The Rete Mirable is two or more intimately woven systems that contain fluids. 
Fluids are in proximity but normally

never exchange contents, rather heat or gases flow/diffuse down to a lower 
concentration or gradient not the fluid.

Where the two systems engage, the gradient is the greatest where they terminate 
the gradient is near zero or equilibrium.

 

It is less than a perfect system in humans where a lymphatic system collects 
material leaking from capillaries. which also

collects cellular debris and provides a route for cancer cells to spread from 
organ to organ.

 

I have been preoccupied lately and my attendance has suffered. My apologies.

Vladimyr

 

 

From: Friam [mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com] On Behalf Of Steven A Smith
Sent: August-24-18 11:52 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] looking for a word

 

Vladimyr -

Good to hear your voice here again...

Rete Mirable (Latin: miraculous net) seems to be the term/concept *I* was 
looking for here.  

I don't know if it has the persuasive nature Glen is searching for, or captures 
the full *diversity* of the interpenetrating "miraculous" nets, but it is great 
to find out there is an extant working term for these structures and the 
underlying processes supported.   I'm also happy to hear of the term 
"counter-current exchange system" in place of my more colloquial "reverse 
backflow system", though I was describing what is known as a decanted system 
which therefore acted as a countercurrent multiplier system.  

It is impressive that the term goes all the way back to Galen.  Yogi Berra said 
it best: "You can see a lot just by looking."

I sometimes think I need to add to my google fu technique doing a simple 
rendition of the concept in question into Latin and then searching for a few 
variations on the result.  I'm sure there is a Masters project in Natural 
Language processing or Computational Linguistics out there which has already 
implemented something like that?   I doubt I would have hit on "miraculous" in 
this context but maybe a Latin scholar would know intuitively that "mirable" 
was a likely adjective to be used in this kind of situation?

- Steve

 

On 8/22/18 6:23 PM, Vladimyr wrote:

anastomosis(circulatory) is the progressive branching of arteries down to 
capillaries.
The flow in the trunk line is accommodated by the sum of volumes downstream.
When such a network meshes with another closed network and the fluids in each 
are flowing in opposite directions. a counter-current
exchange system reduces the difference in gradients i.e. gases, heat flow.
Rete Mirable , the miraculous network that was first discovered in Tuna used to 
keep the blood warm.
There are  many such systems in the human body. 
vladimyr
-----Original Message-----
From: Friam [mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com] On Behalf Of u?l? ?
Sent: August-21-18 4:59 PM
To: FriAM
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] looking for a word
 
Sorry for being vague.  By "matrixification", I made an attempt to suggest 
something like taking a single 1-dimensional thing (a tube) and splitting it 
into more than one thing, each of which is still 1-dimensional, but together 
approaching a higher dimension (2 or 3).
 
By "articulation", I intended something similar, taking something like a single 
tube and putting in *joints*, which might also provide branch points.  Two 
pipes connected by an angle will be more articulated than a single pipe (of the 
same length).  By extension, then, 3 pipes connected by a splitter will be more 
articulated than two pipes connected by an angle.
 
On 08/21/2018 02:36 PM, Steven A Smith wrote:

Matriculation does indeed seem to be related to "Matrix"  but 
apparently in the sense of embedding into a nourishing environment 
(womblike?) which makes some sense for the common use in "entering an 
institution such as a university or college".   I'm not sure what you 
meant by dimension reduction in this context?
 
You also mention "articulation" but my fumble-fingers had me finding 
"atriculation" instead and found (only?) in an urban dictionary: 1. To 
funnel information down; 2.) the trickle down effect of data that will 
lead you to one conclusion; 3. to vett.

 
 
--
☣ uǝlƃ
 
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