Hi John, (all)

You've been talking about how to distinguish types of patterns of values. I want to offer my thoughts on the matter. A long lost MOQist named Wim made a suggestion that helped me greatly. He considered Pirsig's idea of static latching which brought him to thinking about how the different types of patterns are latched or maintained. Biological patterns are maintained through DNA. Social patterns are maintained through unconscious copying of behavior. Intellectual patterns are maintained through unconscious copying of rationales for behavior. Looking at how patterns are maintained can help you distinguish what sort of pattern you are talking about. For example, though ants have societies in some sense, their behavior is rigidly controlled by their genes. they do not, as far as I know, learn new behaviors from other ants the way mammals do. They do not participate in any social patterns. There is no such thing as ant culture which is passed down through other means than DNA. The biological/social distinction is then very clear, at least in theory. All we have to do is think about whether a behavior is a DNA encoded response to an organisms environment or a copied behavior chosen based on its social quality where terms like celebrity and status are helpful in understanding what quality is.

Perhaps the social/intellectual distinction is still difficult, but considering whether a behavior is maintained through copying one to another or whether we aren't even talking about a behavior but rather a rationale for behavior can be helpful.

What do you think?

Best,
Steve


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