Re: [FRIAM] More friam followup

2007-06-16 Thread Phil Henshaw
ay Morning Applied Complexity > Coffee Group > Subject: Re: [FRIAM] More friam followup > > > Nature 447, 799-816 - Identification and analysis of > functional elements in 1% of the human genome by the ENCODE > pilot project. > > Here are some of their highlights i

Re: [FRIAM] More friam followup

2007-06-16 Thread Phil Henshaw
To: friam@redfish.com Subject: [FRIAM] More friam followup Hi all, I think of our discussions as cumulative, so here is somethat that was discussed today that I would like to nail down. We isolated the concept of "misplaced concreteness (Whitehead) which is a version of a "category

Re: [FRIAM] More friam followup

2007-06-15 Thread Russell Standish
This is what John Mattick (from U. Queensland) has been talking about all these years. Its sweet to observe heretic science becoming mainstream :) Cheers On Fri, Jun 15, 2007 at 04:22:06PM -0700, Roger Critchlow wrote: > Nature 447, 799-816 - Identification and analysis of functional > elements

Re: [FRIAM] More friam followup

2007-06-15 Thread Roger Critchlow
Nature 447, 799-816 - Identification and analysis of functional elements in 1% of the human genome by the ENCODE pilot project. Here are some of their highlights in their own words: - The human genome is pervasively transcribed, such that the majority of its bases are associated with at least

Re: [FRIAM] More friam followup

2007-06-15 Thread Carl Tollander
I may have mentioned this morning that this is probably important: http://www.scienceblog.com/cms/node/13465/print Carl Nicholas Thompson wrote: > > Hi all, > > I think of our discussions as cumulative, so here is somethat that was > discussed today that I would like to nail down. We isolated

[FRIAM] More friam followup

2007-06-15 Thread Nicholas Thompson
Hi all, I think of our discussions as cumulative, so here is somethat that was discussed today that I would like to nail down. We isolated the concept of "misplaced concreteness (Whitehead) which is a version of a "category error" (Ryle) or the violation of a language game (Wittegenstein) or