M.,

 

Is that like “nudge”?

 

N.

 

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:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Merle Lefkoff
Sent: Saturday, March 30, 2019 1:04 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] excess meaning alert? (was, Re: are we how we behave?)

 

For whatever it's worth, Nick, I'm now using this thread in the work we're 
doing on the adjacent possible.

 

On Fri, Mar 29, 2019 at 9:29 PM Nick Thompson <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

Steve,

 

We were doing SO WELL until we got to … oh, see my “HORSEFEATHERS!” below. 

 

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:[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> ] On Behalf Of Steven A Smith
Sent: Friday, March 29, 2019 9:39 AM
To: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] excess meaning alert? (was, Re: are we how we behave?)

 

 

On 3/28/19 1:20 PM, Nick Thompson wrote:

Steve, ‘n all, 

 

Just to be cranky, I want to remind everybody that ALL language use, except 
perhaps tautological expressions, is metaphorical.

I ascribe to this idea as well, following Lakoff and Johnson in their 1980 
_Metaphors we Live by_ .

  So then, the question is not, “Is this a metaphor”, but what kind of a 
metaphor is it and is it pernicious. 

I believe that ultimately conceptual metaphor is no more nor less than the 
intuitive application of a model, and as is often mentioned "all models are 
wrong, some are useful".    You use the term pernicious which suggests 
*harmful*, I presume either intentionally so or more from sloppiness or 
ignorance.

My own view is that in any “tense” conversation – one in which the parties feel 
the words really matter – it behooves a metaphor-user to define the limits of 
the metaphor. 

I agree that "tense" conversations are different than "casual" ones if that is 
your distinction.  Unfortunately, outside of Science/Engineering contexts, I 
find that "tense" conversations are at their root political or at least 
rhetorical.   One or both sides are really *serious* about being believed.   If 
not believed in fact ("I believe what you just said") then in principle ("I 
believe that you believe what you just said").

I think that political/rhetorical dialog would *benefit*  by careful disclosure 
of all metaphors being used, but one mode of such dialog is for one or both 
sides to attempt to interject equivocal meanings... to use a term (or in this 
case set of terms belonging to a metaphorical domain) to weave an *apparently* 
logical argument, which is only superficially logical but falls apart when the 
"correct" meaning of the term(s) are applied.   

So, for instance, much mischief has arisen in evolutionary biology from a 
failure of theorists to define the limits of their use of such metaphors as 
“natural selection” and “ adaptation”.  When limits are defined, the surplus 
meaning of a metaphor is separated into two parts, initially, that which the 
metaphor-user embraces and that which s/he disclaims.  The embraced part goes 
on to become the positive heuristic of the metaphor, the “wet edge” along which 
science develops. 

>From this line of discussion, I take you to be on the branch of the fault-tree 
>I implied above as a Scientific dialog where *both* sides of the discussion 
>are honestly trying to come to mutual understanding and perhaps advance 
>understanding by combining differing perspectives on the same phenomena.

The disclaimed part, must be further divided into that which was legitimately 
[logically] disclaimed and that which was disclaimed fraudulently.  For 
instance, when sociobiologists use the notion of selfish gene, they may 
legitimately disclaim the idea that genes consciously choose between 
self-regarding and other-regarding options, but they cannot legitimately 
disclaim the idea that a gene has the power to make any choice but the 
self-regarding one.

When Dawkins coined "Selfish Gene",  I felt that the *value* of the metaphor 
invoked was in the challenge it presents:

  And that idea is patently false.  Genes do not make choices

Patently Genes do not make choices in the sense that we usually mean "make 
choices", yet the strong implication is that the phenomena functions *as if* 
they do, in "all other ways".   There may be (useful) hairsplitting between 
"all other ways" and "many other ways" which is an important aspect of 
analogical thinking.  

, they ARE choices and the choice is made at the level of the phenotype or at 
the level of the population, depending on how one thinks about the matter.  So 
the metaphor ‘selfish gene’ is pernicious in evolutionary biology, because it 
creates confusion on the very point that it purports to clarify – the level at 
which differential replication operates to generate long term phenotypic change 
in a population. 

I would challenge this as I think my verbage above outlines.   I do not believe 
that the metaphor *purports* to clarify what you say it does.  

[NST==> HORSEFEATHERS! One or two generations of sociobiologists were directed 
away from group level explanations by this pernicious metaphor.  <==nst] 

It *strives* to provide a cognitive shortcut and to establish a fairly strong 
metaphor which deserves careful dissection to understand the particulars of the 
*target domain*.   An important question in the target domain becomes "why does 
the shortcut of thinking of genes as selfish actually have some level of 
accuracy as a description of the phenomena when in fact the mechanisms involved 
do not support that directly?"

[NST==>I don’t think it does.  I think it’s a subtle and largely successful 
attempt to import Spenserian ideology in to evolutionary biology.  <==nst] 

For all I know, EB has entirely debunked the concept and there is NO utility in 
the idea of a "selfish gene"...  

Bruce Sherwood likes to make the point that the analogy of hydraulic systems 
for DC circuits is misleading.   I forget the specifics of where he shows that 
the analogy breaks down, but it is well below (or above?) the level of "normal" 
DC circuit understanding and manipulation.   For the kinds of problems I work 
with using DC circuits, a "battery" is a "tank of water at some height", the 
Voltage out of the battery is the water Pressure, the amount of Current is the 
Volume of water, a Diode is a one-way valve,  a resistor is any hydraulic 
element which conserves water but reduces pressure through what is nominally 
friction, etc.    As you point out, there is plenty of "excess meaning" around 
hydraulics as source domain, and "insufficient meaning" around DC circuits as 
target domain, and if one is to use the analogy effectively one must either 
understand those over/under mappings, or be operating within only the smaller 
apt-portion of the domains.   For example, I don't know what the equivalent of 
an anti-hammer stub (probably a little like a capacitor in parallel?) is but 
that is no longer describing a simple DC circuit. 

[NST==>I think I am back to heartily agreeing. <==nst] 

A farmer buying his first tractor may try to understand it using the source 
domain of "draft animal" and can't go particularly wrong by doing things like 
"giving it a rest off and on to let it cool down", "planning to feed it well 
before expecting it to work", "putting it away, out of the elements when not in 
use", etc.  your "excess meaning" would seem to be things like the farmer going 
out and trying to top off the fuel every day even when he was not using the 
tractor, or maybe taking it out for a spin every day to keep it exercised and 
accustomed to being driven.   The farmer *might* understand "changing the oil" 
and "cleaning the plugs" and "adjusting the points" vaguely like "deworming" 
and "cleaning the hooves" but the analogy is pretty wide of the mark beyond the 
simple idea that "things need attending to".

[NST==>OoooooH.  I like the above!  May I plaigiarise it some day?  Do you by 
any chance know Epamanondas from your childhood.  Very politically incorrect, 
now, I fear, but endlessly instructive on the perils of over using metaphors.  
<==nst] 

 

PS – Is anybody on this list (among the handful that have gotten this far in 
this post) familiar with the work of Douglas Walton? 

I just took a look and his work does sound interesting (and relevant).

He seems perhaps to have written a lot about misunderstandings in AI systems … 
i.e., how does Siri know what we mean?  

By AI, it seems you mean (the subset of) Natural Language Understanding?

I am also reminded by reading the Wikipedia article on his work that I haven't 
responded to Glen's question about the "theorem dependency project".

I came to this work through my interest in abduction, which may be described as 
the process by which we identify (ascribe meaning to?) experiences.  Walton 
seems to suggest that you-guys are way ahead of the rest of us on the process 
of meaning ascription, and we all should go to school with you.  Please tell me 
where and when you offer the class.

I assume the "you-guys" referred to here are the hard core CS/Modeling folks 
(e.g. Glen, Marcus, Dave, ...).  I do think that the challenges of "explaining 
things to a machine" do require some rigor, as does formal mathematics and 
systems like the aforementioned "theorem dependency project".

- Steve

PS.  It has been noted that my long-winded explanation of my (poorly adhered 
to) typographical conventions for around "reserved terms" and the  like was 
perhaps defensive.  I didn't mean to sound defensive, I just wanted to be more 
precise and complete to (possibly) reduce misunderstandings.   I don't imagine 
many read the entireity of my missives, but as often as not,  when people do 
read and respond, I sense that some of my conventions are not recognized.

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-- 

Merle Lefkoff, Ph.D.
President, Center for Emergent Diplomacy
emergentdiplomacy.org <http://emergentdiplomacy.org> 

Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA

[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 
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skype:  merle.lelfkoff2

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