Nick, it looks like my replies yesterday AM didn't get through... I've been poking at "making sense" as a reduction & mangling of the complex differences between things,.. Losing the many by making it one. Sooo hard to say these unexpected things simply. ;-) Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry
-----Original Message----- From: "Nicholas Thompson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Date: Thu, 2 Oct 2008 22:30:09 To: Phil Henshaw<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group<[email protected]> Subject: RE: [FRIAM] or more simply, is there order? PH wrote " I too also find I make my best sense when talking to myself" NT replies: Oh good lord! I cannot allow myself to go along with this statement. First, as a behaviorist, I am not sure what it means to talk to oneself. Second, I have no idea what the validator of such a statement would be. No, I think that only people who have been understood by [some] others can claim to have made sense. Otherwise, made sense to whom? That is why it is so maddening to speak and not be understood. Nick Nicholas S. Thompson Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Ethology, Clark University ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) ----- Original Message ----- From: Phil Henshaw To: [EMAIL PROTECTED];The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group Sent: 10/2/2008 8:18:37 PM Subject: RE: [FRIAM] or more simply, is there order? Yes,� such is the disappointment of life! However� we do, I believe, have words that would be quite meaningless even to ourselves without some sort of experience in common. I too also find I make my best sense when talking to myself� but am still also driven to explore those subjects which I can only really understand by way of the give and take of examining the physical world people seem to experience in common. Since nearly everything in my mind makes complete sense, as I make it so, anything that doesn�t seems to have a good chance of being something not in my mind. That�s sort of a technique. I also find a consistent predictability to not being able to make very good sense of anything that grows exponentially. I see loops of events that get somewhere that I can�t trace, and have found that very helpful in identifying things that are �out of body� in that sort of actual physical sense, but lead me to think about the distributed networks of things they connect which I can�t make much sense of. However, they still seem to be of the kind of thing not located in my mind, but located in the physical world of common experience, identifiable, but not explainable? Does that work, is that right ? Phil From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Nicholas Thompson Sent: Thursday, October 02, 2008 5:26 PM To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group Subject: Re: [FRIAM] or more simply, is there order? Phil Henshaw Hath Spoken Thus: ==>Look, I know this audience is not made of fools, and not deaf and dumb, and probably not disinterested in change, so I have to figure your inability to connect with my approach to constructing a science of change for natural complex systems must be that you find no door between your methods and mine. <== Phil, Nick Thompson hath replied: I have struggled to understand you over the years and just .... can't. Others have said the same of me. Perhaps "connection" is too high a standard. Certainly "AUDIENCE" is too high a standard. We are not all here, quietly attentive, waiting for ANYbody's message. There is no "we" here. The older I get, the rarer communication between actual human beings seems to be. We talk to our gods; we talk to our college mentors; we talk to our long dead parents, we reproduce the values of those who have tortured us in our past. However, talking to EACH OTHER is pretty unusual. And hearing one another is rarer still. Take care, nick Nicholas S. Thompson Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Ethology, Clark University ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) ----- Original Message ----- From: Phil Henshaw To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 10/2/2008 5:56:08 AM Subject: or more simply, is there order?
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