You are working upon a false definition of meme.  No one actually
believes that meme X is identical in any two people.  Quite the
opposite; it explains subjectivity.

Please read the thesis and critique it's points, I will gladly debate
it with you.  You are exactly right, there is no difference between a
meme and an idea.  Its a concept of blurred boundaries and distinction
precisely because it is the source of subjectivity.  Memes are
processed by unique meme-machines, resulting in unique physiological
structures of memes which at a conscious level means different things
to different people.

How about this argument from my thesis, that evolution is the only
process that we know of that is capable of going against entropy,
creating complexity from simplicity, from simple axioms.  You accept
this with genetic evolution, yet the idea that genetic evolution is
responsible for the exponential evolution of culture is absurd...
genetics is the realm of instinct and sub-conscious action.  That is
what I mean when I say memetic evolution provides us with our
conscious selves.  The exponential growth comes from horizontal
transference as well as the standard hereditory, together with the
ability to transmit from one to many and over vast distances of time.

Who are you?  You might describe your appearance (genetic) or you
might describe what you do, what you like etc which is memetic.  It
makes perfect sense that replicable information, as passing from host
to host, will not stay unaltered as it builds upon what has come
before.  That sentance perfectly describes both genetics and memetics.

In my thesis I provide simple axioms that together explain everything
humanities; complexity from simplicitly.  I would appreciate it if
your critique at least tried to recognise it as such instead of
throwing out generalisations and arguments of semantics.  Your
critique thus far is in utter ignorance of all my arguments, that the
process involves complexity theory, chaos theory and the like.  As
such, they are simply offensively off-base.

Try reading it first.  Then perhaps your thoughts would be relevant.



On 30 June, 11:44, chazwin <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Jun 29, 11:35 pm, grimeandreason <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Try reading the thesis first.  You mistake the medium for the content.
>
> > Memetic evolution is the basis of our conscious selves, the reason for
> > civilisation.
>
> Complete rubbish. Memetics tells you the mechanism only. To understand
> human history you need to engage with the particularities and cultural
> logic coded in the 'meme'.  The main problem with that is there is no
> identifiable material component that is equivalent to a meme.
> Basically there is nothing different between what you call a meme and
> normal people for centuries have called an Idea. Ideas change each
> time they are encountered by each new person. This is what meme-
> believers call mutation. Its what normal people call interpretation.
>
>
>
> > Plus, you can say a hell of a lot, indeed everything there is to say,
> > about the Mona Lisa if you speak of all the memes that contributed to
> > its creation, both the objective and the expression of the subjective
> > (language consists of memes too...)
>
> Name one single identifiable meme and its materialist corollary that
> is associated with the Mona Lisa!
> The fact is there is no such things as memes, they are nothing more
> than a historically situated article of faith by evolutionary
> psychology and its associated pseudo-sciences.
> There are no memes. Prove otherwise!
>
>
>
>
>
> > On 29 June, 21:05, chazwin <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > The basic problem with memes as history is that it is like trying to
> > > understand the building, its uses and the people in it from the type
> > > of brick it is constructed with. You cannot say anything meaningful
> > > about the Mona Lisa from a chemical analysis of the paint.
>
> > > On Jun 22, 2:24 pm, grimeandreason <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > > I have hi hopes for you lot since I have found that the more
> > > > contemporary the thinking, the more likely they are to get my idea so
> > > > here goes...
>
> > > > Its more than just history, its identity, the self, everything
> > > > humanities.  Its universal, it comes down to simple axioms and is
> > > > based on mere physical laws like cause and effect.
>
> > > > I'd really appreciate feedback.  A knowledge of memetics means you're
> > > > halfway there as it is.  If I show it to a historian, the cognitive
> > > > science baffles them, and if I show it to science minded people they
> > > > dont like committing to the big picture implications.
>
> > > > Its 
> > > > athttp://sites.google.com/site/grimeandreason/memetics/we-are-what-we-t...
> > > > or, because you can't comment there (though you can see the matrix in
> > > > the appendix which blogger couldn't handle), it's also on my 
> > > > blog,www.grimeandreason.blogspot.comunderthe20/6/2010entry.
>
> > > > Thanks!
>
> > > > Ben- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

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