Grant, Russ, Glen,

 

Ok.  I think I got it.  Paradoxically, it has to do with emergence.  You
would think I would have seen it right away.  Thanks for your help.  More
later when the swirl dies down. 

 

N

 

From: Grant Holland [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Saturday, August 07, 2010 4:52 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Cc: [email protected]; Nicholas Thompson; glen e. p. ropella
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] entropy and uncertainty, REDUX

 

Nick,

Maybe let me explain how I use these two "dimensions" together in my
"Organic Complex Systems" theory:

I am interested in 1) the Organization (structure) of organic systems, and
2) how that organization changes/evolves.

So, yes, Organization is "what is there" as you say. But, also "how that
organization changes" is also "what is there".

But, furthermore, my theory is also very interested in something else about
"organizational change" beyond just "how it changes". I am profoundly
interested also in how "random" versus  how "deterministic" that change can
be. I am interested in this because I suspect that, in living systems, the
randomness versus determinism thing is all over the map. Living system
dynamics sometimes behaves randomly and sometimes behaves deterministically,
and mostly "somewhere in between". At least it looks so to me. 

Therefore, when it comes to #2) above - how the organization of living
systems changes, I am also profoundly interested in characterizing the
"predictability/unpredictability" aspects of that change, as well as the
mechanism of "how" that change occurs. I need to represent how that "degree
of unpredictability of change of organization" can itself change from time
to time in biology. Shannon's entropy is the perfect model for this.

To recap, the organization of living systems can change: from disorganized
to disorganized, from disorganized to organized, from organized to
disorganized, and from organized to organized. (All four of these are
actually continua.) But - and this is the point - all 4 of those types of
changes can either be predictable or unpredictable. 

(Yes, in biology, it sometimes occurs that a disorganized situation
transitions to an organized situation with a high degree of probability.
That's what make biology different from thermodynamics, and makes biology
appear to contradict the second law sometimes.)

Consequently, you can see that I need a mathematics that lets
Organization/Disorganization vary independently from
Predictability/Unpredictability sometimes. Shannon entropy has a part to
play in that - but thermodynamic entropy does not, because I am not doing
Physics.

Grant

Nicholas Thompson wrote: 

But you agree that good prediction requires there to be structure or a
process that provides the frame work in which a prediction can be made.  

  

Minimally, I think we assume that what we see is a feature of what is there.
Not all careful observational techniques reveal the same aspect.  

  

n 

  

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Russ Abbott
Sent: Saturday, August 07, 2010 3:45 PM
To: Grant Holland
Cc: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] entropy and uncertainty, REDUX 

  

That seems to me to be a different point--and one that Glen made about
entropy a while ago.  Scientific realists assume that what one sees is what
there is, more or less, that structure in any dimension is presumed to be
part of the universe, and that as observers we just see what is.  (I know
that's oversimplified, but that's the basic idea.)  Predictability is
different in that it's a matter of predicting something unknown when the
prediction is made.


-- Russ 

 

On Sat, Aug 7, 2010 at 12:25 PM, Grant Holland <[email protected]>
wrote: 

t 

  

 

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-- 
Grant Holland
VP, Product Development and Software Engineering
NuTech Solutions
404.427.4759
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