Re: [FRIAM] disorder caused by individual, or collective human agents, in hierarchically-ordered and complex systems--systems composed of sub-systems that, in turn, have their own subsystems, and so o

2013-11-10 Thread Arlo Barnes
*Old email:*

 What a great cascade here... I'm not sure anyone but you and I are
 properly enjoying it however grin.

The delete key suffices.  And, in the spirit of hiding in plain sight, we
 have to populate caches like Arlo's with _something_ to lower the SNR.
  Personally, I feel successful enough if I can stump ht://Dig 
 http://www.htdig.org/.  I'm sure Arlo's got a better indexer for his
 cache, though.

 Not sure how to parse this metaphor (I suspect your conclusions are
inaccurate, but I appreciate the vote of confidence).

  This deserves it's own entire thread... what means creativity?. And
 perhaps, is creativity just another name for emergent?.

 Ouch.  No way.  The concept of emergence is largely vapid, I think.  It
 can be unavoidable at times.  But I try hard to avoid it.  Creativity is
 the Twitch, which I think reduces to randomness, a generative wiggle that
 initiates causal flows.  We then perceive novel acts and artifacts through
 hindsight.

I had the same reaction. Firstly, emergence is far less about how the world
is than how you think it should be. Very mechanistically, the 'emergent'
behaviour results from the simple rules, yet it is surprising because we
had wrong preconceptions about what simplicity, complexity and (in a
meta-defined way) emergence are.

 I think the real secret to happiness lies in being able to do the exact
 same thing an infinite number of times, yet thinking something entirely
 different each time you do it, different yet woven/coherent with the rest
 of the possible paths in the swath.

 I like this, although I am not sure how it could be verified. I tend to
despise routine, yet if there is a best way to do a given thing (which I
believe) and if you have to do that thing more than once, routine is
inevitable.

 Anyone who has faith in anything should be prescribed high doses of
 psychedelics as a cure for that debilitating illness. 8^)

[EDIT: More or less as Steve said below] I think that psychedelics
themselves do not magically change your worldview, they just provoke your
senses in order to pull you out of your every-day narrow framework or
context of thought (which is survival- and society-oriented, among other
things) so that you may reflect on your existence with a little more
perspective. It seems the result of this is that some people *get* faith in
something (peyote mysticism, for instance) and some lose a faith. Not
having taken any psychedelics myself, though, this is all a guess-based
interpretation of others' accounts.
-Arlo

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Re: [FRIAM] disorder caused by individual, or collective human agents, in hierarchically-ordered and complex systems--systems composed of sub-systems that, in turn, have their own subsystems, and so o

2013-10-31 Thread glen

On 10/30/2013 04:54 PM, Steve Smith wrote:

What a great cascade here... I'm not sure anyone but you and I are
properly enjoying it however grin.


The delete key suffices.  And, in the spirit of hiding in plain sight, 
we have to populate caches like Arlo's with _something_ to lower the 
SNR.  Personally, I feel successful enough if I can stump ht://Dig 
http://www.htdig.org/.  I'm sure Arlo's got a better indexer for his 
cache, though.



This deserves it's own entire thread... what means creativity?. And
perhaps, is creativity just another name for emergent?.


Ouch.  No way.  The concept of emergence is largely vapid, I think.  It 
can be unavoidable at times.  But I try hard to avoid it.  Creativity is 
the Twitch, which I think reduces to randomness, a generative wiggle 
that initiates causal flows.  We then perceive novel acts and artifacts 
through hindsight.



My direct involvement in this work, tangential (direct for me,
tangential for the domain itself) suggests that it is very young and
immature, that it often takes itself too seriously, etc.   I'm naturally
interested in ontologies as low-fidelity, distorted snapshots in time
from a specific perspective of something much grander.   Unfortunately
that line of consideration risks being yet-less mature and yet-more
self-aggrandizing-worthy not unlike classical Platonic Idealism.


I don't know.  If you could recast what you're saying in terms of the 
much more ancient sensory-motor complex presented by (mammalian?) 
anatomy and physiology, then you could tie into something much more 
mature and much more reality-based than the fluid brain farts that 
constitute our language.



I have always had a very complicated relationship with postmodernism
myself.   I'm knee-jerk suspicious of any movement whose fundamental
nature is deconstructionistic... that is the central power/theme of
criticism.   It's easy to tear something down, not so easy to build
something (and then defend it from entropy itself and those who would
tear it down for tearing-down sake).   That said, I'm naturally
sympathetic with those who question the existing order which is (by
definition?) held in place by authority/intimidation/momentum...


I don't think of it as deconstructionist at all.  I think of it as a 
more -urgic construction.  Modernism is too cerebral.  Postmodernism is 
more arbitrary, attempting to construct new stuff from whatever garbage 
happens to be laying around at the time.  But, that's probably me just 
stamping it with my own do what thou wilt ethic (come to think of it, 
Crowley could be thought of as a postmodern occultist... hmmm).



I think you are describing the problem of rut-following and creation?
One often doesn't recognize the ruts they are running in until they
manage to jump them, or more likely get high-centered when they get too
deep.  Me, I'm dragging a LOT of shit with my undercarriage despite
having jumped and/or cut across ruts many times.


I typically think of ruts as behavior oriented.  Personally, I 
seriously enjoy doing the same thing day in, day out.  I find a kind of 
Taoist mindfulness to that.  What I don't like are canalized patterns of 
_thought_.  I think the real secret to happiness lies in being able to 
do the exact same thing an infinite number of times, yet thinking 
something entirely different each time you do it, different yet 
woven/coherent with the rest of the possible paths in the swath.


I can guess this is one reason Deutsch's concept of the multiverse is 
interesting to me.



My yard alone tells me there should be some useful fungus around here
somewhere. ;-)  It seems like those drugs are an established mechanism
for cracking the cosmic egg, as it were.


I think their efficacy is intrinsically faith-based... there probably is
no objective way to determine whether the subjective experience induced
by them (immediate and latent) is real or not.


Hm.  You seem to have taken an odd turn, there.  Since I put little 
stock in reality, it should be clear that I put even less stock in the 
subjective experiences of any one animal.  The point of psych drugs, in 
my opinion, wouldn't be to find a new reality outside the cracked egg. 
It would simply be to destroy whatever reality you _think_ you've found 
as a result of your mind-rut.  Anyone who has faith in anything should 
be prescribed high doses of psychedelics as a cure for that debilitating 
illness. 8^)



In my own case, my own maturing has lead me *away* from a strong or deep
belief in any of the specific, accepted classification systems.  If
anything I've become more interested in a wider variety of them and
intuitive as well as formal comparative analysis of them.   My
professional work in the area is informed by that as well... I'm
interested in how this plenitude of related classification systems are
related to eachother and whether one can combine or superpose them,
interpolate between them, etc.


I'm trying to fight this battle against SBML 

Re: [FRIAM] disorder caused by individual, or collective human agents, in hierarchically-ordered and complex systems--systems composed of sub-systems that, in turn, have their own subsystems, and so o

2013-10-31 Thread Steve Smith

Glen -

What a great cascade here... I'm not sure anyone but you and I are
properly enjoying it however grin.


The delete key suffices.  And, in the spirit of hiding in plain 
sight, we have to populate caches like Arlo's with _something_ to 
lower the SNR.  Personally, I feel successful enough if I can stump 
ht://Dig http://www.htdig.org/.  I'm sure Arlo's got a better 
indexer for his cache, though.
I'm not sure how he indexes... I'll ask him when I see him...  he's got 
some wonderfully idiosyncratic ways of doing things that I feel like I 
can learn from.   I think he just lets his FRIAM mail back up when he's 
busy with other things (like the Summer Complexity And Modeling Camp) 
and then runs through it post-hoc, giving us a little benefit of 
hindsight into our own foibles.

This deserves it's own entire thread... what means creativity?. And
perhaps, is creativity just another name for emergent?.


Ouch.  No way.  The concept of emergence is largely vapid, I think.  
It can be unavoidable at times.  But I try hard to avoid it.
I think it is a wonderfully elusive topic which is it's boon and it's 
bane.  It is absolutely overused and misused.
Creativity is the Twitch, which I think reduces to randomness, a 
generative wiggle that initiates causal flows.  We then perceive novel 
acts and artifacts through hindsight.
I find creativity similarly elusive and over/misused.   But then I'm 
married to an outsider artist who clashes gleefully with insider 
artists all the time in my presence.   She owns an impressive array of 
melee weapons for discussing creativity and art.   The field is always a 
mess when she walks off of it.


I do suspect that creativity and possibly emergent phenomena are as 
much in the eye of the beholder as is beauty.  But even as illusions 
or consensual hallucination, they fascinate me, possibly all the more 
for their ephemerality.


But none of that makes it any easier to talk about fruitfully.

My direct involvement in this work, tangential (direct for me,
tangential for the domain itself) suggests that it is very young and
immature, that it often takes itself too seriously, etc.   I'm naturally
interested in ontologies as low-fidelity, distorted snapshots in time
from a specific perspective of something much grander. Unfortunately
that line of consideration risks being yet-less mature and yet-more
self-aggrandizing-worthy not unlike classical Platonic Idealism.


I don't know.  If you could recast what you're saying in terms of the 
much more ancient sensory-motor complex presented by (mammalian?) 
anatomy and physiology, then you could tie into something much more 
mature and much more reality-based than the fluid brain farts that 
constitute our language.

Ah yes, the battle of the petards...

I *am* very interested in making the connection you describe and 
Lakoff/Nunez's and other's work in Embodiment of Mind seem to provide a 
decent stalagmite growing up from the grounding of said mammalian 
sensory-motor (and biochemical stew?) toward my hanging stalagtites of 
abstractions precipitated out of the fog of brain farts you reference...


As an aside, my metaphor of stalagite/stalagmite is flawed in at least 
one obvious way that is relevant to this conversation... in 
calcium-carbonate cave evolution, there is a downward causation... 
stalagmites form opposite stalagtites from the drips...  in my analogy, 
I don't intend to suggest that our higher (in the sense of level of 
abstraction) conceptual structures in any way cause the development of 
your lower sensory motor structures, although since our development of 
language and the extreme extensions of our phenotype that may have been 
leveraged by language (tools, weapons, conveyances, agriculture, 
architecture, industry, etc.) may in fact have begun to adjust our 
sensory-motor structures...

I have always had a very complicated relationship with postmodernism
myself.   I'm knee-jerk suspicious of any movement whose fundamental
nature is deconstructionistic... that is the central power/theme of
criticism.   It's easy to tear something down, not so easy to build
something (and then defend it from entropy itself and those who would
tear it down for tearing-down sake).   That said, I'm naturally
sympathetic with those who question the existing order which is (by
definition?) held in place by authority/intimidation/momentum...


I don't think of it as deconstructionist at all.

Of course you don't! grin.
  I think of it as a more -urgic construction.  Modernism is too 
cerebral.  Postmodernism is more arbitrary, attempting to construct 
new stuff from whatever garbage happens to be laying around at the time.
I concede that this is a key aspect.   Some postmodernism seems to grow 
out of the presumption that modernism itself has (or is or will) 
collapsed under it's own loftiness, and the urgic part of 
postmodernism can do it's juxtaposing/folding/collaging thing with the 
rich detritus created by an (overly) 

Re: [FRIAM] disorder caused by individual, or collective human agents, in hierarchically-ordered and complex systems--systems composed of sub-systems that, in turn, have their own subsystems, and so o

2013-10-30 Thread glen

On 10/27/2013 06:59 PM, Arlo Barnes wrote:

On 10/27/2013 03:12 PM, Steve Smith wrote:
 Colloquially, one might simply say one person's mess is another's

order...


This is a good example. It seems pretty straightforward and obvious that
this is the case, but I think it has more to do with the schema for
organisation: if the schema is not open, it is hard to discern.


Or, perhaps, that schema are illusory ... they don't actually exist and 
are an epiphenomenon of the constraint sieve that is our (common) 
anatomy and physiology?  If that's the case, then every person's mess is 
just the variance/uncertainty allowed by the (dynamic) sieve that is 
their body/mind.  Hence, the more sieves you can chain/network together, 
the more orderly the mess.


Some of us, of course, resist being chained together.  For example, I 
usually refrain from sieving someone else's mess, when I can.  But 
because my sieve is ... uh ... coarse-grained and irregular ... when I 
do sieve a mess, I usually just make a bigger mess.  Somehow, the input 
must be leaky.


--
⇒⇐ glen e. p. ropella
And silo shed, on the other side



FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
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Re: [FRIAM] disorder caused by individual, or collective human agents, in hierarchically-ordered and complex systems--systems composed of sub-systems that, in turn, have their own subsystems, and so o

2013-10-30 Thread Steve Smith

Glen -

On 10/27/2013 06:59 PM, Arlo Barnes wrote:

On 10/27/2013 03:12 PM, Steve Smith wrote:
 Colloquially, one might simply say one person's mess is another's

order...


This is a good example. It seems pretty straightforward and obvious that
this is the case, but I think it has more to do with the schema for
organisation: if the schema is not open, it is hard to discern.


Or, perhaps, that schema are illusory ... they don't actually exist 
and are an epiphenomenon of the constraint sieve that is our (common) 
anatomy and physiology?
I definitely agree that by one measure, schema are illusory, or more as 
you suggest epiphenomenal.


(aside: nod to Carl for possibly coining the longest Subject in FRIAMic 
history... it's systems all the way down!)


In my specific work, what we are roughly trying to do is characterize 
the constraint sieves that you suggest.  In our case, we take for 
granted that of our shared anatomy and physiology and try to capture 
what is our shared cultural experience within specific cultures and 
subcultures...  the subcultures in question are those of various 
specialists.   For example, the specialty POV of a Coast Guard Captain 
trying to interdict smugglers vs an Al-Quaeda analysts in the CIA trying 
to understand motive, intent and capability of the group and it's members.


This subdivision of specialty can go right down to the individual...   
For example, trying to recreate the perspective of Edward Snowden or 
Glen Greenwald...   given those examples, the utility of our work 
suddenly seems to take on a nefarious air, but in fact, I would claim 
that Snowden and Greenwald are examples of people who, by the nature of 
the lives they have chosen *want* people to share their perspectives.


What we are seeking might be considered an alternative to rhetoric. We 
are not seeking to establish a strong rhetorical arguement that would 
lead someone from one point of view (or more likely a fuzzy point of 
view) to a specific point of view, but more aptly to allow one person to 
*find* their way from their own point of view to that of another's...   
In the Intelligence examples our sponsor cared about, naturally the goal 
was for the Blue Team to understand the Red Team's point of view for 
many reasons... but there are also many potentially non-adversarial  
uses for such techniques all roughly in the category of walk a mile in 
my shoes or if you could just understand my point of view...
If that's the case, then every person's mess is just the 
variance/uncertainty allowed by the (dynamic) sieve that is their 
body/mind.  Hence, the more sieves you can chain/network together, the 
more orderly the mess.
Well, this is part of my point...  while one can impose more complex 
order (superpose many modes of order?), the question is how to tease the 
individual orders back out of that and then to use that understanding of 
structure to provide contrast and comparison between individual (or 
collective?) perspectives.

Some of us, of course, resist being chained together.
And others seem to seek to be coupled (if not chained) into a larger 
structure/dynamic.   I find this a wonderful tension in humanity, 
between our lone-wolf and our pack instincts, our bachelor-stallion and 
our herd-leader modes.
For example, I usually refrain from sieving someone else's mess, when 
I can.
And I seem inclined to try to sieve other's and re-present it contorted 
through my own expresser (what is the opposite of a sieve...  a pug-mill 
or a meat-grinder?   I think one of the things I do here in this forum 
that is surely maddening to anyone who tries to follow my missives is 
precisely what I'm talking about doing automagically... to ingest one 
point of view and regurgitate it from a slightly different one (with 
added ingredients from earlier meals, of course, just to push the 
metaphor hard)...
But because my sieve is ... uh ... coarse-grained and irregular ... 
when I do sieve a mess, I usually just make a bigger mess. Somehow, 
the input must be leaky.
But it is your very re-combobulation of the conversations others have 
here that I find entertaining/useful/fascinating.  I have *enough* of a 
sense of your background/understanding of the world to appreciate some 
of the odder things you regurgitate here...  and they almost *always* 
inform me in some useful way.  The meta-dialogs between you and Marcus 
are often even richer in that sense, each of your POVs being similar yet 
distinct enough to seem to add some coherence.


- Steve



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Re: [FRIAM] disorder caused by individual, or collective human agents, in hierarchically-ordered and complex systems--systems composed of sub-systems that, in turn, have their own subsystems, and so o

2013-10-30 Thread Steve Smith

Glen -

And just to add a completely different perspective (via a different 
physical system metaphor) on this topic:


As a dabbler in holography, this whole problem of a shared information 
mess and the idea of constraint sieves reminds me a lot of the process 
of recording (in a lossy way of course) the interference patterns of a 
coherent signal (e.g.object beam from a long-coherence length laser) 
bouncing off of many objects and then at a later time (re)creating the 
original collective wave-front from that recording.


The journalistic record, for example, is created by a host of 
journalists trained in a specific observational and reporting 
methodology (with many variations of course, especially if you include 
the blogosphere as journalism).   We then read articles about events 
we did not experience directly and try to reconstruct an understanding 
of what happened and possibly even it's relevance to other events.


The body of scientific knowledge, ditto.  Sieved through a host of 
scientists, their methodology(ies) and the peer-review and publication 
process.


For Intelligence Analysts, the same is true, but with a different (but 
similar) set of methodologies and access to secret (hidden from others, 
from most) holograms to superpose and try to find a POV to view them 
from and find specific hidden (obscured by intent or circumstance) 
information.


Thanks for sharing the constraint sieve description

Carry on!
 - Steve

On 10/27/2013 06:59 PM, Arlo Barnes wrote:

On 10/27/2013 03:12 PM, Steve Smith wrote:
 Colloquially, one might simply say one person's mess is another's

order...


This is a good example. It seems pretty straightforward and obvious that
this is the case, but I think it has more to do with the schema for
organisation: if the schema is not open, it is hard to discern.


Or, perhaps, that schema are illusory ... they don't actually exist 
and are an epiphenomenon of the constraint sieve that is our (common) 
anatomy and physiology?  If that's the case, then every person's mess 
is just the variance/uncertainty allowed by the (dynamic) sieve that 
is their body/mind.  Hence, the more sieves you can chain/network 
together, the more orderly the mess.


Some of us, of course, resist being chained together.  For example, I 
usually refrain from sieving someone else's mess, when I can.  But 
because my sieve is ... uh ... coarse-grained and irregular ... when I 
do sieve a mess, I usually just make a bigger mess.  Somehow, the 
input must be leaky.






FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com


Re: [FRIAM] disorder caused by individual, or collective human agents, in hierarchically-ordered and complex systems--systems composed of sub-systems that, in turn, have their own subsystems, and so o

2013-10-30 Thread Steve Smith

Glen (and anyone else trying to follow) -

I left out an important point in all of this, I think.  The work going 
into building ontologies for various (sub)domains is roughly the act 
of building a shared, formalized constraint sieve.  My interest is in 
developing a working environment for ensembles of these.


- Steve

Glen -

And just to add a completely different perspective (via a different 
physical system metaphor) on this topic:


As a dabbler in holography, this whole problem of a shared information 
mess and the idea of constraint sieves reminds me a lot of the process 
of recording (in a lossy way of course) the interference patterns of a 
coherent signal (e.g.object beam from a long-coherence length laser) 
bouncing off of many objects and then at a later time (re)creating the 
original collective wave-front from that recording.


The journalistic record, for example, is created by a host of 
journalists trained in a specific observational and reporting 
methodology (with many variations of course, especially if you include 
the blogosphere as journalism).   We then read articles about events 
we did not experience directly and try to reconstruct an understanding 
of what happened and possibly even it's relevance to other events.


The body of scientific knowledge, ditto.  Sieved through a host of 
scientists, their methodology(ies) and the peer-review and publication 
process.


For Intelligence Analysts, the same is true, but with a different (but 
similar) set of methodologies and access to secret (hidden from 
others, from most) holograms to superpose and try to find a POV to 
view them from and find specific hidden (obscured by intent or 
circumstance) information.


Thanks for sharing the constraint sieve description

Carry on!
 - Steve

On 10/27/2013 06:59 PM, Arlo Barnes wrote:

On 10/27/2013 03:12 PM, Steve Smith wrote:
 Colloquially, one might simply say one person's mess is another's

order...


This is a good example. It seems pretty straightforward and obvious 
that

this is the case, but I think it has more to do with the schema for
organisation: if the schema is not open, it is hard to discern.


Or, perhaps, that schema are illusory ... they don't actually exist 
and are an epiphenomenon of the constraint sieve that is our (common) 
anatomy and physiology?  If that's the case, then every person's mess 
is just the variance/uncertainty allowed by the (dynamic) sieve that 
is their body/mind.  Hence, the more sieves you can chain/network 
together, the more orderly the mess.


Some of us, of course, resist being chained together.  For example, I 
usually refrain from sieving someone else's mess, when I can.  But 
because my sieve is ... uh ... coarse-grained and irregular ... when 
I do sieve a mess, I usually just make a bigger mess.  Somehow, the 
input must be leaky.






FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com




FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
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Re: [FRIAM] disorder caused by individual, or collective human agents, in hierarchically-ordered and complex systems--systems composed of sub-systems that, in turn, have their own subsystems, and so o

2013-10-30 Thread glen

On 10/30/2013 12:21 PM, Steve Smith wrote:

And I seem inclined to try to sieve other's and re-present it contorted
through my own expresser (what is the opposite of a sieve...  a pug-mill
or a meat-grinder?   I think one of the things I do here in this forum
that is surely maddening to anyone who tries to follow my missives is
precisely what I'm talking about doing automagically... to ingest one
point of view and regurgitate it from a slightly different one (with
added ingredients from earlier meals, of course, just to push the
metaphor hard)...


You make a great point, here.  I danced around the production problem by 
allowing for a leaky/uncertain input.  I.e. I may _intend_ to pay sole 
attention to one thing (mess, object, phenomenon, whatever).  But 
there's a wiggle or fuzziness to my attention.  As a result, what comes 
out the other end might contain something new, something that doesn't 
_seem_ to exist in the original thing on which I focused (or said I'd 
focus).


But that probably doesn't account for all of creative/production.  There 
are plenty of others, e.g. your material from earlier foci, or perhaps a 
multi-tasking ability to be able to simultaneously consider and merge 
foci.  The more important one, I suppose would be if/whether there's 
something pivotal happening inside the machine (consciousness?), 
something creative rather than merely transformative.



But it is your very re-combobulation of the conversations others have
here that I find entertaining/useful/fascinating.


Same here, of course.

On 10/30/2013 12:45 PM, Steve Smith wrote:

I left out an important point in all of this, I think.  The work going
into building ontologies for various (sub)domains is roughly the act
of building a shared, formalized constraint sieve.  My interest is in
developing a working environment for ensembles of these.


One thing that's always bothered me (right down to the etymological 
nightmare of the words ontologies and methodologies) is the 
assumption that ontologies are at all stable, much less static, or even 
real.  These languages we have for various things (experiences, domains, 
identities, expectations) have always seemed so arbitrary to me.  Of 
course, that's what sparks my defense of postmodernism against people 
who are clearly smarter and more linguistically endowed than me. ;-) 
But more importantly, as I age, I consistently find my peers are 
maturing faster than I am.  They (for good or bad) fall more naturally 
into expertise or guru statuses or fall more naturally into right 
wing nutjob or cancer patient or whatever classification system may 
be most convenient for them.


Of course, I can't help but think that if they're doing that, then I 
must be doing the same, even if i can't accurately observe it about 
myself.  And if I'm maturing like they are, then what can I do to _stop_ 
it?  I've thought seriously about leaping off the cliff and trying some 
psychedelics.  My yard alone tells me there should be some useful fungus 
around here somewhere. ;-)  It seems like those drugs are an established 
mechanism for cracking the cosmic egg, as it were.


But this is an individual, ontogenic observation, not a population 
based, transpersonal, or objective one.  Perhaps there are stable or 
even static/true classification systems out there and I'm just too lazy 
to find them?  And, if that's the case, then the Satanists are right. 
It's not wrong to purposefully go crazy through, say, meditation or 
psychedelics, but why would you do that if you can be _right_ and _know_ 
things about the world?  Why would you take the risk of abandoning the 
Truth?


--
⇒⇐ glen e. p. ropella
The clouds were hanging low above the path



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Re: [FRIAM] disorder caused by individual, or collective human agents, in hierarchically-ordered and complex systems--systems composed of sub-systems that, in turn, have their own subsystems, and so o

2013-10-30 Thread Steve Smith

Glen -
What a great cascade here... I'm not sure anyone but you and I are 
properly enjoying it however grin.
But that probably doesn't account for all of creative/production. 
There are plenty of others, e.g. your material from earlier foci, or 
perhaps a multi-tasking ability to be able to simultaneously consider 
and merge foci.  The more important one, I suppose would be if/whether 
there's something pivotal happening inside the machine 
(consciousness?), something creative rather than merely transformative.
This deserves it's own entire thread... what means creativity?. And 
perhaps, is creativity just another name for emergent?.

I left out an important point in all of this, I think.  The work going

into building ontologies for various (sub)domains is roughly the act
of building a shared, formalized constraint sieve.  My interest is in
developing a working environment for ensembles of these.


One thing that's always bothered me (right down to the etymological 
nightmare of the words ontologies and methodologies) is the 
assumption that ontologies are at all stable, much less static, or 
even real.  These languages we have for various things (experiences, 
domains, identities, expectations) have always seemed so arbitrary to me.
My direct involvement in this work, tangential (direct for me, 
tangential for the domain itself) suggests that it is very young and 
immature, that it often takes itself too seriously, etc.   I'm naturally 
interested in ontologies as low-fidelity, distorted snapshots in time 
from a specific perspective of something much grander.   Unfortunately 
that line of consideration risks being yet-less mature and yet-more 
self-aggrandizing-worthy not unlike classical Platonic Idealism.
Of course, that's what sparks my defense of postmodernism against 
people who are clearly smarter and more linguistically endowed than 
me. ;-) 
I have always had a very complicated relationship with postmodernism 
myself.   I'm knee-jerk suspicious of any movement whose fundamental 
nature is deconstructionistic... that is the central power/theme of 
criticism.   It's easy to tear something down, not so easy to build 
something (and then defend it from entropy itself and those who would 
tear it down for tearing-down sake).   That said, I'm naturally 
sympathetic with those who question the existing order which is (by 
definition?) held in place by authority/intimidation/momentum...
But more importantly, as I age, I consistently find my peers are 
maturing faster than I am.  They (for good or bad) fall more naturally 
into expertise or guru statuses or fall more naturally into right 
wing nutjob or cancer patient or whatever classification system may 
be most convenient for them.
I think you are describing the problem of rut-following and creation?   
One often doesn't recognize the ruts they are running in until they 
manage to jump them, or more likely get high-centered when they get too 
deep.  Me, I'm dragging a LOT of shit with my undercarriage despite 
having jumped and/or cut across ruts many times.

don't let the sound of your own wheels drive you crazy - Eagles
Of course, I can't help but think that if they're doing that, then I 
must be doing the same, even if i can't accurately observe it about 
myself.  And if I'm maturing like they are, then what can I do to 
_stop_ it?  I've thought seriously about leaping off the cliff and 
trying some psychedelics.
In the anti-drug mythology, I believe those two events (jumping off a 
cliff and taking psychadelics) happen in the opposite order.
My yard alone tells me there should be some useful fungus around here 
somewhere. ;-)  It seems like those drugs are an established mechanism 
for cracking the cosmic egg, as it were.
I think their efficacy is intrinsically faith-based... there probably is 
no objective way to determine whether the subjective experience induced 
by them (immediate and latent) is real or not.


But this is an individual, ontogenic observation, not a population 
based, transpersonal, or objective one.  Perhaps there are stable or 
even static/true classification systems out there and I'm just too 
lazy to find them?
In my own case, my own maturing has lead me *away* from a strong or deep 
belief in any of the specific, accepted classification systems.  If 
anything I've become more interested in a wider variety of them and 
intuitive as well as formal comparative analysis of them.   My 
professional work in the area is informed by that as well... I'm 
interested in how this plenitude of related classification systems are 
related to eachother and whether one can combine or superpose them, 
interpolate between them, etc.
And, if that's the case, then the Satanists are right. It's not wrong 
to purposefully go crazy through, say, meditation or psychedelics, but 
why would you do that if you can be _right_ and _know_ things about 
the world?  Why would you take the risk of abandoning the Truth?
This sounds scarily similar to 

Re: [FRIAM] disorder caused by individual, or collective human agents, in hierarchically-ordered and complex systems--systems composed of sub-systems that, in turn, have their own subsystems, and so o

2013-10-27 Thread Nick Thompson
Carl,

 

Great to hear your voice.

 

Link did not work for me.  I'm probable the only one. 

 

n

 

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 Carl Diegert
Sent: Sunday, October 27, 2013 9:16 AM
To: friam@redfish.com
Subject: [FRIAM] disorder caused by individual, or collective human agents,
in hierarchically-ordered and complex systems--systems composed of
sub-systems that, in turn, have their own subsystems, and so on.

 

Disorganization Theory and Disorganizational Behavior: Towards an Etiology
of Messes, Eric Abrahamson, Research in Organizational Behavior, vol. 24,
2002, pp. 139-80. 

 

http://harry.buttle.free.fr/ebooks/disorganisation.pdf

 

 


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Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
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Re: [FRIAM] disorder caused by individual, or collective human agents, in hierarchically-ordered and complex systems--systems composed of sub-systems that, in turn, have their own subsystems, and so o

2013-10-27 Thread Owen Densmore
Link worked here.

   -- Owen


On Sun, Oct 27, 2013 at 10:20 AM, Nick Thompson
nickthomp...@earthlink.netwrote:

 Carl,

 ** **

 Great to hear your “voice.”

 ** **

 Link did not work for me.  I’m probable the only one. 

 ** **

 n

 ** **

 Nicholas S. Thompson

 Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology

 Clark University

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

 ** **

 *From:* Friam [mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com] *On Behalf Of *Carl
 Diegert
 *Sent:* Sunday, October 27, 2013 9:16 AM
 *To:* friam@redfish.com
 *Subject:* [FRIAM] disorder caused by individual, or collective human
 agents, in hierarchically-ordered and complex systems--systems composed of
 sub-systems that, in turn, have their own subsystems, and so on.

 ** **

 “Disorganization Theory and Disorganizational Behavior: Towards an
 Etiology of Messes, Eric Abrahamson, Research in Organizational Behavior,
 vol. 24, 2002, pp. 139–80. ”

 ** **

 http://harry.buttle.free.fr/ebooks/disorganisation.pdf

 ** **

 ** **

 
 FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
 Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
 to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com


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Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
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Re: [FRIAM] disorder caused by individual, or collective human agents, in hierarchically-ordered and complex systems--systems composed of sub-systems that, in turn, have their own subsystems, and so o

2013-10-27 Thread Steve Smith

Nick -

Mine wants to open directly in Firefox (property of the link or my 
settings in Thunderbird, rather than the document?), I am guessing you 
might be running MS-only indigenous products, you may want to download 
(Ctrl-Click or R/L Click?) and then open in Adobe Reader?


I'm reading the article now (while making potato-leek soup), so will try 
to comment on the content (esp. relative to our earlier conversations 
here on Entropy and on Appropriation of Reserved Terms).


I look forward to your own insights.

- Steve

Link worked here.

 -- Owen


On Sun, Oct 27, 2013 at 10:20 AM, Nick Thompson 
nickthomp...@earthlink.net mailto:nickthomp...@earthlink.net wrote:


Carl,

Great to hear your voice.

Link did not work for me.  I'm probable the only one.

n

Nicholas S. Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology

Clark University

http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/
http://home.earthlink.net/%7Enickthompson/naturaldesigns/

*From:*Friam [mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com
mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com] *On Behalf Of *Carl Diegert
*Sent:* Sunday, October 27, 2013 9:16 AM
*To:* friam@redfish.com mailto:friam@redfish.com
*Subject:* [FRIAM] disorder caused by individual, or collective
human agents, in hierarchically-ordered and complex
systems--systems composed of sub-systems that, in turn, have their
own subsystems, and so on.

Disorganization Theory and Disorganizational Behavior: Towards an
Etiology of Messes, Eric Abrahamson, Research in Organizational
Behavior, vol. 24, 2002, pp. 139--80. 

http://harry.buttle.free.fr/ebooks/disorganisation.pdf



FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com





FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com



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Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com

Re: [FRIAM] disorder caused by individual, or collective human agents, in hierarchically-ordered and complex systems--systems composed of sub-systems that, in turn, have their own subsystems, and so o

2013-10-27 Thread Steve Smith

Carl -

Great link/article... apropos perhaps of our conversations about 
cognitive loss with aging and it's prevention/mitigation?


Nick -

I'm reminded of your idea of using Wiki technology (plus some 
conventions) for what you called Noodles or Noodling some time 
back.  I saw that concept as your attempt to collaboratively impose or 
find order in some of the discussions we might hold on various (semi) 
formal topics.  In this case, it felt almost like creating a deliberate 
mess (or an order not conventionally accepted?)


All -

If you haven't already filed my e-mail in your TLDR (too long, didn't 
read) file, but are about to, I recommend possibly jumping past 
Abrahamson's Conclusion section to his Some Final Thoughts in No 
Particular Order section.   Oh... and did anyone (else) notice that the 
website this came from was titled in honor of the unfortunate character 
Harry Buttle in Terry Gilliam's movie Brazil?  Very apropopriate to 
the topic IMO.


...

I was immediately struck with the (mis?)appropriation of A) the 
common/vernacular term mess and B) the information theory and/or 
complex systems terms hierarchy, complex systems, agent, and even 
organization itself.


Given that this is coming from a Business School and Organizational 
Theorists, it is probably fair to say that their use of some of the 
terms has it's own history and precedent and may not feel like an 
appropriation to insiders, but I suspect *most* here are not insiders 
to that group.


I was also drawn to the title/topic (as usual) by my own anecdotal 
experience, in particular my three favorite characters in such: Myself, 
my lovely and creative Wife, and Generic Persons Not Close To Me.


My wife and I are both very disorderly people when observed from the 
outside, but my wife's disorganization/disorderliness is highly 
functional (for her, if not those of us who try to function within her 
milieu).  My own disorder/disorganization is more problematic (to me as 
well as others trying to navigate my messes, including these soliloquys 
on FRIAM.


One branch of my own technical work relates closely to this.  I've 
referred to it in the past as Faceted Ontologies which has it's own 
specific use in Web Page and Web Store Access.  In my world, we are 
talking roughly about finding and/or imposing order within relatively 
disordered collections, or in fact, more to the point, collections which 
have complex, multi-relations intrinsic to their creation and/or 
subsequent indexing/collecting/analysis.


Colloquially, one might simply say one person's mess is another's 
order...



*The Paper itself:*

It feels almost disengenuous on the part of the author (Abrahamson) to 
use the colloquial term mess throughout his description of the 
research he did for the paper...


   The rare article that pertains to a theory of messes is usually lost 
somewhere in
   a gigantic_mess_  of articles...


I particularly appreciated the references to Bateson's 1972 _Ecology of 
Mind_ 
http://www.edtechpost.ca/readings/Gregory%20Bateson%20-%20Ecology%20of%20Mind.pdf  
and his 1948 Why do Things get in a Muddle? included therein.   The 
metalog on Muddles seem to provide an everyday understanding of 
Entropy, and in my terminology relative entropy which pivots on the 
relative expectations that various people might have about information 
(or in this case, organization of things?).


Abrahamson's section on Politics seemed potentially quite relevant to 
today's news, whether it be the Arab Spring (now in it's second Autumn 
to tweak a non-sequitor?) or the NSA surviellance.   His main takeaway 
seems to be that the agents of Messiness do so, to disrupt or blunt the 
power of the Hierarchical Establishment... effectively hiding resources 
from those in power in plain sight.


In his Socio-cultural section, the takeaway seems to be that hierarchy 
provides an iconic or symbolic reminder of the legitimacy and power of 
the dominant culture...  and messiness (which disrupts the hierarchy?)  
therefore suggests anti-social tendencies.


In Psychology, he suggests that much hierarchical order may be simply 
perceived by humans since that is (one strong way) that we organize and 
apprehend complexity mentally.   This point (and counterpoints that 
might be made to it?) reminds me of Bart Kosko's book popularizing Fuzzy 
Mathematics entitled Fuzzy Thinking, where he attempted to make a case 
at least for using non-crisp set theoretic ideas in everyday life...
I also have a book from my Grandfather's library entitled Straight and 
Crooked Thinking 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Straight_and_Crooked_Thinking which 
approached the question of messy thinking from a somewhat more 
colloquial/practical point of view, focused *mostly* on the deliberate 
crooked thinking of various types of con-men (with a specific focus on 
politicians).


 Abrahamson also does a bit of chicken-egg consideration of whether the 
prevalence of hierarchical systems within 

Re: [FRIAM] disorder caused by individual, or collective human agents, in hierarchically-ordered and complex systems--systems composed of sub-systems that, in turn, have their own subsystems, and so o

2013-10-27 Thread Arlo Barnes

  I'm reminded of your idea of using Wiki technology (plus some
 conventions) for what you called Noodles or Noodling some time back.

Found 
thishttp://article.gmane.org/gmane.org.region.new-mexico.santa-fe.friam/7818/match=noodlesby
searchinghttp://search.gmane.org/?query=noodles+noodlingauthor=Thompsongroup=gmane.org.region.new-mexico.santa-fe.friamsort=revdateDEFAULTOP=orxP=ZnoodlxFILTERS=Gorg.region.new-mexico.santa-fe.friam-Athompson---O.
Unfortunately the wiki directory on the sf_x
sitehttp://www.sfcomplex.org/is giving me a 403. Tried Gmane after
the
list archives http://redfish.com/pipermail/friam_redfish.com/ were not
helpful; Mailman is powerful but shows it's age.

 If you haven't already filed my e-mail in your TLDR (too long, didn't
 read) file but are about to

Since I do not delete anything, it is more of a too long, will read later
file. I will take your advice about skipping to the end as a more general
suggestion to skim, which I have done.

 Oh... and did anyone (else) notice that the website this came from was
 titled in honor of the unfortunate character Harry Buttle in Terry
 Gilliam's movie Brazil?  Very appropriate to the topic IMO.

Unfortunately, still have not seen Brazil (not to be confused with The Boys
From Brazil) although I am a fan of Gilliam (and also Pratchett and Jones);
I have seen Time Bandits, which is presumably quite different. Anyway, the
owner of the website is apparently named Archibald Harry Tuttle.

 My wife and I are both very disorderly people when observed from the
 outside, but my wife's disorganization/disorderliness is highly functional
 (for her, if not those of us who try to function within her milieu).  My
 own disorder/disorganization is more problematic (to me as well as others
 trying to navigate my messes, including these soliloquies on FRIAM.

As someone who has been called 'OCPD' often, not unwelcomely so, I have an
interest in the formal characterisation of the psychology and utility
behind human organisation of physical and semantic objects, or lack thereof
- in specific narrow contexts. I think given a good amount of research and
thoughtwork, I could provide a point or two of perspective, if for no other
reason that although everyone has experience with this sort of thing, it is
not something that is often addressed in a technical manner.

 Colloquially, one might simply say one person's mess is another's
 order...

This is a good example. It seems pretty straightforward and obvious that
this is the case, but I think it has more to do with the schema for
organisation: if the schema is not open, it is hard to discern. It seems
like there could be an objective measure for the inherent-ness of the
schema, that would correlate to how easily it can be inferred by others.
Then this starts to fall into the areas of design in communications (like
you mentioned, web-pages are a good example).

Anyway, I have downloaded the PDF and will read it sometime tonight, I
think.

-Arlo

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