Second, that we can form hierarchies does not imply that we ought form hierarchies.
— Banno
The question is about nature and why it does in fact organise itself hierarchically - the logical inevitability of that. — apokrisis
Thanks. I'm quite familiar with all that. I was around when IBM was pushing LU6.2. — apokrisis
Ok. Then you must agree with my point that the software protocols are peer-to-peer and the opposite of hierarchical. And I concede your point that the hardware infrastructure is hierarchical. — fishfry
You make it sound like I am trying to enlist some technique of rhetoric here. — JerseyFlight
You think that hierarchy theory is about stacking levels up like construction bricks? — apokrisis
Am I being too subtle? — apokrisis
The hardware was hierarchical because that's just the naturally efficient way to organise the world so it can handle a traffic of data. — apokrisis
Then the software was the attempt to create a new flat virtual realm on top - a unstructured network. — apokrisis
And yet once this software started to handle real world activity, it then developed a hierarchical pattern of activity. As again, that just is what is natural. The flat network became a hierarchical network of networks, with some networks much bigger than most of the others. — apokrisis
Check out constructal theory for the generality it this. — apokrisis
So it was all inevitable, and not an awful contingent perversion of the original idea. You're probably right. The utopian vision of the Internet failed; and it wasn't an accident or a plot of the telcos and the government; but rather some sort of structural law of nature in favor of hierarchies, if I can put it that way. — fishfry
It is the same as the wealth inequality story. — apokrisis
It is the same as the wealth inequality story. We can't accuse neoliberalism of having a malign intent. It is just a fact of exponential growth..." — apokrisis
In hierarchy theory, it is about global constraints imposed on local degrees of freedom. — apokrisis
Still ... discovering that your worldview comes from IBM mainframes explains a lot :-) — fishfry
I actually did edit an IBM mainframe journal for a couple of years so interviewed guys like Gene Amdahl and Bill Gates. It was right at the time that IBM was losing the battle to impose its proprietary hierarchical SNA cooperative processing architecture on the data processing world. — apokrisis
Does your theory account for the fact that a hierarchical hardware layer with a peer-to-peer software layer seems to be the winning ticket? — fishfry
Or at least humans will be happy to pay the data centre electricity bills. — apokrisis
But if IBM had managed to stay in control, then you would have been stuck with corporate information systems and not evolved to those new levels of information flow. — apokrisis
What is most dangerous as I see it, and it is no surprise to me that you cannot see it, is this idea of natural order. — JerseyFlight
Don’t bother with the science — apokrisis
You will claim that these are natural, thus normative. This creates a category beyond criticism. — JerseyFlight
Hence the evolutionary advantage of non-hierarchical systems! — fishfry
Is that more dangerous then folk invoking supernatural order? — apokrisis
And did you miss the bit where I said if you understand natural order, then you can actually answer the question of what else could you be doing? — apokrisis
But how can you even see that is what happened if you don’t understand the way nature works? — apokrisis
It is always concerning to see empirical observation and science challenged by ideology. — Judaka
Do you think moderating how the hierarchy functions insofar as how it is enforced, who rises upward, the power granted to each ring and so on, is the best way to avoid negative outcomes? — Judaka
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