Isn't math our tool for mapping this stuff? — Garrett Travers
Sure. And Aleksandr Bogdanov published his Tektology just before, Cybernetics came along just after. — apokrisis
Sarcasm still doesn't work on the interwebs, does it? — apokrisis
Arran Gare is a good source on the philosophical history of systems science. Here is his paper on Bogdanov - https://philarchive.org/archive/GARABA-3 — apokrisis
Well, for example by saying that "the "best" society manages to balance its global cooperation with its local competition by maximizing its social cohesion and its individual independence."Where would I have said that? — apokrisis
At what point do we then give up talking like atomists when we are discussing hierarchical organisation — apokrisis
It's my specialist subject too. So happy to help. — apokrisis
Well, especially in history you do find the tension of the individual and the group certainly. But not perhaps in the way you would want it. It is the problem that all sociologists and those who promote the Longe durée. It's the problem that they will immediately say is a non-issue. It's the Cleopatra's nose. And that's why the focus for example of the Annales school, but others is somewhere that we don't see the ordinary history of rapid transformations where certain small individuals and their actions have huge consequences. Perhaps there are too many Butterfly effects in history that in the end the historian choses to model it by using the old narrative of story telling.But what caused the collapse and led to the unsustainability? Clearly I would look to the balancing act that any sociologist or anthropologist understands - the necessary tension between the individual and the group.
And that tension is hierarchy theory in a nutshell. The need to balance local degrees of freedom and global habits of constraint. — apokrisis
From an economic history point of view, that's just hogwash — ssu
We have well and truly left the world of material objects and are now talking about stacks of QFT fields — apokrisis
Does neoliberalism deem monetarism as an essential part? Liberalism surely didn't want something as micromanaging as monetarism to be around. But monetary policy is actually the perfect example of things heading for a collapse, not something "balanced".Why did neoliberalism deem monetarism an essential part of its "naked market" architecture? — apokrisis
Define what the global constraint of money supply is, because I don't know what you mean. I do understand what money supply is and the role of debt, but what is the global constraint of it is something new.Why are central banks using the global constraint of money supply to bound the local competitive behaviour of market actors? — apokrisis
And I predicted you would, exactly.The way I want it is analysis based on the maths of hierarchy theory, not Great Men of history fables. — apokrisis
QFT describes particle fields. Shortly interacting. It doesn't describe bound states very well (unless very specific conditions are specified). So to find out about quarks and leptons you can do the same as for bound quark states. Bound systems like atoms and molecules are not modeled by QFT. Aggregates of particles that form life can best be described by non-equilibrium thermodynamics, but to say that even the appearing of a bacteria can be described is too much already. — EugeneW
Does neoliberalism deem monetarism as an essential part? — ssu
But monetary policy is actually the perfect example of things heading for a collapse, not something "balanced". — ssu
Define what the global constraint of money supply is, because I don't know what you mean. — ssu
So what does the math of hierarchy theory say about the impact of Donald Trump compared to Joe Biden? Or is it something inconsequential? Or rubbish? — ssu
If preon particle fields are a thing, then they are only a vacuum expectation until some kind of constraining horizon is imposed on their observables. A "concrete" excitation that might be claimed as a particle is only a virtual possibility until some kind of classical frame has been imposed on the situation — apokrisis
I don't know if this qualifies as successful reductionism but in chemistry class, thousands of years ago, the fact that ice floats on water was explained to me in terms of Hydrogen bonding. I felt quite satisfied with the answer: the H bonds meant that water molecules, quite literally, kept each other at a distance and this results in an increase in overall volume for the same mass of liquid water, making ice less dense than liquid water; hence, said my teach, ice floats on water.
Can this be done for all phenomena? — Agent Smith
Consciousness, thus far, has been resistant to such a treatment. Nobody has been able to convincingly explain how electrochemical events in the brain produce thinking/thoughts. We know the two are correlated (brain experiments prove that), but how exactly is still a mystery. — Agent Smith
If use is the scale by which we judge metaphysical factors, then it seems to me that the scales would be epistemological in nature, as in existing in our minds only and not the way the world is actually divided.
— Harry Hindu
I think that's true too. — T Clark
Wait, I thought you agreed that the division of these scales was epistemological, not metaphysical. So physics, chemistry, biology and cosmology are merely epistemological explanations of scales that only exist in our minds, and not real in any sense in the world beyond our minds. So I fail to see how they are useful if they are not representative of what is the case outside of our minds.Why should you represent reality into the physics-chemistry-biology-cosmology division in the first place?
— EugeneW
As I indicated in my OP, I think that's a metaphysical division. It's useful, so we use it. — T Clark
Above what? If the scales are epistemological then there is no metaphysical above or below. We are simply talking about the same thing from different views. In other words we are confusing the map with the territory. The constraints from above or below are only figments of our imagination, ie explanations that are useful, but not representative of anything real in any sense outside of our minds. Constraints would only come from the sides - meaning things on the same "scale" (there would only be one scale, so the term becomes meaningless when describing the world outside of your mind) as the thing we are talking about. This is akin to natural selection where forces on the same scale constrain other forces on the same scale, like how predators constrain the evolution of prey and vice versa.How does this fit into your military metaphor? You talk about constraints from above. How do the feedback loops constrain the chemistry? Are the products of the enzymes the soldiers? So chemicals evolve into structures that control how they behave. — T Clark
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