Dear Robert, 

 

It was great to see you at today’s meeting; hope you become a regular. 

 

I will “lard” your text below with my responses. 

 

Nick 

 

Nicholas S. Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology

Clark University

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

 

From: Friam [mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com] On Behalf Of Robert Wall
Sent: Friday, October 27, 2017 5:51 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <friam@redfish.com>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Opportunity to join a discussion about Charles Sanders 
Peirce

 

Nick,

 

Thanks for the offer; I do have a copy of Jacques Monod’s Chance and Necessity. 
As I remember, it was not easy to find at the time as a new copy. 

 

Your request: 

 ... if you have a text of your presentation, I would love to read it. 

 

What I do still have is the text I prepared for the Santa Fe Philosophical 
Society as "homework" for my 20-minute presentation.  So, if one reads my 
20-page "Does the universe have a purpose for us?" before the presentation, 
they would be better prepared for the "lecture" and ensuing discussion.  So it 
is a primer of sorts.  And, it serves as a partial look at how, with the rise 
of Darwinism, teleonomic explanations historically and "successfully" pushed 
aside teleological explanations for the apparent goal directiveness of 
biological evolution.  But I see that your 1987 paper "The Misappropriation of 
Teleonomy" would see this as no explanation at all. 

[NST==>Well, I would need to read you papers and see how you characterize a 
“teloeonomic explanation.”  My suggested use of the term is descriptive.  But 
the only real constraint is that a teloeonomic concept not be used as an 
explainer and as a describer in the same argument.  <==nst] 

I shall read that paper to see why you say that, though, you are also saying 
that Jaques Monad "beat you to the punch-line." 

[NST==>Well, it was more that he beat Sean Carroll to the punch line.  If I had 
read Monod in graduate school (which was possible) I might not have been so 
amazed by Carroll in retirement.  And I might have not spent so much of my 
career beating back silly arguments about the nature-nurture “issue.”  <==nst] 

 Need to re-read that one. 😊  More to come ...

 

I also had a two-page handout, summarizing the points in the paper.  Also, the 
title question was posed to the group (~ 20 persons) both before and after the 
session.  The final majority consensus was "no" but there were some minds 
changed as I recall.  I wonder if I had changed the question to "Does life have 
a purpose for us?" would the consensus been different. Friedrich Nietzsche 
clearly lamented "no," but warned us that we had better figure out a rational 
one we can all agree on pretty soon.  His warning seems to ask, "If we are so 
smart, why haven't we come up with a rational purpose (goal) for humanity?"  
Humans are the only teleological agents in the universe that we know about. 

[NST==>I wonder if I agree with this.  <==nst] 

And, we are the only organisms that can imbue rational purpose for ourselves. 

[NST==>I guess I agree that we are the only rationalizing organisms.  <==nst] 

 

Here's a sidebar ramble motivated by today's FRIAM session ... giving it more 
"thought": 

 

Given what I heard you aks the FRIAM group this morning, "Is natural selection 
a fair process--for it must be so for it to work the way it does (careful to 
not say 'progress' here)?'," you might find Lee Smolin's ("testable") 
Cosmological Natural Selection hypothesis intriguing in the sense that your 
question may be applied cosmologically. Smolin's model refute's the (strong and 
weak) Anthropic Principle of Cosmology which is arguably teleological.  So, I 
wonder, if your idea of "fairness" would need to satisfy an anti-teleology 
filter ... no goal. That does seem reasonable, but does it work?

[NST==>Is Smolin’s thesis within easy reach, anywhere on the web?  <==nst] 

 

When existing life becomes environmentally stressed (the stimulus to change or 
die), evolution builds on what it already has through a (non-random) 
re-expression of the "parts" in a way that makes the organism more fit (e.g., 
the grasshopper to locust phenomenon).  This is also how the Hox gene circuit 
seems to work (and it makes the probability math work out). However, like 
others expressed, I do not see the word "fair" being the right selection among 
possible fit words ... pun not really intended, but it's curious in that, not 
any word will do.

[NST==>I truly garbled this argument, today.  Got really tongue-tied.  I will 
try to straighten it out in a subsequent email.  <==nst] 

 

Can a new organism be re-made from its initial state to fit within the moving 
niche (as I think Kim would put it)?  

[NST==>I am uneasy about the notion of niche.  It implies a stable set of ways 
of making a living in an environment that have nothing with the organisms that 
make them.  This the whole issue of the Baldwin effect in which an organism 
determines its niche by its behavioral choices.  I think “the niche”, like “the 
species”, can survive this sort of attack,  but only through a long and careful 
statistical and mathematical analysis of the concept of design.  <==nst] 

Maybe the selection process is like information transmission, but through a 
gene expression process where an irrelevant message becomes relevant 
(functional) in the new context.  With moving niches, time can be the enemy, 
which is why the process cannot be random (fair?) because the probability math 
does not work out, and which is why bacteria populations do so well as moving 
into new niches.  Bacteria use short reproduction cycles (change the organism); 
humans use technology (change the environment, which is not natural selection, 
but changing our tolerance to niche movements), as was pointed out today.

 

Then again, this may all be a nonsensical (fair?) grope to an explanation (a 
solution) that will satisfy (fit) ... 🤔 (again, no pun intended). 😊

[NST==>Yeah.  Sorry.  I really screwed this up.  It’s the genetic/developmental 
system that has to be “fair”; natural selection is patently Unfair.  Please see 
later message.  <==nst] 

 

Anyway.  Let me know where you would like for me to send the discussion paper 
and I will.  It could serve as the basis for a new thread, but it might also be 
way too much material for such a use.

[NST==>If you put it up in the cloud somewhere, we will find it!  <==nst] 

 

 BTW, from what I learned from Frank this morning about the group dynamics is 
that the group interaction works more coherently--like it did today--when 
seeded with an interesting question or proposition. 

[NST==> I agree, people who come to a meeting with a burr under their saddle 
are a great resource.  By the way, Frank, the effect of a burr under the saddle 
is on the HORSE, right?  So, the metaphor is to somebody who is riding a horse 
he cannot altogether control.  <==nst] 

 

Cheers,

 

Robert

 

 

On Thu, Oct 26, 2017 at 9:18 PM, Nick Thompson <nickthomp...@earthlink.net 
<mailto:nickthomp...@earthlink.net> > wrote:

Robert, 

 

Friam starts a little earlier than 9.30; closer to 9.10.  I like to come early 
so I can get a seat in the middle (hearing problems), but that might not be a 
factor for you, so come any time.  The group is very eclectic – sometimes we do 
old fart stuff, and sometimes we do really interesting stuff.  We have several 
mathematicians, and when they get going, I just have to Sit In Wonder.  

I note your interest in teleonomy.  Through a weird coincidence, I ran into a 
blog  run by some middle eastern folks who made me read Jacques Monod’s CHANCE 
AND NECESSITY. 
<https://www.amazon.com/Chance-Necessity-Natural-Philosophy-Biology/dp/0394718259/ref=sr_1_sc_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1509073028&sr=8-1-spell&keywords=Chance+and+necesssity>
   (I have a PDF, if you would like to read it.)  I was astounded because 
“Teleonomy” is the key term of Monod’s  exposition, and I had written some 
papers on it in the eighties (e.g. The Misappropriation of Teleonomy 
<https://www.researchgate.net/publication/302329059_The_Misappropriation_of_Teleonomy>
 ) without ever finding his book.  Anyway, if you have a text of your 
presentation, I would love to read it.  

 

I have been trying to write something on Peirce for months now but need a 
collaborator to keep me honest.  Perhaps the group has one. 

 

Thanks again for getting in touch. 

 

Nick 

 

 

 

Nicholas S. Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology

Clark University

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

 

From: Friam [mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com 
<mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com> ] On Behalf Of Robert Wall
Sent: Thursday, October 26, 2017 7:00 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <friam@redfish.com 
<mailto:friam@redfish.com> >
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Opportunity to join a discussion about Charles Sanders 
Peirce

 

Hi Nick,

 

No worries.  I am happy to tell you et al. a bit more about the Santa Fe 
Philosophical Society that wouldn't be apparent from the website. I have been a 
member of the SFPS for about four years and joined about a year after we moved 
to Santa Fe from Austin, Texas, where I retired from Hewlett Packard as a 
performance-research scientist | engineer. We most often meet at a particular 
member's comfortable home, Mim's, every second Sunday of the month for a 
discussion on some philosophical issue or on the works of some philosopher that 
has or will be researched by a volunteer and who will provide a 30 to 40-minute 
introduction to the group followed by a moderated discussion.  I have given two 
or three presentations to the group on topics like Martin Heidegger's 1954 
essay "The Question Concerning Technology" and teleonomy versus teleology, to 
give you some quick examples. The group is older, very friendly, and 
philosophically curious.  Many are ex-pats from LANL, but not all ... like me.

 

If I can get a number of those among you that are interested, I can just add 
you as my guest to the sign-up list.  Then, if you like what you see and hear, 
you can join ... but you do not have to be a member to come to these meetings.  
The member headcount determines the dues that are paid annually to the Meetup 
organization that maintains the web resources. Members, or anyone, can donate a 
few dollars to a can, but it doesn't take a lot of money to run this Meetup 
group.  Mim has a very large accommodating living room for these meetings, but 
we try to limit sessions to just 25 attendees (with shoes off at the door). 
Parking has never been a problem. My good friend Chris Goad--a theoretical 
mathematician Ph.D. graduate from Stanford, a self-admitted Platonist, and a 
huge proponent of the Computational Theory of Mind (we have argued this for 
nearly four years now)--has volunteered as the session moderator. A good guy. 
Coffee and tea are always available; some, like Chris Mechels, bring a beer. 😎  
Many times handouts are provided, but it is best just to print off the 
prepared, linked material from the website.

 

Often, there can be several much smaller (~4-5 persons) breakout subgroups that 
will do a deeper dive into some philosophical topic at some other time(s).  I 
have been involved in several that meet weekly at the Travel Bug for a few 
hours. The one I frequent seems to have turned toward discussions in 
neuroscience, which I think has been motivated by early sessions on 
consciousness and the Philosophy of Mind. It's all good. 😎

 

BTW, I came across FRIAM by way of Steven Guerin, to whom I wrote years ago 
after reading a paper he wrote on complex adaptive systems, a percolating 
interest of mine.  Steven replied that that made six now who read the paper, or 
something like that. 😊 Even as a perhaps too infrequent contributor--but 
frequent reader--of the forum, I find the list has many thoughtful contributors 
that seem to know one another fairly well. And, I imagine the FRIAM at St. 
Johns has the same caliber of thinkers with a similar degree of familiarity. 
Anyway, I've been meaning to drop by the FRIAM group at least on my way to join 
the St. John's library, as they have the best philosophical library in these 
parts. If memory serves, you meet at 9:30 a.m. every Friday.

 

For some reason, I thought you were on the east coast near Boston or something 
like that. But, yes, I would enjoy meeting you as well, having enjoyed your 
contributions to the forum, especially as you go about explaining Peirce. So, I 
have been waiting for Peirce to appear on the menu at the SFPS and it has 
finally arrived. William James, another pragmatist, about whom I am also very 
curious. Dewey?  Maybe, so ... 

 

Hope you can make it to the SFPS. The sessions never seem to disappoint.

 

Cheers,

 

Robert

 

 

On Wed, Oct 25, 2017 at 9:18 PM, Nick Thompson <nickthomp...@earthlink.net 
<mailto:nickthomp...@earthlink.net> > wrote:

Robert, 

 

I apologize for asking a dumb question about SF Philosophers.  I didn’t see the 
link (as a link).  

 

I will make every effort to be there.  Sunday night is my cooking night for the 
extended family, but with a little planning I should be able to finesse it.  

 

I always imagined that you were from some far distant place!  Like Australia, 
or something.  Have you been here the whole time?  Have you ever come to FRIAM? 
 

 

I look forward to meeting you. 

 

Nick 

 

Nicholas S. Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology

Clark University

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

 

From: Friam [mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com 
<mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com> ] On Behalf Of Robert Wall
Sent: Wednesday, October 25, 2017 8:46 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <friam@redfish.com 
<mailto:friam@redfish.com> >
Subject: [FRIAM] Opportunity to join a discussion about Charles Sanders Peirce

 

FYI.

 

The Santa Fe Philosophical Society is offering a discussion session on 
<https://www.meetup.com/SantaFe-Philosophers/events/244523385/?fromEmail=244523385&rv=ea1>
  Charles Sanders Peirce on Sunday, November 12, 2017, 2:00 PM to 4:00 PM.

 

Nick, if you are in town, the group would definitely benefit from your 
attendance ...

 

Robert

 

 

 

 


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Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
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Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
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