I remember reading, or trying to read, Rosen's "Life Itself". For a long time 
it seemed like Rosen was onto something very important and exciting but, to my 
mind, he never even came close to delivering. The conclusion of "Life Itself" 
was, for me, a complete disappointment.


The material presented here seems similar. I can feel the same kind of 
excitement, but I wonder if any real progress will be made on the issues that 
are raised.


I guess I have missed much of the conversation on this issue. Maybe my comments 
are way too late, but I would appreciate it if someone with a more positive 
view of Rosen would try to explain what it is that Rosen achieved.


--John



________________________________
From: Friam <friam-boun...@redfish.com> on behalf of Nick Thompson 
<nickthomp...@earthlink.net>
Sent: Wednesday, October 24, 2018 4:42:18 PM
To: 'The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group'
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] On old question


Thanks, everybody, for your responses.



Most of them are way above my pay-grade, but watching you all work together is 
inspiring, and I always, ALWAYS, get a rich harvest of crumbs off your table.  
Back in old days, I did a brief visitorship at the Philadelphia Child Guidance 
Clinic, toying with the idea of giving up ethology to be a family therapist.  
They quickly sent me back home to academia, insisting that I would more good 
for group therapy theory by pushing on as an ethologist.  I took that as a 
compliment, at the time.  (}8-0]



A few years later, a clinical graduate student came to me and asked me to help 
her think about the problem of “function” in the family therapy literature.  At 
the time, Salvador Munichin, Jay Haley, and others were toying with the idea of 
the Indicated Patient.  The notion was that every troubled family designates 
one of its individuals to be the patient, and unites in support of that 
person’s illness.  Because the family has a stake in the illness, the illness 
cannot be cured without the whole family present.



This entailed the notion that the patient’s illness FUNCTIONED to hold the 
family together.  The patient, and his/her illness were like an organ of the 
body, or like a soldier ant in a colony, etc.  The patients served their 
families and their families directed or regulated their service.  I thought it 
was a fascinating theoretical problem, but the Department stopped hiring family 
systems people, and that was the end of that.   Another lesson noted.



So here it is.  The problem of defining the system and what

it means for a system as a whole to cause changes in one of its components.  I 
sent the graduate student off to find a simple, straightforward biological 
model, and she never came back and was rumored to have had a nervous breakdown 
and left graduate school.



Let that be a lesson to you.



Here is another example to chew on.  It is often said that young male baboons 
serve as the patrols of a baboon troop, a kind of trip wire over which 
attacking predators have to pass in order to attack the troop.  The mechanistic 
explanation is that a young maturing male baboon is seen as a threat to the 
dominant males and is kept away from the females (at the center of the troop) 
by his betters.  He is certainly not a trip wire by choice; but is he so by 
design?   Presumably his “trip-wire-ness” is a spandrel.  So, in what sense is 
he functioning for anything?



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 Prof David West
Sent: Wednesday, October 24, 2018 12:16 PM
To: friam@redfish.com
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] On old question



Glen, I was trying very hard to be metaphorical and general and avoid 
addressing details, like the one you raise, that would require pages to discuss 
properly. But,  I would definitely and immediately concede that Rosen, in 
particular, recognizes and deals with, sometimes more cleverly than others, 
with the kind of qualitative differences I mention. But, even there, I would 
suggest that the foundations of his work are still primarily derived from 
"Entropic Sciences" and their concepts and formulations.



davew





On Wed, Oct 24, 2018, at 11:07 AM, uǝlƃ ☣ wrote:

> So ... Rosen's openness to material flow, closure to operational flow,

> allows *both* endo- and exothermic sub-systems.  But his (M,R)-systems

> focus on maintaining organization using energy-material harvested from

> the gradient, ignoring sub-systems that produce energy-material?

>

> On 10/24/18 9:20 AM, Prof David West wrote:

> > I am pretty sure that the questions you pose, and the ideas of

> > people like Rosen, arise from a failure to recognize the qualitative

> > difference among structures and therefore miss the essence of 
> > "organization."

> > This, in turn is largely attributable to the fact that we enjoy a

> > highly developed "science" of Entropy and Entropic Structuralism

> > (Physics, Chemistry, Astronomy, etc.) but almost no equivalent

> > science of Anentropy. Recombinant DNA and CRISPR are at the level

> > of alchemy in this regard. Sociology, Anthropology, Psychology,

> > Ecology, etc. are, at best, aspiring to alchemy.

> > pretentiously yours,

>

>

> --

> ☣ uǝlƃ

>

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