Jed Recently stated:

"The laws of economics are constraints, similar to the laws that govern 
structural engineering. If you ignore the laws of structural engineering, your 
buildings will collapse. But within the constraints these laws define, you can 
create an enormous variety of different structures. Some structures, such as an 
airplane hangar, will make extraordinarily efficient use of the materials to 
cover the largest possible area. Other structures, such as a Victorian house, 
will waste a lot of materials to produce a charming effect. Some economic 
structures produce fantastic profits in a short time, such as WallMart 
superstores. Others are inefficient and wasteful, such as Japanese mom-and-pop 
retail stores. But these small stores take care of many people and they enliven 
neighborhoods and make life more pleasant."

- Jed


Jed's thoughts on this matter brings to mind something I've been pondered on 
and off in my life for years, a concept called "Emergence." Theories of 
Emergent behavior help explain why dilapidated Mom-and-Pop retail stores 
thrive. It helps explain why certain run-down neighborhoods in our cities 
deserve to stay pretty much intact the way they are, as compared to being torn 
down and replaced with another ill thought out housing project, and with 
disastrous consequences.

First, humor me a second while I fill in some hopefully entertaining background.

On a recent family recent trip to Portland, Oregon, to deposit my father's 
ashes in the Pacific Ocean (his spawning grounds), we visited Powell's Books, 
one of the most well known used bookstores in the country. Browsing through one 
of the long corridors in the science section my eyes scanned past an off-color 
light gray-blue book. It was of an average size, not very impressive looking 
book at first glance. The title said "Emergence." It continued with, "The 
Connected lives of Ants, Brains, Cities, and Software." I was intrigued. It 
might help to understand that in my youth I, too, had studied the social 
behavior of ants. A kindred spirit! During a younger and more inquisitive time 
in my life I maintained several full-fledged ant colonies which included the 
queen. I had been fascinated by the complex organizational structure these tiny 
creatures exhibited. How is it, I often wondered, that such seemingly mindless 
little creatures with brains the size of, well, the size of an!
  ant, were capable of organizing their living conditions into highly complex 
social structures as if the entire colony was behaving like a single-minded 
organism?

I read on. "THIS BOOK IS ABOUT THE MYSTERY OF WHY THE WHOLE IS SOMETIMES 
SMARTER THAN THE SUM OF ITS PARTS" What did the author mean by the term 
"Emergence?"

I happened to notice the author's name, and that's when I got the biggest 
surprise of all. There, in capital letters was the name: "STEVEN JOHNSON" (No 
relation!)

Not only were the author's ideas on emergence personally compelling he 
possessed my name. Out of the entire bookstore how did I manage to, almost as 
if I was an ant, ambling endlessly through a labyrinth of bookshelves find my 
way to this particular isle in the science section, and how did my eyes manage 
to focus on this particular nondescript book out of the thousands of others 
littering the shelves. It was an eerie kind of synchronicity, one that I had 
not personally experienced to that degree of conscious awareness in decades.

Of course, I bought the book.

I finished it over the following days absorbing as much as my mind could take 
in. The characteristics of Emergence, I discovered, exists in a surprising 
number of seemingly unrelated manifestations. It helps explain the formation of 
neighborhoods, both the highly successful and not so successful ghetto habitats 
that have emerged from our cities. It helps explain the occasionally 
unpredictable idiosyncrasies of economic models, like capitalism. Emergence 
helps explain the surprising robust evolution and success of a high-tech 
phenomenon called "public domain software." It helps explain why our brains, 
while physically hardwired as a jumble of excruciatingly slow carbon-based 
biological networks can, nevertheless, easily exceed the cognitive power of the 
fastest silicon-based super computers currently in existence. The rules of 
emergence help explain why there is a surprising lack of control news networks 
must now contend with as they vainly try to choose what is "newsworthy".

For those who might be interested in designing their own Emergent data models 
(and play God for a while!) I would highly recommend downloading a free public 
domain software package called StarLogo. You can find the package at:

http://education.mit.edu/starlogo/starterpage.html

Some of you old farts might remember this programming language was once called 
"Logo". It was one of the first programming languages developed with children 
in mind. The original intention was to interest tiny tykes in the joys of 
learning the basic rules of programming languages on personal computers. It 
would appear that the Logo language has evolved just a tad over the decades. I 
has now become a robust data modeling "parallel" programming language. It is 
capable of modeling anything from traffic patterns, slime mold, the spread of 
plagues, population growth patterns, and quantum physics.

I downloaded the Starlogo programming package about two months ago and gave it 
a spin around the block. It has been a very entertaining and educational 
experience. It was fun playing God. I also discovered, it's not easy assuming 
the responsibilities of God! Most of my universes didn't far out so well! Lots 
of surprises. Lots of duds.

I dare say it might be possible, assuming one is ambitious enough, to model the 
behavior or hydrinos as they go through their various incarnations using this 
programming language, just to see what might happen. However, I'll leave that 
assignment to others, as I already have a very full dinner plate.

I have some final thoughts to share concerning my profound synchronistic-like 
experience of locating Steven Johnson's book on Emergence. I realize there 
continues to be protracted debates on whether synchronicity truly exists. In my 
own case, the only intelligible thing I can say is that if "God does not play 
with dice", as Einstein once blurted out in one of the most memorable quotes in 
the annals of scientific history it would seem to suggest that, at least in my 
universe, I occasionally experience events as a series of improbabilities. 
Perhaps its simply the fact that if the TAO is to be held responsible for 
creating all of the Emergent rules of random happenstance, it would make a form 
of wry sense to me to occasionally leave in a few flaws here and there in the 
Grand Scheme of Things - just to see what happens.

Regards,
Steven Vincent Johnson
www.OrionWorks.com
www.Zazzle.com/orionworks

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