ENTS,

Just because you can measure some aspect of a phenomena does not mean that you 
understand it.  Just like being able to measure the height of a tree does not 
mean you understand everything about forest ecology.  You can not ignore 
processes and characteristics simply because you do not know how to quantify 
them or how to fit them into your equation or model.

I am all for measuring things, trying to quantify things, and developing 
formulas and models, but there needs to a reality check with respect to how 
well they things actually represent the real-world 

On a more specific point, I am not convinced that a single one-size-fits-all 
definition of forest health is practical or even advisable given the diverse 
nature of various forest ecosystems.  If a simple quantifiable equation is 
developed, you know it will be misapplied to forests or situations where its 
application is not appropriate.

Ed Frank

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Edward Frank 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Wednesday, November 05, 2008 5:05 PM
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Rendezvous Report


Joe,

The world expressed as a series of equations is an engineering concept not a 
scientific one.  In order to be valid we must know all things about every 
variable of the proposition.  Since we do not know, and perhaps can not know 
all things about every variable in a complex system, then our scientific 
understanding will be limited to only the most simple of things.  That is one 
of the great failures of modern science, perhaps driven by our ability to 
manipulate numbers so well by computer, is the drive to quantify everything and 
to simply ignore things that can't be readily quantified.  There is often the 
opinion that a bad quantification is better than no numbers at all.  That is 
not true, if the the bad models resulting from bad quantification lead you to 
the wrong conclusions.  We need to categorize things iteratively, but the 
arbitrary assignment of numbers to poorly understood phenomena doesn't help.  
Scientific understanding is based upon a logic structure that may contain 
equations, but does not need to be numerical to be scientific.  Requiring a 
concept be an equation with may quantifiable variables limits the ability to 
investigate or to even understand many natural phenomena.  Mathematical 
formulas and equations are a tool of scientific investigation, but are not 
themselves science, no more than a shovel is the same thing as a hole in the 
ground.

Ed

"Two roads diverged in a yellow wood, And sorry I could not travel both. "
Robert Frost (1874-1963). Mountain Interval. 1920. 
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Joseph Zorzin 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Wednesday, November 05, 2008 4:18 PM
  Subject: [ENTS] Re: Rendezvous Report


  Joe
  PS: to me, the concept is an equation with many variables- each variable 
  must be quantifiable including values not yet in the marketplace- while 
  social and political values also plugged into the equation must be 
  transparent.






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