Larry and Steven:

I am trying to get clear on the relationship of your respective projects --  
the Digital Universe and Memeio -- to one another, which seem to be 
competitive in some way relative to the common aim of upgrading the 
intellectual quality and value of the web-structured world communicational 
network. In that respect both of your projects seem to be comparable as well 
to Berners-Lee's "semantic web" and the later idea of the "pragmatic web" 
(which I know of via Gary Richmond and Aldo de Moor), though whether there 
is a competition in that respect as well I am not sure.

In any case, one particular matter that especially interests me in this 
connection is your respective conceptions of what I will call "the problem 
of authority" (meaning intellectual or cognitive or epistemic or 
informational authority) and how that is to be identified. This is of course 
closely connected with the issue of transparency of authorship, i.e. the 
ability to identify who the author of given documents and the views 
expressed in them actually is. It seems that there may be no basic 
disagreement between you on the importance of being able to identify the 
author in order to be in position to assess the value and reliability of the 
information (including possible misinformation) available in the documents 
available on the web, but what is not clear to me is how such assessment is 
to be made which does not involve capitulation to an authoritarianism of the 
sort which both of you presumably want to avoid.

Putting it as simply as possible, the problem is that whenever someone, A, 
affirms that someone, B (who might be A, in the special case), is a 
legitimate or real authority (or expert, if you like) on the matter in 
question, the question immediately arises as to the authoritative character 
of A as someone purporting to legitimate B as authoritative. (The same 
problem arises in the case of legitimating a document or a knowledge claim.) 
For example -- and I address this to Larry in particular, for the moment --  
you say somewhere, I believe, that "the purpose of the Digital Universe (DU) 
is to aggregate and organize the world's reliable free information in one 
place", and it seems that the way in which this is to be done in the DU is 
by selecting only experts or authoritative persons to be stewards in charge 
of providing expert or authoritative informational resources for this or 
that particular subject-matter or field of interest. This no doubt means 
something like selecting only "recognized" authorities. But there are many 
areas of concern where one would be hard-pressed to identify anybody with 
such a status, and for matters where there is indeed some such person or 
persons so recognized, the supposed "authorities" will sometimes not in fact 
be worthy of such recognition, whether because they are frauds or are simply 
incompetents, who happened to be successful in persuading others that they 
are something which they are not. On the basis of what authority do those in 
the DU who select the supposed authorities make that selection? Is there a 
class of persons -- those in positions of authority in DU -- who are 
authorities on authority?

If not -- and I anticipate that you would not want to claim that there 
are -- then why should anyone sceptical of the reliability of the 
information available on the web regard the situation as likely to be 
improved by such screening for authorities as your project seems to be 
promising to provide?

There may be a similar question to be raised in connection with Steven's 
Memeio project. I am not sure of that at the moment. But this seems to be a 
question that ought to be raised to you, Larry, and I hope you will 
understand that I am not raising it in a merely negative and carping spirit 
but rather because I foresee it as being the major conceptual problem which 
your enterprise -- which I regard as admirable in intent -- has to come to 
grips with effectively if it is to be successful. I raise it to you before 
raising it to Steven simply because I do find him addressing the question of 
what authority is in an explicit and straightforward way in a couple of 
places on one of his websites -- though I am not sure that he answers the 
question as I pose it -- but I can't find anyplace where the corresponding 
question about expertise or authority is addressed on the DU website.

Joe Ransdell



Joseph Ransdell

[EMAIL PROTECTED]



-- 
No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG Free Edition.
Version: 7.1.375 / Virus Database: 268.1.0/269 - Release Date: 2/24/2006


---
Message from peirce-l forum to subscriber archive@mail-archive.com

Reply via email to