012-09-30 Thread Sarbajit Roy
I'm introducing this subject with some trepidation,  mainly because I
dont want to seem as pushing an alternate religious viewpoint -
especially one which lends itself so easily as justification for
'jihad'.

As Glen expressed earlier the Golden Rule is not really compressible.

Do unto others as you would have done to you / Don't do to others
what you would not want done to yourself etc are rather vague.

The Gita, however,  (as I'm fairly sure the Old Testament does too)
expresses that once a man's side is determined, he is obliged by DUTY
to do what is right, even if it involves heinous killings on a
massive scale or even the killing of his close relatives. DUTY is one
of the core elements of Dharma (the way of righteousness). Of course
DUTY cannot be taken in isolation, because the essence of the Gita is
the continuous weighing of choices between the Dharmic Law (kill /
harm nobody) versus the inferior Niti (Penal) Law (slay all offenders
on sight).  Gita 1:30, 2:31 etc.

So DUTY would probably be compressible. I am an ant, so I'm duty bound
to pick up every speck of sugar I can find and convey it back to the
mother ship.

On 9/29/12, Sarbajit Roy sroy...@gmail.com wrote:
 While agreeing that this version of the Golden Rule is somewhat more
 evolved, I don't exactly recall this variant as especially being
 from the Gita.

 On 9/28/12, Prof David West profw...@fastmail.fm wrote:
 Expected that Sarbaijit might have mentioned this - the Gita has a
 variant of the golden rule that I like much better than the biblical
 version - refrain from doing to others what you would not have them do
 to you.




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Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism - modeling

2012-09-29 Thread Sarbajit Roy
While agreeing that this version of the Golden Rule is somewhat more
evolved, I don't exactly recall this variant as especially being
from the Gita.

On 9/28/12, Prof David West profw...@fastmail.fm wrote:
 Expected that Sarbaijit might have mentioned this - the Gita has a
 variant of the golden rule that I like much better than the biblical
 version - refrain from doing to others what you would not have them do
 to you.



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Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org


Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism - modeling

2012-09-28 Thread Prof David West
Expected that Sarbaijit might have mentioned this - the Gita has a
variant of the golden rule that I like much better than the biblical
version - refrain from doing to others what you would not have them do
to you.

months wages on meal --  I fell into an evil crowd of capitalists on my
first visit to Japan (brother of the head of the Chilean navy, Schwinn
bike importer, guy who bought yachts in Japan and sailed them to
California and sold at 200% profit, ...) and was treated to a dinner by
their banker.  Little, live, fish that you caught with chopsticks,
dipped in hot sauce and tossed down your esophagus - fugu - kobe beef -
about five different kinds of sake - ...  .  The meal for six of us was
about $3600 USD - in 1972.

davew


On Thu, Sep 27, 2012, at 07:53 PM, ERIC P. CHARLES wrote:

Well... so much for discussing modeling...
Personally, I am not a big fan of the Golden Rule because it implies
that everyone should be happy with the same things. It also implies the
very arrogant position that what you-in-particular want can be the
should for everyone else. How about if we try to do unto others as
they would have us do?
As an example I am sure many on the list are familiar with: My mother
does all sorts of things for me that she wishes I would do for her. We
reach an impasse when I try to explain (usually for the 20th time) that
I actually dislike the thing she is doing.
We can get into a similar place if, for example, we think of all the
weird kinky things that some people might like us to do unto them, but
we would really prefer they didn't do unto us. And yes, there is nobody
on this list that someone, somewhere, wouldn't want to do some really,
really nasty things with. (See Rule 34)*
Eric
*This is where there is a small chorus says speak for yourself; for
you people, imagine those desiring very boring and mundane things.
P.S. Having many times been in the presence of people with too much
money, even by middle-income US standards, I find the types of
behaviors Steve mentioned annoying, but in no way offensive. Of course,
I have been raised to have a strong belief in personal property, and
(despite my hippy parents) have strong Libertarian leanings. I have
never seen anybody dump a month's worth of my wages on a single meal,
but I have seen a month of my salary go to a table of meals, and I have
attended private events that probably cost a year of my salary. I think
such spending is dumb, I wish they would give a bit to me, but
ultimately it is their money. And, since it is on topic, There, but
for the grace of God, go I. Grace is funny some times ;- )
On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 08:28 PM, glen g...@ropella.name wrote:

Steve Smith wrote at 09/27/2012 12:55 PM:
 I don't find the golden rule (one variant of social
equality?) exactly
 a delusional idea, though that is probably a thread unto itself.

Well, it's on topic.  The search for a biological mechanism for the
golden rule seems to target the disagreement between religion and
atheism.  Personally, I think the golden rule is a largely useless
abstraction.  It lacks any operational detail.  Sometimes I might well
want to be punched in the face ... sometimes I don't. Sometimes I'd like
Renee' to offer me some of her candy bar.  Sometimes I don't. I'm
currently ~20 lbs overweight.  8^)

 BTW, I'm not sure I think of this as a lossy compression as a
 dimension-reducing projection.   Multiple transactions can be like
 multiple points of view projected from said high dimension, recovering
 some of what was lost (obscured) in any given
transaction/POV.

That's a great point.  The compression algorithm is just as important as
its inputs and outputs.

 In fact it is likely that I would not sell
 but gift such a precious nugget of protein/sustenance to the
right
 member of a community as an ultimately selfish act.

This is also an interesting point.  The dichotomy between selfishness
and altruism is false.  I think it says something important when a gift
giver (loudly) claims they don't want/expect anything in return.  I
like
to play with people who fail to come to my parties after I sent them an
invitation.  They often will say things like Don't stop inviting me,
which opens the door for Eris!  My last victim, a neighbor, said
something like I really wanted to come but blahblahblah.  I
responded:
That's OK.  We only invited you so that you wouldn't call the cops on
us when we got too loud.  I still don't know whether he knows I'm joking.

 If you have ever suffered the attentions (presence) of someone
with too
 much money, you might not call the last one benign.
There is
 nothing more offensive than someone whose spare change exceeds your net
 worth, tossing it around as if they can buy you, or your firstborn, or
 your soul with the flick of a pen...

I don't find that offensive at all ... ignorant, yes, but not offensive.

  It is one of the worst things I
 find about first world tourists in third world countries, even without
 realizing it, dropping a months 

Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism - modeling

2012-09-28 Thread glen
ERIC P. CHARLES wrote at 09/27/2012 06:53 PM:
 Well... so much for discussing modeling... 

I don't get what you mean by that.  In order to model, you have to have
something to model.  You suggested that agents subscribing to social
liberalism had a particular justification problem (contradict their own
doctrine - intra-agent contradiction - or tolerate doctrinal
contradictions between agents).  But you leaped from the realm of
thought (hypocrisy/contradiction) to mechanism/ontology (tolerant
society) without providing any _thing_ to model.  There's no referent to
which a model can refer.  Or, even if there is one, it's too vague to grok.

It's bad practice to reverse engineer a model from analytic methods like
contradiction.  A better route is the forward, synthetic,
constructionist map from mechanism to phenomena.  Once you have at least
one forward map, you can begin serious work on the inverse map.

I suggested a mechanism: currency and trade.  From that referent you
should be able to build a model mechanism from which consistent
justification can emerge.  Steve further suggested some nuance to the
mechanism that may well add finer grained building blocks (IOU vs. YOM).
 And I then elaborated a bit on the objects being traded (distinguishing
between necessary vs. luxury goods) and suggested that a model measure
_other_ than the currency itself be used to observe the system.

Steve also mentioned using a semi-closed agent so that its interface
(trading) is a projection of a larger internal system (which would give
it some hysteresis and perhaps lower its predictability without adding
any stochasticity).

Bruce, earlier, tossed in the option to measure the system as a network
and, perhaps, a hint at a hypothesis that might be tested: agents
primarily motivated to trade facilitate larger, more connected networks.

Then you, David, and Carl began hashing out whether the model should be
rule-based or not.  I read Carl's comment as a suggestion that each
agent could be rule-based, but use different rules, some of which might
be reflective.  I.e. one agent's rules might take expressions of other
agents' rules as inputs ... i.e. meta-rules or rule operators.

This seems like a very common casual modeling conversation, to me.
What's questionable is whether the mechanism we've suggested so far will
contribute to a debate about religion and atheism.

-- 
glen


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Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism - modeling

2012-09-28 Thread Nicholas Thompson
Dear Jess and Caleb,. 

So, we are in hartford with the free wifi, warm and dry, and our plane is on
time.  In such moment of enhanced mortality, it washes over me that neither
of you knows the name of our Lawyer.   It Peter Ziomek and he lives in
Amherst.  He aint much of a lawyer but he has the paper.  

Caleb, well se yhou in six hours.  

Love to you both, 

Nick 

-Original Message-
From: friam-boun...@redfish.com [mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com] On Behalf
Of glen
Sent: Friday, September 28, 2012 2:29 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism - modeling

ERIC P. CHARLES wrote at 09/27/2012 06:53 PM:
 Well... so much for discussing modeling... 

I don't get what you mean by that.  In order to model, you have to have
something to model.  You suggested that agents subscribing to social
liberalism had a particular justification problem (contradict their own
doctrine - intra-agent contradiction - or tolerate doctrinal contradictions
between agents).  But you leaped from the realm of thought
(hypocrisy/contradiction) to mechanism/ontology (tolerant
society) without providing any _thing_ to model.  There's no referent to
which a model can refer.  Or, even if there is one, it's too vague to grok.

It's bad practice to reverse engineer a model from analytic methods like
contradiction.  A better route is the forward, synthetic, constructionist
map from mechanism to phenomena.  Once you have at least one forward map,
you can begin serious work on the inverse map.

I suggested a mechanism: currency and trade.  From that referent you should
be able to build a model mechanism from which consistent justification can
emerge.  Steve further suggested some nuance to the mechanism that may well
add finer grained building blocks (IOU vs. YOM).
 And I then elaborated a bit on the objects being traded (distinguishing
between necessary vs. luxury goods) and suggested that a model measure
_other_ than the currency itself be used to observe the system.

Steve also mentioned using a semi-closed agent so that its interface
(trading) is a projection of a larger internal system (which would give it
some hysteresis and perhaps lower its predictability without adding any
stochasticity).

Bruce, earlier, tossed in the option to measure the system as a network and,
perhaps, a hint at a hypothesis that might be tested: agents primarily
motivated to trade facilitate larger, more connected networks.

Then you, David, and Carl began hashing out whether the model should be
rule-based or not.  I read Carl's comment as a suggestion that each agent
could be rule-based, but use different rules, some of which might be
reflective.  I.e. one agent's rules might take expressions of other agents'
rules as inputs ... i.e. meta-rules or rule operators.

This seems like a very common casual modeling conversation, to me.
What's questionable is whether the mechanism we've suggested so far will
contribute to a debate about religion and atheism.

--
glen


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Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism

2012-09-27 Thread Marcus G. Daniels

On 9/26/2012 7:02 PM, Roger Critchlow wrote:
But start at 1:54:00 and listen to the last three minutes and fourteen 
seconds, and give me your interpretation.
Around 1:47:30 Dawkins makes remark about finding out the fact of the 
matter.   And how passionate he was about it.   This leads to 
Hitchens asserting that all religions are equally wrong, and that the 
menace of religion coming from the surrender of the mind


I think an unstated psychological distinction is between `getting to 
truth Z' vs. `denying yourself truths A-Y'.   To see anything like the 
truth in the natural world one must attempt to mask every bias and only 
to realize the truth will still be, even after extensive falsification, 
ambiguous.   Having nothing nailed down is just more difficult and 
stressful.   (Constrained views of the world apparently do make people 
happy -- http://pewresearch.org/assets/social/pdf/AreWeHappyYet.pdf .)  
But having the drive to some arbitrary Z has a psychological property 
seen in religion: belief without evidence.  In this view, the surrender 
of the mind is also a sort of character weakness. Meanwhile, scientific 
culture even advocates pigheaded sloppiness known as the hypothesis.


Hitchens goes on to talk about the distinction of offending one Muslim 
vs. a billion of them -- or rather why anyone would see the former as 
equivalent to the latter.   It would be weakness to decide the merit of 
an idea based on the implied threats of an unthinking group; it's 
important to be prepared to go it alone.   Just to prove he means it, he 
takes shots at more religions.  (Mostly for dramatic effect, I'd say, 
but fair enough anyway.)


Toward the end, what I think he's worrying about is the possibility that 
the greater (world) population just can't do without having some stupid 
fairy tale to stick to (and especially to stick to each other).   Since 
he equates religious thinking to disease contagion, he clearly envisions 
a future where the fervent outnumber the sober.   He only suggests one 
scenario, though.   Part of what makes the U.S. government act is 
defense of secularism, the Constitution, and all that.  Another part is 
that unleashed fervor is bad for business -- like when it involves 
valuable natural resources. Hitchens mentions the U.S. military as a 
likely appeal, but not other powerful secular actors of Asia that have 
their own interests to protect, and could be pretty nasty about it if 
they were so inclined.   Recess is over -- now put down that book of 
holy words and get your lazy *ss down to the factory, would you?   (I 
just knew globalization must have some benefit!)


Marcus


FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org


Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism

2012-09-27 Thread Steve Smith

Marcus -

 Very thoughtful summary and analysis.  I *am* hopeful that the 
intelligentsia of the world (of the West?) can somehow reason their way 
through the world's problems to some solutions.   We here 
(FRAIM-at-large) might be in some way a microcosm of that.


My snide remark in response to Roger's (also thoughtful and insightful) 
analysis of the Dawkins/Hitchens/et alia thingy was in reaction to my 
fear that (as Roger puts it) appearing to all be reasonable men in 
fact they might actually be as fervently unthinking as those they are 
trying to fix.


One theme of my chiding here (usually of Doug) revolves around a form of 
hypocrisy that I, at least, find somewhere between difficult and 
impossible to avoid.  The epitome of this is intolerance of 
intolerance.  It seems to be an example of Godel's Incompleteness.   If 
there any intuitively obvious allowance for intolerance it would seem to 
be intolerance *of* intolerance, yet opening that door risks scope creep 
on our subjects of intolerance.


The Irony of Hitchens and company declaring Jihad on Islam itself was 
too rich to skip over.   I find your (Marcus') analysis here an antidote 
to my knee-jerk reasoning on the topic.  Thanks for talking me off that 
ledge (if only incidentally).


- Steve

On 9/26/2012 7:02 PM, Roger Critchlow wrote:
But start at 1:54:00 and listen to the last three minutes and 
fourteen seconds, and give me your interpretation.
Around 1:47:30 Dawkins makes remark about finding out the fact of the 
matter.   And how passionate he was about it.   This leads to 
Hitchens asserting that all religions are equally wrong, and that the 
menace of religion coming from the surrender of the mind


I think an unstated psychological distinction is between `getting to 
truth Z' vs. `denying yourself truths A-Y'.   To see anything like the 
truth in the natural world one must attempt to mask every bias and 
only to realize the truth will still be, even after extensive 
falsification, ambiguous.   Having nothing nailed down is just more 
difficult and stressful.   (Constrained views of the world apparently 
do make people happy -- 
http://pewresearch.org/assets/social/pdf/AreWeHappyYet.pdf .)  But 
having the drive to some arbitrary Z has a psychological property seen 
in religion: belief without evidence.  In this view, the surrender of 
the mind is also a sort of character weakness. Meanwhile, scientific 
culture even advocates pigheaded sloppiness known as the hypothesis.


Hitchens goes on to talk about the distinction of offending one Muslim 
vs. a billion of them -- or rather why anyone would see the former as 
equivalent to the latter.   It would be weakness to decide the merit 
of an idea based on the implied threats of an unthinking group; it's 
important to be prepared to go it alone. Just to prove he means it, he 
takes shots at more religions. (Mostly for dramatic effect, I'd say, 
but fair enough anyway.)


Toward the end, what I think he's worrying about is the possibility 
that the greater (world) population just can't do without having some 
stupid fairy tale to stick to (and especially to stick to each 
other).   Since he equates religious thinking to disease contagion, he 
clearly envisions a future where the fervent outnumber the sober.   He 
only suggests one scenario, though. Part of what makes the U.S. 
government act is defense of secularism, the Constitution, and all 
that.  Another part is that unleashed fervor is bad for business -- 
like when it involves valuable natural resources. Hitchens mentions 
the U.S. military as a likely appeal, but not other powerful secular 
actors of Asia that have their own interests to protect, and could be 
pretty nasty about it if they were so inclined.   Recess is over -- 
now put down that book of holy words and get your lazy *ss down to the 
factory, would you?   (I just knew globalization must have some 
benefit!)


Marcus


FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org




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Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
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Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism - modeling

2012-09-27 Thread ERIC P. CHARLES
Steve,
This is, of course, the inherent weakness of the socially liberal position*,
right? Either you become a hypocrite, or you must agree with your antagonist's
right to passionately hate your ideas. The person arguing against you has no
such handicap. The cards are thus stacked from the beginning against the
maintenance of a tolerant society, and some decent amount of planning and
effort is needed to keep things stable.

Hey... that almost looks like something we could make a really good model of.
You could certainly add several layers of real-world, empirically valid
complexity on top of standard altruism models. 

Eric

*The extra adjective is there because this is irrelevant to the financially
liberal position. 



On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 12:37 PM, Steve Smith sasm...@swcp.com wrote:

Marcus -

  Very thoughtful summary and analysis.  I *am* hopeful that the 
intelligentsia of the world (of the West?) can somehow reason their
way 
through the world's problems to some solutions.   We here 
(FRAIM-at-large) might be in some way a microcosm of that.

My snide remark in response to Roger's (also thoughtful and
insightful) 
analysis of the Dawkins/Hitchens/et alia thingy was in reaction to my 
fear that (as Roger puts it) appearing to all be reasonable
men in 
fact they might actually be as fervently unthinking as those they are 
trying to fix.

One theme of my chiding here (usually of Doug) revolves around a form
of 
hypocrisy that I, at least, find somewhere between difficult and 
impossible to avoid.  The epitome of this is intolerance of 
intolerance.  It seems to be an example of Godel's Incompleteness.   If 
there any intuitively obvious allowance for intolerance it would seem to 
be intolerance *of* intolerance, yet opening that door risks scope creep 
on our subjects of intolerance.

The Irony of Hitchens and company declaring Jihad on Islam itself was 
too rich to skip over.   I find your (Marcus') analysis here an
antidote 
to my knee-jerk reasoning on the topic.  Thanks for talking me off that 
ledge (if only incidentally).

- Steve
 On 9/26/2012 7:02 PM, Roger Critchlow wrote:
 But start at 1:54:00 and listen to the last three minutes and 
 fourteen seconds, and give me your interpretation.
 Around 1:47:30 Dawkins makes remark about finding out the fact of
the 
 matter.   And how passionate he was about it.   This
leads to 
 Hitchens asserting that all religions are equally wrong, and that the 
 menace of religion coming from the surrender of the mind

 I think an unstated psychological distinction is between `getting to 
 truth Z' vs. `denying yourself truths A-Y'.   To see anything like the 
 truth in the natural world one must attempt to mask every bias and 
 only to realize the truth will still be, even after extensive 
 falsification, ambiguous.   Having nothing nailed down is just more 
 difficult and stressful.   (Constrained views of the world apparently 
 do make people happy -- 
 http://pewresearch.org/assets/social/pdf/AreWeHappyYet.pdf .)  But 
 having the drive to some arbitrary Z has a psychological property seen 
 in religion: belief without evidence.  In this view, the surrender of 
 the mind is also a sort of character weakness. Meanwhile, scientific 
 culture even advocates pigheaded sloppiness known as the hypothesis.

 Hitchens goes on to talk about the distinction of offending one Muslim 
 vs. a billion of them -- or rather why anyone would see the former as 
 equivalent to the latter.   It would be weakness to decide the merit 
 of an idea based on the implied threats of an unthinking group; it's 
 important to be prepared to go it alone. Just to prove he means it, he 
 takes shots at more religions. (Mostly for dramatic effect, I'd say, 
 but fair enough anyway.)

 Toward the end, what I think he's worrying about is the possibility 
 that the greater (world) population just can't do without having
some 
 stupid fairy tale to stick to (and especially to stick to each 
 other).   Since he equates religious thinking to disease contagion,
he 
 clearly envisions a future where the fervent outnumber the sober.   He 
 only suggests one scenario, though. Part of what makes the U.S. 
 government act is defense of secularism, the Constitution, and all 
 that.  Another part is that unleashed fervor is bad for business -- 
 like when it involves valuable natural resources. Hitchens mentions 
 the U.S. military as a likely appeal, but not other powerful secular 
 actors of Asia that have their own interests to protect, and could be 
 pretty nasty about it if they were so inclined.   Recess is over -- 
 now put down that book of holy words and get your lazy *ss down to the 
 factory, would you?   (I just knew globalization must have some 
 benefit!)

 Marcus

 
 FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
 Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
 lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org



Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism - modeling

2012-09-27 Thread glen
ERIC P. CHARLES wrote at 09/27/2012 09:56 AM:
 *The extra adjective is there because this is irrelevant to the financially
 liberal position. 

I'm not so sure that it is irrelevant.  I tend to view the merchant, who
just wants to do business and doesn't care about your other social
positions, as the very foundation of social liberalism.  The best way to
maintain a speaking relationship with someone you otherwise might hate
is to continue doing business with them.  That bottom line is very
similar to the realists' ultimate Truth and provides a horizon for a
continual moral compass.

Ultimately, the ability to make a buck is a compression of all the
other things that keep us alive ... food, shelter, procreation, etc.
When doctrinal delusions like promises of 72 virgins, our own planets,
or Star Trek social equality interfere with our ability to make a buck
... well _that's_ when all hell breaks loose and we riot in the streets.

Financial liberalism is the _trunk_ and social liberalism is the leaves.

-- 
glen


FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org


Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism - modeling

2012-09-27 Thread Steve Smith

Glen -

I'm not sure I have a conclusive position on this topic.   But I do 
(surprise) have a few observations.


I agree that commerce (especially in it's larger sense, embracing 
community and barter and things other than bucks) can be a valuable 
ingredient in stable society...


What I personally am most worried about is the implications of the 
(true, but maybe unfortunate?) statement to make a buck is a 
compression of    I believe that our reduction of the value of 
*everything* to currency is a lossy compression, and that what is lost 
may not be missed until it is too late.


My touchstone for this is the difference between a buck as an I Owe 
You vs a You Owe Me.   I believe that currency started as a 
normalized form of I Owe You's but that somewhere soon after the 
formation of that device, it became conflated with You Owe Me's. This 
is a subtle but crucial difference.


Whenever I might purchase something (good or service), I don't presume 
that I have a *right* to that good or service simply because I have the 
price of it in my wallet.   I take the signs in many establishments as 
sacred: We reserve the right to refuse service to anyone.   This might 
be a thinly veiled reference to the racial/cultural prejudices of 
yesterday, or to the individualist shop owner's assertion of their right 
to not have to deal with jerks... but it is a reminder to ME that any 
transaction is *more* than the exchange of $$ value.


I think this observation supports your point.   When you buy or sell 
something from/to someone, you also exchange something else much less 
tangible... it can be a building of trust... of understanding even 
perhaps?   In this model, $$ are the needle pulling very ephemeral 
threads which ultimately weave a fine and strong fabric of community.  
Or so I like to think.


- Steve

ERIC P. CHARLES wrote at 09/27/2012 09:56 AM:

*The extra adjective is there because this is irrelevant to the financially
liberal position.

I'm not so sure that it is irrelevant.  I tend to view the merchant, who
just wants to do business and doesn't care about your other social
positions, as the very foundation of social liberalism.  The best way to
maintain a speaking relationship with someone you otherwise might hate
is to continue doing business with them.  That bottom line is very
similar to the realists' ultimate Truth and provides a horizon for a
continual moral compass.

Ultimately, the ability to make a buck is a compression of all the
other things that keep us alive ... food, shelter, procreation, etc.
When doctrinal delusions like promises of 72 virgins, our own planets,
or Star Trek social equality interfere with our ability to make a buck
... well _that's_ when all hell breaks loose and we riot in the streets.

Financial liberalism is the _trunk_ and social liberalism is the leaves.





FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org


Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism - modeling

2012-09-27 Thread glen

I agree that the compression is lossy.  But it all depends on _what_ is
lost.  If the compression extracts the (an?) essence of basic human
needs, then it's a good thing.  It loses all the nonsense (e.g.
delusional ideas of social equality kumbaya) and hones in on things like
bread and water.

I'm not sure the problems with it boil down nicely to a conflation of I
owe you and You owe me.  But they might.  Some layers out, the
problem I see with it is the difference between making a buck for basic
needs vs. making bunches of bucks that will accrue to meet the basic
needs of my descendants for millenia to come.  I.e. the problems aren't
with the compression so much as the misplaced value.  And that point
makes me think the problem is at a coarser layer than IOU vs YOM.
Either of those notes seem benign.

It's the lifetime of the note that is the problem.  A good mnemonic for
this is the word currency ... descended from current.  I've often
thought investments, assets, liabilities, etc. should be measured by a
metric separate, orthogonal to the currency with which they were traded.
 I.e. perhaps we shouldn't be able to _own_ cash, at least not for very
long.  Most checks have a not valid after 90 days qualifier on them.
That seems reasonable to me.

As for your basic point, I agree completely that concrete exchanges,
face 2 face, facilitate the exchange of intangibles, trust,
understanding ... like boxers touching gloves before pounding each other
into meat ... or an agreement not to shoot someone in the back ...
nobility, honor, respect, etc.  And the more abstract the currency, the
less it facilitates this exchange of intangibles.


Steve Smith wrote at 09/27/2012 10:55 AM:
 I agree that commerce (especially in it's larger sense, embracing
 community and barter and things other than bucks) can be a valuable
 ingredient in stable society...
 
 What I personally am most worried about is the implications of the
 (true, but maybe unfortunate?) statement to make a buck is a
 compression of    I believe that our reduction of the value of
 *everything* to currency is a lossy compression, and that what is lost
 may not be missed until it is too late.
 
 My touchstone for this is the difference between a buck as an I Owe
 You vs a You Owe Me.   I believe that currency started as a
 normalized form of I Owe You's but that somewhere soon after the
 formation of that device, it became conflated with You Owe Me's. This
 is a subtle but crucial difference.
 
 Whenever I might purchase something (good or service), I don't presume
 that I have a *right* to that good or service simply because I have the
 price of it in my wallet.   I take the signs in many establishments as
 sacred: We reserve the right to refuse service to anyone.   This might
 be a thinly veiled reference to the racial/cultural prejudices of
 yesterday, or to the individualist shop owner's assertion of their right
 to not have to deal with jerks... but it is a reminder to ME that any
 transaction is *more* than the exchange of $$ value.
 
 I think this observation supports your point.   When you buy or sell
 something from/to someone, you also exchange something else much less
 tangible... it can be a building of trust... of understanding even
 perhaps?   In this model, $$ are the needle pulling very ephemeral
 threads which ultimately weave a fine and strong fabric of community. 
 Or so I like to think.


-- 
glen


FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org


Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism - modeling

2012-09-27 Thread Steve Smith

Glen -

I agree that the compression is lossy.  But it all depends on _what_ is
lost.  If the compression extracts the (an?) essence of basic human
needs, then it's a good thing.  It loses all the nonsense (e.g.
delusional ideas of social equality kumbaya) and hones in on things like
bread and water.
I don't find the golden rule (one variant of social equality?) exactly 
a delusional idea, though that is probably a thread unto itself.


BTW, I'm not sure I think of this as a lossy compression as a 
dimension-reducing projection.   Multiple transactions can be like 
multiple points of view projected from said high dimension, recovering 
some of what was lost (obscured) in any given transaction/POV.

I'm not sure the problems with it boil down nicely to a conflation of I
owe you and You owe me.  But they might.
I agree that they are not that simple...  it was merely an illustration 
of what I consider to be one *obvious* problem with abstraction of value.

  Some layers out, the
problem I see with it is the difference between making a buck for basic
needs vs. making bunches of bucks that will accrue to meet the basic
needs of my descendants for millenia to come.  I.e. the problems aren't
with the compression so much as the misplaced value.
Agreed.   In a true community, I would not sell my last egg during a 
famine to someone who was hoarding or scalping them to my neighbors, 
but rather to someone whose survival through the famine increased my own 
chance of survival (ideally through the increased health/survival of the 
whole network/community).  In fact it is likely that I would not sell 
but gift such a precious nugget of protein/sustenance to the right 
member of a community as an ultimately selfish act.

  And that point
makes me think the problem is at a coarser layer than IOU vs YOM.
Either of those notes seem benign.
If you have ever suffered the attentions (presence) of someone with too 
much money, you might not call the last one benign.   There is 
nothing more offensive than someone whose spare change exceeds your net 
worth, tossing it around as if they can buy you, or your firstborn, or 
your soul with the flick of a pen...  It is one of the worst things I 
find about first world tourists in third world countries, even without 
realizing it, dropping a months wages for someone in service class on a 
single meal for themselves.  It is dehumanizing, even if it supports the 
tall pyramid of an extreme trickle-down economy.

It's the lifetime of the note that is the problem.  A good mnemonic for
this is the word currency ... descended from current.  I've often
thought investments, assets, liabilities, etc. should be measured by a
metric separate, orthogonal to the currency with which they were traded.
  I.e. perhaps we shouldn't be able to _own_ cash, at least not for very
long.  Most checks have a not valid after 90 days qualifier on them.
That seems reasonable to me.
Yes, the time-constant of abstracted IOU/YOM is an interesting 
feature...  I suppose (hyper)inflation is a good antidote to this, 
though it moves one from being a saver to being a borrower or a 
lender, or worse yet, to adding absolutely nothing to the economy 
except the management/manipulation/speculation of loans.

As for your basic point, I agree completely that concrete exchanges,
face 2 face, facilitate the exchange of intangibles, trust,
understanding ... like boxers touching gloves before pounding each other
into meat ... or an agreement not to shoot someone in the back ...
nobility, honor, respect, etc.  And the more abstract the currency, the
less it facilitates this exchange of intangibles.
Yes, this is probably the most risky part of abstraction of value... the 
abstraction.


 - Steve


FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org


Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism - modeling

2012-09-27 Thread Bruce Sherwood
In Stephen Pinker's recent book on the remarkable decline of violence,
The Better Angels of our Nature, he makes a similar observation
about the role of merchants, that they necessarily must practice
empathy with respect to an ever-widening circle of people who go far
beyond the emhathy one more easily feels for close kin. The merchant
needs to practice the skill of being inside another's skin and
understanding the Other. Pinker points out that we rarely give
merchants and commerce the acknowledgement due their expansion of
empathy.

Bruce

On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 11:14 AM, glen g...@ropella.name wrote:
 I'm not so sure that it is irrelevant.  I tend to view the merchant, who
 just wants to do business and doesn't care about your other social
 positions, as the very foundation of social liberalism.  The best way to
 maintain a speaking relationship with someone you otherwise might hate
 is to continue doing business with them.  That bottom line is very
 similar to the realists' ultimate Truth and provides a horizon for a
 continual moral compass.

 Ultimately, the ability to make a buck is a compression of all the
 other things that keep us alive ... food, shelter, procreation, etc.
 When doctrinal delusions like promises of 72 virgins, our own planets,
 or Star Trek social equality interfere with our ability to make a buck
 ... well _that's_ when all hell breaks loose and we riot in the streets.

 Financial liberalism is the _trunk_ and social liberalism is the leaves.

 --
 glen


FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org


Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism - modeling

2012-09-27 Thread glen
Steve Smith wrote at 09/27/2012 12:55 PM:
 I don't find the golden rule (one variant of social equality?) exactly
 a delusional idea, though that is probably a thread unto itself.

Well, it's on topic.  The search for a biological mechanism for the
golden rule seems to target the disagreement between religion and
atheism.  Personally, I think the golden rule is a largely useless
abstraction.  It lacks any operational detail.  Sometimes I might well
want to be punched in the face ... sometimes I don't. Sometimes I'd like
Renee' to offer me some of her candy bar.  Sometimes I don't. I'm
currently ~20 lbs overweight.  8^)

 BTW, I'm not sure I think of this as a lossy compression as a
 dimension-reducing projection.   Multiple transactions can be like
 multiple points of view projected from said high dimension, recovering
 some of what was lost (obscured) in any given transaction/POV.

That's a great point.  The compression algorithm is just as important as
its inputs and outputs.

 In fact it is likely that I would not sell
 but gift such a precious nugget of protein/sustenance to the right
 member of a community as an ultimately selfish act.

This is also an interesting point.  The dichotomy between selfishness
and altruism is false.  I think it says something important when a gift
giver (loudly) claims they don't want/expect anything in return.  I like
to play with people who fail to come to my parties after I sent them an
invitation.  They often will say things like Don't stop inviting me,
which opens the door for Eris!  My last victim, a neighbor, said
something like I really wanted to come but blahblahblah.  I responded:
That's OK.  We only invited you so that you wouldn't call the cops on
us when we got too loud.  I still don't know whether he knows I'm joking.

 If you have ever suffered the attentions (presence) of someone with too
 much money, you might not call the last one benign.   There is
 nothing more offensive than someone whose spare change exceeds your net
 worth, tossing it around as if they can buy you, or your firstborn, or
 your soul with the flick of a pen...

I don't find that offensive at all ... ignorant, yes, but not offensive.

  It is one of the worst things I
 find about first world tourists in third world countries, even without
 realizing it, dropping a months wages for someone in service class on a
 single meal for themselves.  It is dehumanizing, even if it supports the
 tall pyramid of an extreme trickle-down economy.

I guess I have to disagree there, too.  I don't think that act, in
isolation, is dehumanizing.  I think it depends more on the cloud of
attitude surrounding the act.  If you treat the locals with respect,
look them in the eye, engage their customs, listen when they talk, etc.
... i.e. treat them like humans, then it doesn't matter one whit how
much you spend on your food.  The trouble is that wealth engenders
abstraction.  So, the wealthy tend to view everyone around them as tools.

 to adding absolutely nothing to the economy
 except the management/manipulation/speculation of loans.

I'm still torn on this.  I do think financial instruments, in general,
are good.  I just can't predict which ones will yield good things versus
bad things ... until _after_ we've used them and seen their effects.

-- 
glen


FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org


Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism - modeling

2012-09-27 Thread ERIC P. CHARLES
Well... so much for discussing modeling... 

Personally, I am not a big fan of the Golden Rule because it implies that
everyone should be happy with the same things. It also implies the very
arrogant position that what you-in-particular want can be the should for
everyone else. How about if we try to do unto others as they would have us do?

As an example I am sure many on the list are familiar with: My mother does all
sorts of things for me that she wishes I would do for her. We reach an impasse
when I try to explain (usually for the 20th time) that I actually dislike the
thing she is doing. 

We can get into a similar place if, for example, we think of all the weird
kinky things that some people might like us to do unto them, but we would
really prefer they didn't do unto us. And yes, there is nobody on this list
that someone, somewhere, wouldn't want to do some really, really nasty things
with. (See Rule 34)*

Eric

*This is where there is a small chorus says speak for yourself; for you
people, imagine those desiring very boring and mundane things. 

P.S. Having many times been in the presence of people with too much money,
even by middle-income US standards, I find the types of behaviors Steve
mentioned annoying, but in no way offensive. Of course, I have been raised to
have a strong belief in personal property, and (despite my hippy parents) have
strong Libertarian leanings. I have never seen anybody dump a month's worth of
my wages on a single meal, but I have seen a month of my salary go to a table
of meals, and I have attended private events that probably cost a year of my
salary. I think such spending is dumb, I wish they would give a bit to me, but
ultimately it is their money. And, since it is on topic, There, but for the
grace of God, go I. Grace is funny some times ;- )



On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 08:28 PM, glen g...@ropella.name wrote:

Steve Smith wrote at 09/27/2012 12:55 PM:
 I don't find the golden rule (one variant of social
equality?) exactly
 a delusional idea, though that is probably a thread unto itself.

Well, it's on topic.  The search for a biological mechanism for the
golden rule seems to target the disagreement between religion and
atheism.  Personally, I think the golden rule is a largely useless
abstraction.  It lacks any operational detail.  Sometimes I might well
want to be punched in the face ... sometimes I don't. Sometimes I'd like
Renee' to offer me some of her candy bar.  Sometimes I don't. I'm
currently ~20 lbs overweight.  8^)

 BTW, I'm not sure I think of this as a lossy compression as a
 dimension-reducing projection.   Multiple transactions can be like
 multiple points of view projected from said high dimension, recovering
 some of what was lost (obscured) in any given
transaction/POV.

That's a great point.  The compression algorithm is just as important as
its inputs and outputs.

 In fact it is likely that I would not sell
 but gift such a precious nugget of protein/sustenance to the
right
 member of a community as an ultimately selfish act.

This is also an interesting point.  The dichotomy between selfishness
and altruism is false.  I think it says something important when a gift
giver (loudly) claims they don't want/expect anything in return.  I
like
to play with people who fail to come to my parties after I sent them an
invitation.  They often will say things like Don't stop inviting me,
which opens the door for Eris!  My last victim, a neighbor, said
something like I really wanted to come but blahblahblah.  I
responded:
That's OK.  We only invited you so that you wouldn't call the cops on
us when we got too loud.  I still don't know whether he knows I'm joking.

 If you have ever suffered the attentions (presence) of someone
with too
 much money, you might not call the last one benign.  
There is
 nothing more offensive than someone whose spare change exceeds your net
 worth, tossing it around as if they can buy you, or your firstborn, or
 your soul with the flick of a pen...

I don't find that offensive at all ... ignorant, yes, but not offensive.

  It is one of the worst things I
 find about first world tourists in third world countries, even without
 realizing it, dropping a months wages for someone in service class on a
 single meal for themselves.  It is dehumanizing, even if it supports the
 tall pyramid of an extreme trickle-down economy.

I guess I have to disagree there, too.  I don't think that act, in
isolation, is dehumanizing.  I think it depends more on the cloud of
attitude surrounding the act.  If you treat the locals with respect,
look them in the eye, engage their customs, listen when they talk, etc.
... i.e. treat them like humans, then it doesn't matter one whit how
much you spend on your food.  The trouble is that wealth engenders
abstraction.  So, the wealthy tend to view everyone around them as tools.

 to adding absolutely nothing to the economy
 except the management/manipulation/speculation of loans.

I'm still torn on this.  I do 

Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism - modeling

2012-09-27 Thread Carl Tollander

I think the GR just says you might want to value context over doctrine.

On 9/27/12 7:53 PM, ERIC P. CHARLES wrote:

Well... so much for discussing modeling...

Personally, I am not a big fan of the Golden Rule because it implies 
that everyone /should /be happy with the same things. It also implies 
the very arrogant position that what you-in-particular want can be the 
should for everyone else. How about if we try to do unto others as 
/they /would have us do?


As an example I am sure many on the list are familiar with: My mother 
does all sorts of things for me that she wishes I would do for her. We 
reach an impasse when I try to explain (usually for the 20th time) 
that I actually dislike the thing she is doing.


We can get into a similar place if, for example, we think of all the 
weird kinky things that some people might like us to do unto them, but 
we would really prefer they didn't do unto us. And yes, there is 
nobody on this list that someone, somewhere, wouldn't want to do some 
really, really nasty things with. (See Rule 34)*


Eric

*This is where there is a small chorus says speak for yourself; for 
you people, imagine those desiring very boring and mundane things.


P.S. Having many times been in the presence of people with too much 
money, even by middle-income US standards, I find the types of 
behaviors Steve mentioned annoying, but in no way offensive. Of 
course, I have been raised to have a strong belief in personal 
property, and (despite my hippy parents) have strong Libertarian 
leanings. I have never seen anybody dump a month's worth of my wages 
on a single meal, but I have seen a month of my salary go to a table 
of meals, and I have attended private events that probably cost a year 
of my salary. I think such spending is dumb, I wish they would give a 
bit to me, but ultimately it is their money. And, since it is on 
topic, There, but for the grace of God, go I. Grace is funny some 
times ;- )




On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 08:28 PM, *glen g...@ropella.name* wrote:

Steve Smith wrote at 09/27/2012 12:55 PM:
 I don't find the golden rule (one variant of social
equality?) exactly
 a delusional idea, though that is probably a thread unto itself.

Well, it's on topic.  The search for a biological mechanism for the
golden rule seems to target the disagreement between religion and
atheism.  Personally, I think the golden rule is a largely useless
abstraction.  It lacks any operational detail.  Sometimes I might well
want to be punched in the face ... sometimes I don't. Sometimes I'd like
Renee' to offer me some of her candy bar.  Sometimes I don't. I'm
currently ~20 lbs overweight.  8^)

 BTW, I'm not sure I think of this as a lossy compression as a
 dimension-reducing projection.   Multiple transactions can be like
 multiple points of view projected from said high dimension, recovering
 some of what was lost (obscured) in any given
transaction/POV.

That's a great point.  The compression algorithm is just as important as
its inputs and outputs.

 In fact it is likely that I would not sell
 but gift such a precious nugget of protein/sustenance to the
right
 member of a community as an ultimately selfish act.

This is also an interesting point.  The dichotomy between selfishness
and altruism is false.  I think it says something important when a gift
giver (loudly) claims they don't want/expect anything in return.  I
like
to play with people who fail to come to my parties after I sent them an
invitation.  They often will say things like Don't stop inviting me,
which opens the door for Eris!  My last victim, a neighbor, said
something like I really wanted to come but blahblahblah.  I
responded:
That's OK.  We only invited you so that you wouldn't call the cops on
us when we got too loud.  I still don't know whether he knows I'm joking.

 If you have ever suffered the attentions (presence) of someone
with too
 much money, you might not call the last one benign.
There is
 nothing more offensive than someone whose spare change exceeds your net
 worth, tossing it around as if they can buy you, or your firstborn, or
 your soul with the flick of a pen...

I don't find that offensive at all ... ignorant, yes, but not offensive.

  It is one of the worst things I
 find about first world tourists in third world countries, even without
 realizing it, dropping a months wages for someone in service class on a
 single meal for themselves.  It is dehumanizing, even if it supports the
 tall pyramid of an extreme trickle-down economy.

I guess I have to disagree there, too.  I don't think that act, in
isolation, is dehumanizing.  I think it depends more on the cloud of
attitude surrounding the act.  If you treat the locals with respect,
look them in the eye, engage their customs, listen when they talk, etc.

Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism

2012-09-26 Thread Roger Critchlow
Alfredo --

Very interesting listening.

One might believe that they are all very reasonable men, until you get to
the very end of the video where they listen to Hitch argue that the end of
world civilization is imminent unless the Islamic world is reformed of its
unacceptable beliefs, a reformation which he sees as only being effectively
pursued by American military force.  His colleagues are either struck
speechless or they are in agreement.

The truly unacceptable belief of Islam, as far as I can tell, is Jihad, the
doctrine that beliefs which endanger the faithful may need to be answered
with force.

Sam Harris posted
http://www.samharris.org/blog/item/on-the-freedom-to-offend-an-imaginary-god
last
week.

-- rec --

2012/9/22 Alfredo Covaleda alfredocoval...@gmail.com


 Richard Dawkins, Christopher Hitchens, Sam Harris, Daniel Dennett
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uUg-1NCCowc


 PS. Christopher Hitchens murió en diciembre el año pasado. Asi que o está
 en la Gloria de Dios o simplemente transformado en otras formas físicas de
 la naturaleza. A mi me da igual !
 --

 _
 *
 *
 *Alfredo Covaleda Vélez*

 Ingeniero Agrónomo
 Universidad Nacional

 Tecnólogo en Informática
 Uniminuto

 Cel:  (+57) 311 213 7829
 __



 
 FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
 Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
 lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org


FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org

Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism

2012-09-26 Thread Steve Smith
Did you just point out that the mighty Hitch himself has come up with 
his own justification for an anti-Islamic Jihad?   And the rest endorsed 
it with their silence?

Alfredo --

Very interesting listening.

One might believe that they are all very reasonable men, until you get 
to the very end of the video where they listen to Hitch argue that the 
end of world civilization is imminent unless the Islamic world is 
reformed of its unacceptable beliefs, a reformation which he sees as 
only being effectively pursued by American military force.  His 
colleagues are either struck speechless or they are in agreement.


The truly unacceptable belief of Islam, as far as I can tell, is 
Jihad, the doctrine that beliefs which endanger the faithful may need 
to be answered with force.


Sam Harris posted 
http://www.samharris.org/blog/item/on-the-freedom-to-offend-an-imaginary-god last 
week.


-- rec --

2012/9/22 Alfredo Covaleda alfredocoval...@gmail.com 
mailto:alfredocoval...@gmail.com



  Richard Dawkins, Christopher Hitchens, Sam Harris, Daniel Dennett

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uUg-1NCCowc


  PS. Christopher Hitchens murió en diciembre el año pasado. Asi
  que o está en la Gloria de Dios o simplemente transformado en
  otras formas físicas de la naturaleza. A mi me da igual !

-- 


_
*
*
*Alfredo Covaleda Vélez*

Ingeniero Agrónomo
Universidad Nacional

Tecnólogo en Informática
Uniminuto

Cel: (+57) 311 213 7829 tel:%28%2B57%29%20311%20213%207829
__




FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org





FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org



FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org

Re: [FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism

2012-09-26 Thread Roger Critchlow
Yes, that's one way to hear it.  But on review, I now hear Dennett
attempting to interject, and Hitch allowing that Dawkins disagrees.  Also
wondering what got edited out, since something did.

But start at 1:54:00 and listen to the last three minutes and fourteen
seconds, and give me your interpretation.

Jump back another 4 minutes for riffs on Messianic Judaism, wicked Quakers,
and fascist Roman Catholics.

-- rec --

On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 2:33 PM, Steve Smith sasm...@swcp.com wrote:

  Did you just point out that the mighty Hitch himself has come up with
 his own justification for an anti-Islamic Jihad?   And the rest endorsed it
 with their silence?

 Alfredo --

  Very interesting listening.

  One might believe that they are all very reasonable men, until you get
 to the very end of the video where they listen to Hitch argue that the end
 of world civilization is imminent unless the Islamic world is reformed of
 its unacceptable beliefs, a reformation which he sees as only being
 effectively pursued by American military force.  His colleagues are either
 struck speechless or they are in agreement.

  The truly unacceptable belief of Islam, as far as I can tell, is Jihad,
 the doctrine that beliefs which endanger the faithful may need to be
 answered with force.

  Sam Harris posted
 http://www.samharris.org/blog/item/on-the-freedom-to-offend-an-imaginary-god 
 last
 week.

  -- rec --

 2012/9/22 Alfredo Covaleda alfredocoval...@gmail.com


  Richard Dawkins, Christopher Hitchens, Sam Harris, Daniel Dennett
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uUg-1NCCowc


 PS. Christopher Hitchens murió en diciembre el año pasado. Asi que o está
 en la Gloria de Dios o simplemente transformado en otras formas físicas de
 la naturaleza. A mi me da igual !
  --

 _
 *
 *
 *Alfredo Covaleda Vélez*

 Ingeniero Agrónomo
 Universidad Nacional

  Tecnólogo en Informática
 Uniminuto

 Cel:  (+57) 311 213 7829 %28%2B57%29%20311%20213%207829
 __



 
 FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
 Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
 lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org




 
 FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
 Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
 lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org



 
 FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
 Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
 lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org


FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org

[FRIAM] DEBATE about Religion and Atheism

2012-09-22 Thread Alfredo Covaleda
Richard Dawkins, Christopher Hitchens, Sam Harris, Daniel Dennett
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uUg-1NCCowc


PS. Christopher Hitchens murió en diciembre el año pasado. Asi que o está
en la Gloria de Dios o simplemente transformado en otras formas físicas de
la naturaleza. A mi me da igual !
-- 

_
*
*
*Alfredo Covaleda Vélez*

Ingeniero Agrónomo
Universidad Nacional

Tecnólogo en Informática
Uniminuto

Cel:  (+57) 311 213 7829
__

FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org