So which one is the correct one or are they all correct or perhaps only a particular sublist of this list? — Pieter R van Wyk
An engine is a system that converts energy into work. — Pieter R van Wyk
Yes, you are right (I am wrong); but then, anything can be proved from an absurd statement. — Pieter R van Wyk
I deduce that you have read the AI assessment of "If Neptune disappeared". Since AI is incapable of abstract thought I would regard this assessment as highly suspect. This is apart from the fact that your example is still absurd — Pieter R van Wyk
I would say that you are looking for a quantifiable definition, so one that is mathematically framed. One that is a geometry of relations. And a geometry that includes the tricky thing of quantifying the notion of what a system is even for. A theory of systems has to account for finality or purpose in some useful way. — apokrisis
Another tricky thing is that a theory of systems has to capture its ability to develop and self-organise. To grow and to scale. — apokrisis
So a systems scientist understands that they are seeking to mathematise and quantify this Aristotelean package. There are then quite an array of such models. And it is a work very much in progress. — apokrisis
We had a burst of activity in the 1980s with chaos theory, complexity theory, dissipative structure theory, fractals, scalefree networks, and so forth. Category theory added an angle that set theory couldn’t provide. And things continue. Topological order for example. — apokrisis
So it is curious that all this has been happening to advance systems science and yet you seem not to even know what the field is up to. — apokrisis
All this seems quite normal and sensible. One doesn’t demand that there be one Margaret Mead level of definition that would suit a small and impatient child. — apokrisis
It is almost like a child being told 3x3=9 not 10, and then turning around and saying "I was wrong, but numbers are stupid anyway!" — I like sushi
I feel like I have wasted my time here for the most part — I like sushi
I claim my contribution to be definitive. Subject to somebody finding a fatal flaw in my reasoning. — Pieter R van Wyk
I see you have also wasted some time on Youtube with some philosophical ramblings. — Pieter R van Wyk
Quite so, but then there is absolutely no utility in arguing with a person that believe an AI story on face value and then try to sell it as fact. — Pieter R van Wyk
No problem. I see you have also wasted some time on Youtube with some philosophical ramblings. — Pieter R van Wyk
Never getting around to explaining what is so definitive about your own new contribution. — apokrisis
Perhaps, to retain an air of mystery, you have avoided defining the key term in your thread*1. But you seem to have in mind a simplistic concept of a system : like the game Jenga, where players try to avoid removing the essential part of a stack of static wooden blocks. That's a simple gravitation system.We speak of the solar system.
We{you} cannot agree on what, exactly, is a system.
We {?} make the absurd postulate that one planet could be removed from the solar system.
This could tell us whether the solar system is in fact a system. — Pieter R van Wyk
IS THIS AN ORGANIZED SYSTEM OR A DISORGANIZED CHAOS? — Gnomon
So, you agree that the seemingly haphazard stack of irregularly shaped rocks is a "system", in the sense that it was produced, not by Nature, nor by mountain goats, but by a sentient agent with a future purpose in mind : navigation aid or abstract art???This will depend on a possible purpose, not so? In my younger days I did some mountaineering, we used stacked rocks (like your picture) to mark a road, thus it was part of a navigation system. Your picture though, looks like a piece of art (A deliberate transformation of the feelings and emotions of the artist [the life form making the art], into a physical form. p96) — Pieter R van Wyk
Now we're getting somewhere : a definition of "System" that may be relevant to the covert purpose of this thread. Example : A System is a collection of things designed for a specific purpose or function*1. Question : designed (created?) by Accident or Intention? Or, in the case of universals*2, not designed, nor contingent, but eternal & self-existent, like Plato's Form. But is the Purpose/Function top-down intentional, or bottom-up inferred, or both? :chin:A system consist of components (things that are) and the interactions between these components (things that happen) contributing to a single unique purpose. p27, p135 — Pieter R van Wyk
Traditionally, "The Universal System" has been labeled God, or some variation like Brahman (ultimate, unchanging, and infinite reality) . But is that unique set-of-all-things Real (tangible) or Ideal (conceptual) ; Quanta or Qualia ; Immanent or Transcendent? Spinoza and Smuts*3 identified the "one and only one" System with the immanent Universe or Nature. But the Big Bang theory has raised the question of some prior or higher Set or System. Alas, Multiverse & Many Worlds systems seem to water-down the notion of uniqueness. :smile:There is one, and only one, system that is not a component of any other system. Named the Universal system — Pieter R van Wyk
Question : designed (created?) by Accident or Intention? — Gnomon
OK. Now we have narrowed-down the kind of Systems this thread is about. As far as we know, only physical biological beings*1 are capable of abstracting Ideas from concrete Reality. And only one of those physical sub-Systems has the capability to communicate their intangible ideas in the form of meaningful symbols : e.g. auditory or visual Words. The jury is still out on parrots & dolphins, which apparently can produce two-way communication to some degree. Even dogs can understand a few words of spoken language, but can't reciprocate except via body language, including barking and button-pushing .all systems are physical systems, but there exist systems with the capability of abstraction.
Moreover, this classification provides a theory of evolution sans any tautologies. — Pieter R van Wyk
OK. Now we have narrowed-down the kind of Systems this thread is about. As far as we know, only physical biological beings*1 are capable of abstracting Ideas from concrete Reality. And only one of those physical sub-Systems has the capability to communicate their intangible ideas in the form of meaningful symbols : e.g. auditory or visual Words. The jury is still out on parrots & dolphins, which apparently can produce two-way communication to some degree. Even dogs can understand a few words of spoken language, but can't reciprocate except via body language, including barking and button-pushing . — Gnomon
Given that the ability to abstract ideas has evolved on at least one planet, what does that fact imply about Evolution in general? — Gnomon
Were living & thinking & abstracting entities inevitable, perhaps because that was the Purpose of the evolutionary System from its Big Bang beginning — Gnomon
Was the System programmed or designed to produce Thinking Beings? — Gnomon
Are you implying that Darwin's Theory of Evolution is based on Tautologies or Axioms? — Gnomon
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.