Thank you, Vladimyr, 

 

As any member of the local congregation will tell you, I am a sucker for the 
plausible.  I am also interested in bringing new blood into our conversations 
and in guiding the conversations back toward complexity in order to bring back 
some of the old blood that has gone a-wandering.  Hence my attempt to introduce 
the question of birdsong and fractality.  

 

Here is an example of a bit of bird song.

 



 

Some bird song is temporally fractal: i.e., it is hiearchically organized and 
the principles of organization are repeated at different levels of 
organization.  Unfortunately, the song above … a mockingbird song … is NOT 
fractally organized, and it’s the only one I can find on my computer at the 
moment.  But you can see what it would be for a song to be so organized.   
Crows “ordinary” cawing is fractal in that it consistes of temporal units 
divided into temperal units;  both a caw, and a burst of caws, are temporal 
units.  Raven “drumming” is similar.  Cardinal singing is similary divided into 
temporal units of temporal units, but unfortunately, there is a morphological 
level between the “song” and the “note” in cardinal singing, (cardinals sing in 
runs) so it is not strictly speaking fractal,  if I understand the concept.  

 

To be a thousand percent honest, I have to confess that I don’t know what it 
would mean for bird song to be spacially fractal.  I am guilty, often, of 
throwing stuff out to friam just because I don’t have a clue, and hoping to be 
educatied.  But because of song learning, it is often observed that songs are 
more similar locally than at longer distances.  Where that could be conceived 
as spacially fractal in any sense, I don’t know. 

 

I THINK this is a case of Thompson having taken a flyer and getting shot down, 
and perhaps we should all just tip-toe away in respectful silence. 

 

Nick 

 

Nicholas S. Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology

Clark University

http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Friam [mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com] On Behalf Of Vladimyr Burachynsky
Sent: Saturday, February 25, 2017 1:51 AM
To: 'The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group' <friam@redfish.com>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] FW: Fractal discussion Landscape-bird songs

 

Nick,

Thank-you and let's talk about the birds in their complex landscape. Are they 
hatched with the neural equipment to sing... or do they discriminate their most 
ideal voices from the orchestra, only after learning their father's voice?

 

Do they mimic the Caruso's among themselves and regale these stars with more  
favorable advances

 

that leaves a large problem ... to sing in perfect mimicry  they would only 
confuse eachother and throw flowers at the wrong feet.

 

So as the birds can distinguish each other so we can distinguish opera stars. 
Does the Fractal component hide a unique cipher code?

Is it audibly detectable at great distance.

I am not much of a bird watcher anymore but can recall a few voices;  Ravens, 
Jays, Larks, Poor-wills/snipes? , Herons,Loons, ... That's a surprise I recall 
more than I thought at first. Not a very melodious group upon reflection, 
ah...If I close my eyes and concentrate they come alive again.

 

Only the crow  family in my experience tries to imitate other voices. Indeed I 
used to charm Ravens with my mimicry while working in the far north. I recall 
someone stating that Ravens could imitate the sound of a Honda Generator. But I 
can attest that they can change sounds as if they were speaking and the glass 
bell clang usually gets their attention. Crows do not like it so much since 
they fear Ravens. I suspect wolves understand some Raven calls. Just a northern 
perspective of mine.

 

I think the thread has merits and hope not to have caused anyone to spill a 
drink.

vib 

 

-----Original Message-----

From: Friam [ <mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com> 
mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com] On Behalf Of Nick Thompson

Sent: February-25-17 12:56 AM

To: 'The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group'

Subject: Re: [FRIAM] FW: Fractal discussion Landscape-bird songs

 

Speaking for the audience ... 

 

Or at least one member, thereof.   I have not understood a word any of you guys 
have said since I introduced the thread a week or so ago.  That's Ok.  That's 
great, in fact.  It's the nature of the FRIAM beast.  I love it when you 
experts go crazy on this list.

 

So long as you go NICE crazy.   If you are going to get grumpy, you can't do it 
on my thread.    Ok? 

 

A point of this thread was to introduce  Alberto to FRIAM.  He should know we 
don't DO grumpy, here. (We really don't, A.)  No apologies necessary.   Just 
stop. 

 

As a fellow madman, I love you like brothers.  

 

Thanks, 

 

Nick 

 

Nicholas S. Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology Clark University  
<http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/> 
http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/

 

 

-----Original Message-----

From: Friam [ <mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com> 
mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com] On Behalf Of Vladimyr Burachynsky

Sent: Friday, February 24, 2017 7:49 PM

To: 'The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group' < 
<mailto:friam@redfish.com> friam@redfish.com>

Subject: Re: [FRIAM] FW: Fractal discussion Landscape-bird songs

 

Gentlemen and audience,

 

The tempest ( Glen) and the captain of a small vessel (Robert) lashed to the 
mast. Are not in any form of disagreement by their own admissions.

OK, from my vantage point in the cold inhospitable North Lands , I sense a 
salient exchange of cannon fire.

 

Let's look at events Robert Wall introduced a novel idea Flow affecting 
individuals.

Vladimyr suggested that the description of Flow might be extended to Society or 
Social Groups. And that multiple low dimensional view points could recover 
higher dimensional realities.

 

Glen strongly protests this assertion.

Robert got backhanded when Glen denied that  Flow could be extended from the 
original individual to a group of individuals. I don't think Robert knew it was 
coming. If I am asked to judge this I will accuse Vladimyr of Meddling give 
points to Glen and a yellow flag for bending the rules of discourse. The two 
remain at the same point score and Vladimyr was told to leave the arena or shut 
up and just watch.

So complying with the judges warning...

 

he goes into the recesses of the internet and presents a coup against one of 
Glen's points about low and high dimensionality. 

This was a past attempt to compile two or more complex ideas into his personal 
self study device having no external value until Glen's position was declared.

 <https://1drv.ms/v/s!AjdC7pqwzaUUkxz3QBcDOoGZ2Lop> 
https://1drv.ms/v/s!AjdC7pqwzaUUkxz3QBcDOoGZ2Lop

 
<https://onedrive.live.com/?cid=14A5CDB09AEE4237&id=14A5CDB09AEE4237%212460&parId=14A5CDB09AEE4237%212223&o=OneUp>
 
https://onedrive.live.com/?cid=14A5CDB09AEE4237&id=14A5CDB09AEE4237%212460&parId=14A5CDB09AEE4237%212223&o=OneUp

both links to same site. It demonstrates Geometric Projection as a tool 
developed by early Renaissance Artists.

 

 

Next Vladimyr will demonstrate a complex system reduced to a lower dimension 
raising a point suggesting that complex ideas may be reduced to simple but 
dynamic neural structures and shared with other minds as memes.

 
<https://onedrive.live.com/?cid=14A5CDB09AEE4237&id=14A5CDB09AEE4237%212236&parId=14A5CDB09AEE4237%212223&o=OneUp>
 
https://onedrive.live.com/?cid=14A5CDB09AEE4237&id=14A5CDB09AEE4237%212236&parId=14A5CDB09AEE4237%212223&o=OneUp

 <https://1drv.ms/v/s!AjdC7pqwzaUUkTzqvvk6JnRRFJX2> 
https://1drv.ms/v/s!AjdC7pqwzaUUkTzqvvk6JnRRFJX2

again both links to same display.

Vladimyr is trying to demonstrate the imminent feasibility of mapping complex 
ideas from higher dimensions  into lower dimensions that all humans do daily.

This process of mapping to neural networks is a new area of science. Currently 
being investigated by Dr. Kate Jeffery here is an essay from Aeon

 
<https://aeon.co/essays/how-cognitive-maps-help-animals-navigate-the-world?utm_source=Aeon+Newsletter&utm_campaign=6652cf6dd1-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2017_01_25&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_411a82e59d-6652cf6dd1-69341065>
 
https://aeon.co/essays/how-cognitive-maps-help-animals-navigate-the-world?utm_source=Aeon+Newsletter&utm_campaign=6652cf6dd1-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2017_01_25&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_411a82e59d-6652cf6dd1-69341065

 

So complexity can be represented in lower dimensions as human beings do so all 
the time. Maps from lower dimensions can be re-constructed to display higher 
dimensionality admittedly subject to losses known or unknown depending on 
protocol.  Back and forth.

But Glen and all of us now must shift discussion to protocols and measures of 
veracity.

 

So where does this leave Robert Wall, relax sir , you may feel blasted but you 
are in a congregation and Flow is a useful symbol but needs more deliberation.

I have read your links for hours and rankle at the looseness of the pertinent 
details I wish for more at a neurological level. 

And just what does a detachment from moral restrictions mean when like many 
misanthropes ,  I think they never existed in the first place.

 

Perhaps society shapes our young brains and only the obstreperous, 
misanthropic, autotelic, defiant bewhiskered cranks  act as contradictory 
forces. Are we contributing to a renormalization of society? or simply amusing 
ourselves in our twilight years.

the next Bell clang starts a new round of intellectual pugilism  
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_boxing> 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_boxing

Well Robert do you actually think the Flow is always positive, melodious or 
beneficent...

Joy has taken on a kind of Christian mantle and now dissociates itself from the 
Joys of victory or triumph. I recall Obama's announcement of bin Laden's 
assassination and the explosion of unrestrained American Joy....

 

Flow is probably best described with multiple orders of derivatives within the 
human minds. Let's work on this .

 

 

 

vib

 

 

-----Original Message-----

From: Friam [ <mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com> 
mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com] On Behalf Of glen ?

Sent: February-24-17 4:48 PM

To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group

Subject: Re: [FRIAM] FW: Fractal discussion Landscape-bird songs

 

 

OK.  Yes, thanks, that helps.  But I do think you disagree with me, only I may 
not have made myself clear enough for you to realize we disagree.  I'll 
interleave in the hopes of making my objections in context.

 

On 02/24/2017 01:44 PM, Robert Wall wrote:

> The last quote, to me, says that a group acting toward a common goal in, say 
> the way an individual in that group would, does *not *imply that the 
> "symbolic references" used to act rationaly in the world are all in align or 
> even perhaps in synchopation under an fMRI. YES! I can agree with this. And I 
> don't think that I disagreed.

 

But that's not what I'm saying.  Perhaps you're making what I'm saying much 
stronger.  Or perhaps what you're saying is entirely different.  I can't tell 
because you're leaping too far.  I'm only saying that if the stuff that causes 
our behavior is aligned, we need something _other_ than our behavior to 
demonstrate that alignment.  I'm trying to focus on the difference between 
thought and action.  You seem to be conflating that with the difference between 
individuals and groups.

 

The thought vs. action dichotomy is critical to my rhetoric about individuals 
vs. groups.  But it's more fundamental and must be made before (independently) 
of any rhetoric about individual vs. group.

 

> And I do even agree with you that there are examples of goups that do act as 
> if with "one mind" and even benevolently.

 

Again, I don't think I said that.  I don't think even an individual's thoughts 
matter.  (This is why Csikszentmihalyi's concept of "flow" is useless and 
annoying to me.)  It's pure nonsense to talk of mind at all.  So, it's nonsense 
to say that societies act as if with one mind.  But that does not mean they 
can't be "in the zone", because being in the zone has nothing to do with one's 
mind.

 

> Market-oriented co-ops are such a phenomenon, which I discussed in another 
> thread, especially with Marcus who seemed to see these as an bane to society 
> as unmanaged enterprises, which they are not. Perspective is sharpened by 
> exposure.  My company transitionsed to an ESOP, but the intended economic 
> benefit was eventually corrupted by the management team that used this 
> preferred organizational form to basically enrich themselves at the expense 
> of what the ERISA originally intended--cooperative, community-oriented 
> corprorate behavior.  Stakeholders in the welfare of the community. At the 
> grassroots, it was enything but a co-operative.  It was a vehicle to enrich 
> the corporate management. But where it works, it is beautiful.

 

If you see these co-ops as technological innovations, then I'd argue that their 
use and ABUSE can both be examples of society being "in the zone".  The same is 
true of the cell phone and space travel.  It's totally irrelevant whether the 
co-ops relate to the beliefs, desires, and intentions of the humans involved 
(if such things exist).  What would matter is the society's beliefs, desires, 
and intentions (if such exists).  The only stakeholder is society.  The 
individuals are as expendable as sand, or fossil fuel, or bacteria.

 

> But I do kind of see where a "meeting of the minds" between us may have been 
> derailed here about what we each mean concerning /being in the zone/" at a 
> level of society.  And I fault myself for this in joining the underlying 
> threaded thoughts late, perhaps, and not being more clear in the 
> distinctions. It has to do with the phrase "as a whole."  I will use 
> market-oriented co-ops again as a useful example to make my point a bit more 
> clear. Cooperatives cannot seem to take root here in this country [e.g., 
> public banks] because of another blocking cultural, Hayekian meme: "a free 
> market under capitalism will save us all." This meme has been forcefully in 
> play for the last thirty-five years with it's high priest being Milton 
> Friedman and the Chicgo School of Economics.  What have been the results?

 

No worries about joining late or miscomm. or anything.  That's why we're here.  
But I disagree about _why_ co-ops can't take root.  A) They have taken root ... 
at least up here in the PacNW.  But B) any inability to take root has nothing 
to do with shared ideologies like that from Hayek or whoever.  They fail to 
take root because of _behavior_, not thought/ideas.

 

> Which of these memes could be equivalent to Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi's [and I 
> don't mean to push this guy forward, but only this idea] Optimal Experience 
> at the level of society as a whole: (1) profit-driven coorporatism or (2) 
> community-oriented cooperatism?  First off, I am exclusively talking about 
> the behavioral end that leans toward what is good for society--the whole 
> tribe, such that the tribe benefits in an egalitarian sense. Arguably, as a 
> tribe we are not moving in any such direction. But there are pockets of 
> co-operative behavior like we saw at Standing Rock.  But, what happened?  The 
> pipe got laid anyway and the planet weeps. Your take on "effective altruism" 
> is another example, I think, of how we as a society would rather game the 
> moral landscape to give the illusion of being "for the people." I really do 
> not mean to be so pessimistic and my analysis will hopefully bear this out.

 

Again in this paragraph, you seem to conflate individuals with groups.  When 
you say "tribe benefits in an egalitarian sense", I get confused.  Egalitarian 
at the tribe layer requires similarities between tribes.  And if there are 
multiple tribes, then society consists of a group of tribes.  I would not want 
to conflate what's good for a tribe with what's good for the population of 
tribes.

 

> What this comes down to is this. To be /in the zone/ at the level of a 
> society as a whole in a similar way as could happen at the level of an 
> individual--such that we would say there is a Flow characterized as an 
> Optimal Experience, we would NOT expect there to be an alignment of symbolic 
> references.  Precisely the opposite, if we are to regard the thoughts of the 
> many philosophers and linguists on this topic to be wise.  What we would 
> expect instead is the _supersession_ of our language-based symbolic 
> references with something akin to Intuition or Empathy ... something beyond 
> words such that wisdom emeges on the scale of a society [and why I use 
> capitalization of those terms]. So far, anyway, I do not see this as being 
> not only possible, but not evident. 

 

OK.  Again, Csikszentmihalyi's conception is useless to me because we cannot 
talk about an Optimal Experience in purely action/behavior terms.  And since 
(P=>Q) is untrustworthy, we can't talk objectively about qualia at all.  That 
means we can't do it at the individual or collective layers.  
Csikszentmihalyi's "zone" is a detrimental fiction.

 

But we can talk about the actions of a collective or individual, and various 
measures of those actions (e.g. speed of some repetitive action like applying 
rivets, or how fast someone talks, or whatever).  As a society, we can talk 
about technology (not science so much because that implies thoughts/ideas more 
so than tech).  We can measure things like legal systems and city sizes, etc.

 

> We have not as a whole or on many individual levels been able to supercede 
> the animal.

 

Oh, I couldn't disagree more.  We are not only building our environment more 
(and more intensely and more rapidly) than all the other animals combined, but 
we regularly demonstrate our ability/facility to quickly return to our core 
animal states ... and back to our higher/later states at will.  So, we're not 
merely a new animal that is bound by, restricted to its built environment 
(cities, airplanes, etc.)  We can walk the entire spectrum, something no other 
animal can do.

 

Our actions (not our thoughts) clearly demonstrate how we are distinct from the 
other animals.

 

> *Intent *distinguishes the phenomena of /being in the zone/.   *Scale 
> *distinguishes the level of its achievement. To be sure, symbolic references 
> have little to nothing to do with the kind of/being in the zone/ to which I 
> was referring. It's kind of like what Timothy Gallwey was trying to convey in 
> his book /The Inner Game of Tennis/.  Thinking is gone. 

 

And a final repeat of my disagreement:  If intent is required for your "being 
in the zone", then we're not talking about the same thing at all.  For me, 
intent doesn't even exist.  It's only what happens that can be measured and 
talked about.  So, whether some one or group is in the zone must be measurable 
by different properties of their actions, one of which might be scale.

 

Whew!  OK.  Back to work.

 

--

☣ glen

 

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