Please distribute to others who may be interested...

You are hereby invited to a seminar in our twelfth interdisciplinary series
on Evolution, Complexity and Cognition <http://ecco.vub.ac.be/?q=node/108>
(ECCO 2017-2018)
<https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Marjoriikka_Ylisiurua>

Time: Friday November 3, 14h-16h

Place: *room * *D.1.07*, building D, VUB


------------------------------
The social complexity of digital data

Petter Tornberg <https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Petter_Toernberg>
Abstract:

The deluge of digital data has become a powerful force in shaping how we
think about society. Its emergence has given social scientists
unprecedented access to previously unimaginable data – traces of the lives,
dreams, and feelings of hundreds of millions of people. This seems to be
leading to a renewed naturalism in parts of the social sciences -- a
reinvigoration of the notion that, given enough data, we may find a
“physics of culture” that permits prediction and control of the type that
characterize the natural sciences. But this naturalism differs in important
ways from the one that came before it: since digital data does not hide the
intricate relational complexity or mass-interactional nature of the social,
it tends to chafe with the traditional Cartesian-Newtonian paradigm. The
new naturalism instead sees society through the lens of the
mass-interaction and relationality that digital data provides, with
naturalist analogies of “avalanches and granular flows, flocks of birds and
fish” (Ball 2012, p.IX): society is increasingly understood as complex.

This development begs a revisiting of the questions of the influential
mid-20th century debates on naturalism: what are the possibilities of
social scientific knowledge and the limits of naturalism in our new digital
world? Fundamentally, society seems characterized not merely by bottom-up
emergence, but by a continuous dialectic between agency and structure;
between emergence and structure; between bottom-up and top-down. People
shape society, and society shapes us, as we, individually and collectively,
go about changing it or maintaining it. Its structures are themselves
instilled with agency, as the actors are reflexively conscious of the
emergent structures of which they are part. The human capacity of
reflexivity, imply the formation of “causal thickets” (Wimsatt 1994) that
cut through the timescale separation that lies as a foundational
cornerstone assumption of many naturalist methods, what Herbert Simon
(2002) called "near-decomposability" and others through the distinction
between “closed” and “open” systems. This seems to have fundamental
implications for the ontological nature of society, as well as for how we
approach it. This presentation hence suggests that the complexity
scientific approach to society is in a need of a “turn to ontology”: the
formulation of an explicit metatheory for the nature of society.

A possible source of such a metatheory is suggested to be complex realism,
constituted by the integration between complexity science and critical
realism, which may provide a foundations for “the development of a
situated, reflexive and contextually nuanced epistemology" (Kitchin 2014)
to serve a system that is not only complex, but also structured, meaning-
and value-laden.

The presentation furthermore illustrates this tentative metatheoretical
framework through on-going work that looks empirically at the dialectic
between agency and structure, through a case study on gender expression on
social media. This study looks at 500,000 photographs of men and women on
Instagram and Flickr using a mixed-methods approach, including image and
text analysis, to study the question of how gender, as a social structure,
is perpetuated in and through a dialectic between agency and structure. The
theoretical lens of Erving Goffman shows social media as a platform through
which we are socialized into society through a continual "learning by
posting": the platforms function as a mirror that guides us in the shaping
and reshaping of our identities through repeated attempts at
self-representation. This study hence also illustrates how digital data
emphasize not only the quantifiability and complexity of social life, but
paradoxically also precisely the distinctive features that makes society
ontologically distinct: the self-reflexivity and hyperreality
characteristic of postmodernity.



References
Ball, P., 2012. Why society is a complex matter: Meeting twenty-first
century


Kitchin, R., 2014. Big Data, new epistemologies and paradigm shifts. Big
Data & Society, 1(1), p.2053951714528481.

Simon, H. A. (2002). Near decomposability and the speed of evolution.
Industrial and corporate change, 11(3), 587-599.

Wimsatt, W. C. (1994). The ontology of complex systems: levels of
organization, perspectives, and causal thickets. Canadian Journal of
Philosophy, 24(sup1), 207-274
------------------------------

Upcoming Seminars

*November 10th*
Atanu Chatterjee
Non-equilibrium thermodynamics from first-principles

*November 17th*
Katarina Petrovic
On cosmogony: approaching the unknowable origin

*November 24th*
Paul B. Rainey
Origins of multicellular life

See also the ECCO/GBI calendar
<https://www.google.com/calendar/embed?src=azMyN252aWluM2JoMnU3MXY5OGt2ZzliOGdAZ3JvdXAuY2FsZW5kYXIuZ29vZ2xlLmNvbQ>
.
You can add this calendar to your calendar application through here
<https://www.google.com/calendar/ical/k327nviin3bh2u71v98kvg9b8g%40group.calendar.google.com/public/basic.ics>

More info about the ECCO seminar program: http://ecco.vub.ac.be/?q=node/108
<http://ecco.vub.ac.be/?q=node/108>

-- 
Cadell

ECCO Group (VUB) <http://ecco.vub.ac.be/?q=node/1>
Email:  [email protected]
Website: https://cadelllast.com

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