Excellent!  Thanks, Eric (and everyone -- I'm enjoying this).  So, here's my, 
in class, answer to Nick's quiz:

nick> What is the difference between a circular explanation and a recursive 
one.  What is the key dimension that determines whether an explanation is 
viciously circular?   Is the virtuus dormitiva viciously circular? Why?  Why 
not?

Recursive explanations contain layers of reasoning (e.g. mechanism vs 
phenomenon) whereas circular ones are flat.  Vicious circularity simply means 
"has only 1 layer".  (I disagree with this idea.[*])  The virtus dormitiva has 
multiple (abstraction of language) layers and, by the single-layer defn of 
"vicious" is not vicious.

Now, on to NPD, I think we have 2 types of recursion: 1) communicative, as 
Frank (probably) tried to point out to me before, and 2) phenomenological.  
When we land in an attractor like "something is wrong with Trump", we're still 
within a single layer of reasoning (intuition, emotion, systemic gestalt, 
whatever).  If we have a tacit feeling for NPD, we can stay within that single 
layer and simply assign a token to it: NPD.  But if we're at all reductionist, 
we'll look for ways to break that layer into parts.  Parts don't necessarily 
imply crossing layers.  E.g. a meaningful picture can be cut into curvy pieces 
without claiming the images on the pieces also have meaning.  So 1) we can 
simply name various (same layer) phenomena that hook together like jigsaw 
pieces to comprise NPD. Or 2) we can assert that personality traits are layered 
so that the lower/inner turtles _construct_ the higher/outer turtles.

What Frank says below is of type (1).  What Jochen (and others) have talked 
about before (childhood experiences, etc.) is more like type (2).  The question 
arises of whether the layering of symbolic compression (renaming sets of 
same-layer attributes) is merely type (1) or does it become type (2).  To me, 
mere _renaming_ doesn't cut it.  There must be a somewhat objectively defined 
difference, a name-independent difference.  So, if we changed all the words we 
use (don't use "narcissism", "personality", "disorder", "emptiness", etc. ... 
use booga1, booga2, booga3, etc.), would we _still_ see a cross-trophic effect? 
 Note that mathematics has elicited lots of such demonstrations of irreducible 
layering ... e.g. various no-go theorems.  But those are syntactic 
_demonstrations_ ... without the vagaries introduced by natural language and 
scientific grounding.  To assert that problems like natural selection vs. 
adaptation or the diagnosis of NPD also demonstrate such cross-trophic 
properties would _require_ complete formalization into math.  Wolpert did this 
(I think) to some extent.  But I doubt it's been done in evolutionary theory 
and I'm fairly confident it hasn't been done in psychiatry.  (I admit my 
ignorance, of course... doubt is a good mistress but a bad master.)

More importantly, though, I personally don't believe a recursive cycle is _any_ 
different from a flat cycle.  Who was it that said all deductive inference is 
tautology?  I have it in a book somewhere, cited by John Woods.  Unless there 
is some significantly different chunk of reasoning somewhere in one of the 
layers, all the layers perfectly _reduce_ to a single layer.

Hence, my answer to Nick's quiz (at the pub after class) is that _all_ cycles 
are "vicious" (if vicious means single layer), but if we take my concept of 
"vicious", then only those cycles that _hide_ behind (false) layers are vicious.


[*] I think a cycle is vicious iff it causes problems.  Tautologies don't cause 
problems.  They don't solve them.  But they don't cause them either.  So a 
vicious cycle must have more than 1 layer.

On 01/20/2017 01:18 PM, Frank Wimberly wrote:
> Why does Trump display Narcissistic [Personality] Disorder Symptoms?  Because 
> he feels unrelenting emptiness and low self esteem which causes him great 
> pain when anyone criticizes him or suggests that someone else is superior to 
> him.  This unbearable pain causes him to counterattack forcefully when he 
> feels attacked regardless of whether an attack is actually intended by the 
> other person.  
> 
> Is that less circular, Nick?  Of course we will now have to deal with your 
> claim that he is aware of his pain because he infers it from his behavior, to 
> wit exhibiting the symptoms of NPD.

-- 
☣ glen
============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com
FRIAM-COMIC http://friam-comic.blogspot.com/ by Dr. Strangelove

Reply via email to