Re: [Fis] [Feedforward II and Anticipation] Joseph Brenner

2014-02-18 Thread John Collier


I would concur completely with what Joseph says here. I have never
understood the tendency to replace the world with models of it when we
can interact directly with the world in a brute, unmediated way: it can
really surprise us sometimes, no matter how sophisticated our models.
Those familiar with the work of C.S. Peirce will see that I am just
invoking his most basic reason underlying his realism. This is also the
message of our book: Every Thing Must Go: Metaphysics Naturalized,
though I don't agree with everything in it.
There are several problems with the models view, I think: 1) what Joseph
raised, 2) our models can contain information about the world even if
they are not fully accurate, allowing for correction rather than
replacement (sequential idealism, as one of my colleagues has called it),
and 3) our models are seldom complete, and often not even fully
consistent, so they are always open-ended and subject to revision and
greater clarity; this is another major point that Peirce pressed (his
article, How to make our ideas clear is a good source). If we just add
clarity without external motivation, then we are playing word (or symbol)
games, which can be fun, no doubt.
John

At 12:27 PM 2014-02-18, Joseph Brenner wrote:
Dear Loet and
Colleagues,

In this most interesting comment by Loet, there is a
fascinating inversion of roles! Laplace told Louis XV that I don't
need the hypothesis of God, something, let us say, rather abstract
compared to the solar system. Loet is telling us, however, that what he
does not need is the hypothesis of an external reality of energy, since
he can explain 'everything' with a set of discursive perspectives, which
I consider far too abstract.

My position is that I do not need the hypothesis of
abstract, epistemological perspectives that are not grounded in reality.
I do not know exactly what this is, nor everything about it, but I know
some things and understand some real dynamics of their evolution. If a
system (such as Loet's) excludes all of these as ungrounded beliefs,
something may be missed in the understanding of complex processes, e.g.,
information.

Loet is, perhaps, closer to Newton in his attitude to his
own (Loet's) system: Hypotheses non fingo. I'll go with
Laplace.

Best wishes,

Joseph

- Original Message - 
From: Loet Leydesdorff

To: Joseph Brenner

Cc: fis 
Sent: Monday, February 17, 2014 9:32 PM
Subject: Re: [Fis] Fw: [Feedforward II and Anticipation] Joseph
Brenner
Dear Joseph, 
The energetic terms are external referents to the
communication (scholarly discourse). These external referents can
differently be codified; for example, in terms of thermodynamics or
various forms of physics (e.g., in terms of classical physics). The
dynamic properties can only be studied from one discursive perspective.or
another. 
The ontological status that these dynamics are nevertheless attributed in
your logic in reality requires an act of belief in an
external reality that is assumed to be given (so that can enter into the
dialectics of logic in reality.) 
Je n'ai pas besoin de cette hypothese-la.
Best wishes, 
Loet

On Sun, Feb 16, 2014 at 11:51 AM, Joseph Brenner
joe.bren...@bluewin.ch
 wrote:


Dear Loet,

I am still hoping that there will be more comments on both my
original note

and your significant emendation of it, for which many thanks.
Here is my

response to you now. I have, more than before, the feeling that
you have

agreed that LIR can add something to the sufficiency of the
overall

picture.

Three things might make this even clearer:

1. You wrote:

 From this perspective, the reality in
Logic in Reality (LIR) is res

 cogitans: an inter-human construct about which we
remain uncertain.

JEB: But LIR applies also INTRA-human constructs, that is how
human agents

change one another, including their expectations.
Thus,

2.  The codes in the reflexive communications can be
considered as the

 (hypothesized!) eigenvectors of the networks of relations
among

expectations (carried

 by human minds).

JEB: Same comment as above. The logical values of actuality
and

potentiality

of real process elements, which include communications, have
the dimensions

of vectors.

3.  However, this reality has the epistemological
status of a hypothesis,

 whereas you seem to reify it and identify it with
nature (energy?) as a

given. From my

 perspective, this presumes a reduction of the complexity
using the

communicative codes of

 physics and biology. There is nothing against this coding, but
it can be

 considered as one among an alphabet of possible ones.

JEB: This is an interesting _expression_ of our different points
of view. You

see my approach as reducing complexity and reifying 'this
reality' and I

think it is your approach that reduces and reifies it!! Perhaps
we are both

right!!

Logic in Reality does not deal with a /certain/ complexity,
which can be

associated with complicated epistemological entities or states.
Your theory

seems to me

Re: [Fis] [Feedforward II and Anticipation] Joseph Brenner

2014-02-18 Thread Loet Leydesdorff
Dear John and Joseph,

Let me use my second option this week to side with you against those who
wish to replace substantive theorizing with modelling. The issue is, in my
opinion, *which* hypotheses one needs and can elaborate when developing
discursive knowledge (e.g., in physics or sociology).

The hypotheses are entertained in disccourses and can be reflected by
agency. I wished to deny the fruitfulness of the ontological assumptions
made in the Logic of Reality--disguised as energetic dynamics--because
this hypothesis can only be stated as an act of believe.

Instead of believes, one can participate in discourses developing systems
of rationalized expectations.
(I'll be silent fo the remainder of this week. :-)  But I thought that I
had to prevent a misunderstanding.)

Best,
Loet



On Tue, Feb 18, 2014 at 1:43 PM, John Collier colli...@ukzn.ac.za wrote:

  I would concur completely with what Joseph says here. I have never
 understood the tendency to replace the world with models of it when we can
 interact directly with the world in a brute, unmediated way: it can really
 surprise us sometimes, no matter how sophisticated our models. Those
 familiar with the work of C.S. Peirce will see that I am just invoking his
 most basic reason underlying his realism. This is also the message of our
 book: *Every Thing Must Go: Metaphysics Naturalized*, though I don't
 agree with everything in it.

 There are several problems with the models view, I think: 1) what Joseph
 raised, 2) our models can contain information about the world even if they
 are not fully accurate, allowing for correction rather than replacement
 (sequential idealism, as one of my colleagues has called it), and 3) our
 models are seldom complete, and often not even fully consistent, so they
 are always open-ended and subject to revision and greater clarity; this is
 another major point that Peirce pressed (his article, How to make our ideas
 clear is a good source). If we just add clarity without external
 motivation, then we are playing word (or symbol) games, which can be fun,
 no doubt.

 John



 At 12:27 PM 2014-02-18, Joseph Brenner wrote:

 Dear Loet and Colleagues,

 In this most interesting comment by Loet, there is a fascinating inversion
 of roles! Laplace told Louis XV that I don't need the hypothesis of God,
 something, let us say, rather abstract compared to the solar system. Loet
 is telling us, however, that what he does not need is the hypothesis of an
 external reality of energy, since he can explain 'everything' with a set of
 discursive perspectives, which I consider far too abstract.

 My position is that I do not need the hypothesis of abstract,
 epistemological perspectives that are not grounded in reality. I do not
 know exactly what this is, nor everything about it, but I know some things
 and understand some real dynamics of their evolution. If a system (such as
 Loet's) excludes all of these as ungrounded beliefs, something may be
 missed in the understanding of complex processes, e.g., information.

 Loet is, perhaps, closer to Newton in his attitude to his own (Loet's)
 system: Hypotheses non fingo. I'll go with Laplace.

 Best wishes,

 Joseph

 - Original Message -
 *From:* Loet Leydesdorff l...@leydesdorff.net
 *To:* Joseph Brenner joe.bren...@bluewin.ch
 *Cc:* fis fis@listas.unizar.es
 *Sent:* Monday, February 17, 2014 9:32 PM
 *Subject:* Re: [Fis] Fw: [Feedforward II and Anticipation] Joseph Brenner

 Dear Joseph,

 The energetic terms are external referents to the communication
 (scholarly discourse). These external referents can differently be
 codified; for example, in terms of thermodynamics or various forms of
 physics (e.g., in terms of classical physics). The dynamic properties can
 only be studied from one discursive perspective.or another.

 The ontological status that these dynamics are nevertheless attributed in
 your logic in reality requires an act of belief in an external reality
 that is assumed to be given (so that can enter into the dialectics of
 logic in reality.)
 Je n'ai pas besoin de cette hypothese-la.

 Best wishes,
 Loet


 On Sun, Feb 16, 2014 at 11:51 AM, Joseph Brenner joe.bren...@bluewin.ch 
 wrote:
  Dear Loet,

  I am still hoping that there will be more comments on both my original
 note
  and your significant emendation of it, for which many thanks. Here is my
  response to you now. I have, more than before, the feeling that you have
  agreed that LIR can add something to the sufficiency of the overall
 picture.
  Three things might make this even clearer:

  1. You wrote:
   From this perspective, the reality in Logic in Reality (LIR) is res
   cogitans:  an inter-human construct about which we remain uncertain.

  JEB: But LIR applies also INTRA-human constructs, that is how human agents
  change one another, including their expectations. Thus,

 2.   The codes in the reflexive communications can be considered as the
   (hypothesized!) eigenvectors of the networks