Glen,

I re-read your response and can only find a single paltry non- issue, 3D 
printing may only capture a single frame or object, of little use.

The rest of the body of the reply seems to agree with my own ideas in more 
elegant terms. I intentionally left openings in the code that should allow
independent operators even AI to attempt to generate some structures to prove 
that very few shapes are recognizable. The port to engineering  FEM analysis 
still
functions, so even if unrecognizable shapes are generated ,  the structural 
analysis is still possible, but probably not aesthetics. That may mean little 
since one piece of software is evaluating another based on
mathematical properties.

There is no need to think I made video, a requisite, it is easier  for me than 
typing since I wrestle with MS  paralysis and tremors.

If you partition emergence into categories such as weak or strong, then is 
there ever a cut-off point where, it is or is not.

If ideas are the true emergent phenomena and these do require repeated circular 
neural networks to fix or manifest then strength may mean
something closer to resistance to deformation or breakage. 

If you have any more suggestions on removing myself from the process please 
advise. Perhaps directly so as not to clutter the forum.
 I will soon attempt to use random number generators. But expect little of 
consequence.
I am thinking of putting spheres at each node and applying spin, angular 
momentum to see the effects. But will have to wait out my current physical
inconvenience. 

I hope Nick found something useful on his quest.
Vladimyr
 

-----Original Message-----
From: Friam [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of glen ?
Sent: July-18-17 5:28 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] the role of metaphor in scientific thought


These are nice videos.  Your requirement that we respond with video is 
difficult for me because I don't normally produce video...  I could provide, 
say, an "in silico liver visualization".  But the extra content would obscure 
any message, I think.  But this video by other people is relevant to both 
emergence and the type of rhetorical circularity we've been talking about:

  You Can't See This (MIND TRICKS)
  https://youtu.be/0NPH_udOOek

Your videos show, I think, a typical sense of emergence that is often conflated 
with the perspective of the observer.  They are essentially numerical solutions 
(numbers at the generator level) to perceptual/perspectival 
questions/predicates (patterns at some phenomenal level).  Whether we have a 
coherent formulation of the phenomenon we're trying to generate (the flower) or 
not, a priori, is largely irrelevant.  The pixels generate the wiggly lines 
generate the larger patterns, etc.  Our inability to *predict* those larger 
patterns from the smaller patterns is a type of emergence ... but many might 
claim it's a weak form of emergence.

The video of the blind spot, illusions, and our tendency to see only what we 
expect to see, demonstrates (I think) a stronger (though not the strongest) 
form of emergence.  Therein, our *expectations* of the phenomenon bias, 
eliminate, or create components of the phenomenon so that what obtains (the 
concepts in our heads/bodies after experiencing the phenomenon) has different 
properties that cannot be derived solely (objectively) from the generators.  
Our expectations give the experience properties the phenomenon doesn't have.

This sort of medium-strength emergence (or perhaps illusory emergence) depends 
fundamentally on the rhetorical circularity of expectation/anticipation.  And I 
can't help but think your flowers-from-numbers narrative has a bit of it, too.  
But I don't think it has any "still yet stronger" emergence.  For that to 
happen, we'd need to fully decouple the end result (the flower pattern) from 
its generators ... perhaps with a 3D printer or growing/breeding real flowers 
to meet the predicate(s) set by the videos of (perspectives on) the virtual 
flower[*].  Once the flowers are decoupled from their in silico analogs, then 
they can be participants in a larger system, where other members of that system 
can find/exploit unintended properties of the decoupled flowers, not 
immediately/obviously resident in the orginal numbers/matrices that constructed 
the in silico flowers.

I hope what I'm saying here is at least somewhat coherent.


[*] Another method of decoupling might be to parallelize the "world" in which 
the digital flowers grow/live and distribute it across multiple computers that 
allow interfering manipulation/interaction with other processors or meat space. 
 I.e. approach a co-evolutionary set of populations that can find/exploit 
unintended properties of any given in silico flower (or closure of the flower). 
 Also, I regard this discussion as largely apathetic to the metaphysical 
*stances* of [anti]reductionism.  The key to my point lies in the extent to 
which scope, perspective, context, or membership in a collective allows a 
pluralism of "properties" or salient property sets for any given component.


On 07/17/2017 08:22 PM, Vladimyr wrote:
> To Nick Thompson,
> 
>  
> 
> I may have made an error when trying to reply with my Outlook email 
> software not
> 
> so unusual in this heat and with my condition. I apologize for confusion.
> 
> I have been wrestling with your questions. Honestly.
> 
>  
> 
> I asked myself essentially the same some time ago so I seem to have struck 
> off on my own.
> 
> Not my first time in the wilderness feeling naked.
> 
>  
> 
> The  congregation ruckus has rekindled the fire under my arse. So here 
> is my unholy
> 
> mixture of math and hidden philosophy
> 
> https://1drv.ms/v/s!AjdC7pqwzaUUkybexnPVUncB5kt8
> 
>  
> 
> you may have to wait for a moment to download . I would like to 
> volunteer to help you
> 
> with your efforts but can no longer travel. Glen Ropella most 
> assuredly plays a major role in asking
> 
> difficult questions which act as pivot points to redirect lines of 
> inquiry. My own efforts are seemingly
> 
> at some distance but when forced to think philosophically. I see we 
> have much in common, I have even
> 
> provided some evidence of layers or levels in another guise. Name as 
> of yet unknown… You both appear to have been
> 
> correct in some ways.
> 
>  
> 
> The object I work with is convenient but in no way obligated/entitled 
> to importance. I could just as easily work with
> 
> a section of a millipede or a wind turbine. 
> 
> This thread should be maintained even though it seems to be rather dormant.
> 
> I am well aware that my offer also hides self interest but we can discuss 
> that after this heat passes.


--
☣ glen

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