Although I agree with the overall tenor of Nick's "Contra Epstein" piece (
http://jasss.soc.surrey.ac.uk/12/1/9.html), there's one glaring
error: Schelling's segregation model is completely misrepresented. The
notion that segregation decreases as the individuals' desire to be
segregated increases is wrong. Nick - have a play with the Netlogo model! As
you increase the "%-similar-wanted" slider, the end-point of the
"percent-similar" plot get closer to 100%. It does NOT suddenly start
dropping. The interesting point that the model illuminates is that you need
surprisingly low values of "%-similar-wanted" to generate high "percent
similar" environments.

Robert

P.S. There's some other parts of the paper I'd argue with, viz:

   1. Hempels' symmetry of explanation and prediction has been dead and
   buried for years so really can't be used to support any argument;
   2. hypothesizing micro-rules in models is actually a perfectly reasonable
   thing to do;
   3. the burden-of-proof should rest with the modeler, not with anyone who
   dares to disagree with her.

...but having already demolished 40% of Nick's paper, I thought I'd better
give it a rest :-)  Nick - buy me a coffee and I'll give you details!
============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org

Reply via email to