Going back to the original thread you split (subject line), I would probably 
have more concern for parallax if I thought there were different perspectives 
and some kind of nuance that was at risk.    Metaphorically speaking, we aren’t 
driving in the fog or snow, we are driving on a cool, dry, summer evening, but 
with the lights off, well over the legal blood alcohol limit, at about 130 mph. 
   Open the door and jump out while there is still time.    Next time we’ll 
send the Tesla on autopilot and it can escort them to the authorities for 
processing.

From: Friam <[email protected]> on behalf of Steven A Smith 
<[email protected]>
Reply-To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[email protected]>
Date: Thursday, April 18, 2019 at 7:13 PM
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Trans/Post Homo Erectus/Sapiens/Faber/Hiveus




< We can turn up the brightness and narrow the focus to maximize flux, but for 
many problems, that is not unlike hitting our high beams in a snowstorm or 
fogbank.   One of the things I hope (mostly in vain, but not entirely) for from 
this list is discussion of how to apply Complex Systems Theory to predicting 
something more interesting/relevant to the human tragicomedy being played out 
right.  >

Switch to synthetic aperture radar in fog.  ☺

https://semiengineering.com/here-comes-high-res-car-radar/
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucas%E2%80%93Kanade_method>

Good one.  I *was* going to invoke the work Takeo Kenade (CMU) presented here a 
year or so ago, based on his (Lucas-Kenade) Optical Flow algorithms to 
detect/predict the pattern of rain/snow a fraction of a second later such that 
the headlights (imaging projectors) can mask the beam, minimizing the egregious 
illumination of rain/snow/sleet.    As a metaphor, I don't know if it helps in 
this discussion, but it was a good example of fairly straightforward but highly 
motivated adaptation of  existing technology.

Your synthetic aperture imaging via arrays (formal, ad hoc, phased, radio, 
light, sound... ) probably provide a better metaphor.   This is one of the 
reasons I'm very interested in other people's perspectives on many topics...  
if done well (which I can't claim I do) it seems that such ubiquitous parallax 
can yield some of the same things synthetic apertures can...  like post-hoc 
focus and depth extraction.

Unfortunately both of these are merely sophisticated engineering mathematics, 
probably closer to what Asimov's Psychohistory gestured at.

Projects like our own Merle Lefkoff's Center for Emergent 
Diplomacy<https://www.emergentdiplomacy.org/> and ASU's Global Biosocial 
Complexity Initiative<https://complexity.asu.edu/> show promise... I suppose I 
should quit blathering on here and do a more diligent literature search...   
There are initiatives at SFI that are somewhat relevant that I don't (bother 
to?) follow.

Mumble,

 - Steve
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