I am sort of coming around to my original position. The non-hierarchical nature of the software at its core, has to be acknowledged. You can't just say it's a hierarchy because that's how the packets flow. It's a lot different than a pure hierarchical network. — fishfry
In network science, a hub is a node with a number of links that greatly exceeds the average. Emergence of hubs is a consequence of a scale-free property of networks. While hubs cannot be observed in a random network, they are expected to emerge in scale-free networks. The uprise of hubs in scale-free networks is associated with power-law distribution. Hubs have a significant impact on the network topology. Hubs can be found in many real networks, such as the brain or the Internet.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hub_(network_science)
pigmentation of a porphyry olive shell
lichen growth
zebra and giraffe coat patterns
hexagonal Bénard convection cells
spiral patterns produced by the Belousov-Zhabotinski reaction — Banno
I think that you would have to trample on those to destroy hierarchies? — Judaka
So Herbert A. Simon's analysis is a start, not the end. — Banno
Contains the articles: "The Organization of Complex Systems" by Herbert A. Simon; "The Hierarchical Order and Neogenesis" by Clifford Drobstein; "Hierarchical Control Programs in Biological Development" By James Bonner; "The Physical Basis and Origin of Hierarchical Control" by Howard H. Pattee; and, "The Limits of Complexity" by Richard Levins.
Empirically, a large proportion of the (complex) biological systems we observe in nature exhibit hierarchical structure. On theoretical grounds we could expect complex systems to be hierarchies in a world in which complexity had to evolve from simplicity. System hierarchies analysis performed in the 1950s, laid the empirical foundations for a field that would be, from the 1980s, hierarchical ecology.
The theoretical foundations are summarized by thermodynamics. When biological systems are modeled as physical systems, in its most general abstraction, they are thermodynamic open systems that exhibit self-organised behavior, and the set/subset relations between dissipative structures can be characterized in a hierarchy.
A simpler and more direct way to explain the fundamentals of the "hierarchical organization of life", was introduced in Ecology by Odum and others as the "Simon's hierarchical principle";[14] Simon[15] emphasized that hierarchy "emerges almost inevitably through a wide variety of evolutionary processes, for the simple reason that hierarchical structures are stable".
If you simply read over this thread you will see admissions from apokrisis that go exactly in this direction. — JerseyFlight
Instead of making hopeful sounds that people have no choice but to agree with you, why not make a considered argument. — apokrisis
Not all complex systems are hierarchies. — Banno
My entire discourse has been directed at potential tyranny. — JerseyFlight
...are you sure that Hierarchy Theory will not end up going in this direction? — JerseyFlight
fishfry, JerseyFlight and I don't agree. Not all complex systems are hierarchies. — Banno
Further, Apo says that it is science that backs his claim, while mixing in Hegel and Peirce. — Banno
Your questions are mind-numbingly monotonic. — apokrisis
So when hierarchies go bad? Or "all hierarchy is bad"? — apokrisis
there are tensions built into "what works". And over time we would expect those tensions manifest in ways that force change and achieve some better overall balance for the whole of that society. — apokrisis
But to hear you bleat on about "hierarchies are the slippery slope to tyranny" is just painful to listen to. — apokrisis
In any case how do you create a world where attraction is no longer an advantage for one and a disadvantage for another? — BitconnectCarlos
Cultivate a stronger cultural emphasis valuing quality of character above that of physical appearance. — JerseyFlight
So our societies make us what we are by placing limits on our actions. And if those limits are well adapted, then we will spend our lives expressing the resulting habits of action in ways that bring personal achievement while confirming those same rules of engagement. — apokrisis
The question you are asking me is negated by your metaphysics: "If tyrannies can persist, then hierarchy theory would demand that they have found some way to repair and reproduce their own fabric."
Which is contradicted by:
"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..." — JerseyFlight
So when you ask me about hierarchies versus hierarchy it is you who have made them the same thing, because by accepting them as normative you are also making the claim that they are socially intelligent standards. — JerseyFlight
I would like to go back to your example of the Roman army, because one might point out the similarities and differences between discipline there and in the modern army. — Judaka
For example, a restriction on behaviour for the purpose of discipline is necessary but the punishment for that in the Roman army might be execution or lashing, while in a modern army, the measures taken are substantially less severe. I think we could all agree that it is preferable to have the later approach though both undeniably function. Tyranny may become an issue where the Roman general has the complete authority to execute a soldier for a minor offence, whereas the authority of the modern general is far more constrained. — Judaka
It seems we have the ability to impose constraints on behaviours which don't merely sabotage the effectiveness of the hierarchy but also on those that result in infringements upon human rights or our ideas about fairness. To what extent is it practical for us to think that we can introduce such restrictions due the concerns we might have about hierarchies? I am really interested in what is unrealistic for us to try to manufacture and what we should be able to do to make society as fair and pleasant as possible. What parts of the hierarchical system can't be touched? — Judaka
The inevitability of hierarchies, yes but what about their functions and structure? And third, if no, then are hierarchies bad and/or is there a better alternative? — Judaka
The only actual chance you have here, to destroy this particular hierarchy is to impose rules that constitute the absolute greatest degree of tyranny. — Judaka
You are the most nurture-orientated thinker I've ever seen. — Judaka
Whether you like it or not how your brain functions is a matter of your maturation environment, most specifically the development of your attachment system — JerseyFlight
You were allowing Carlos' own insecurity to dictate the objective nature of the situation — JerseyFlight
If you want a better society you have to produce better humans, and if you want to grow better humans you have to give them a better environment and higher quality nutrients. — JerseyFlight
I believe in the power of thought too, but not to do the impossible, rather, to control the narrative through arranging truth. To render truth an irrelevance through control over the narrative is a simple thing done by everyone. — Judaka
What you mean by "functions" here is selective, because indeed, what is included in this "function" you describe? You are excluding a lot, emphasising some portion of the brain's activities. — Judaka
The burden of proof for characterisations like this, minuscule, but do not think that this applies only for you. To characterise you in unflattering ways is always a possibility for me, to do it to the extent that your ideas don't even have to be contended with, well, I'm sure you've seen that before, you can't be blind to this, can be done by a child. — Judaka
Your "truth" is personalised, it is a creation of yours, not something which I should accept unless I wish to relinquish all control. — Judaka
So in what technical sense is neoliberalism a tyranny? — apokrisis
A systems answer instead focuses on the reality that to exist, a system has to be - in some proper sense - functional. — apokrisis
So my ethical framework is the one that encompasses the usual dialectic of is~ought and reveals its many grades of semiosis, its various levels of hierarchical constraint on individual freedom. — apokrisis
The fact that it bolsters corporate hierarchies to the detriment of human potential. Privatizing economic sectors of public service to the disenfranchisement of individuals. Deregulation, austerity. Not sure what you need to know that you don't already know? — JerseyFlight
It might be helpful to talk about this in the language that network theory has created for itself. — apokrisis
So it had nothing to do with going non-hierarchical and everything to do with creating a new virtual stage where the information was divorced from the physics. — apokrisis
People let rip in this new world. And as is natural, hierarchical order resulted. We ended up with the influencer economy, Trump, cancel culture, and all those other good things. — apokrisis
Of course hierarchies have arisen in the software layer (Facebook, etc.), but they don't invalidate the basic point. — fishfry
Of course governments and corporations are getting a pretty good stranglehold on the Internet these days, which does support your point. — fishfry
Like the OP, you are applying a lay concept of a hierarchy. I am defending something else. — apokrisis
Yeah, I give up. If you don’t get network theory, then I’ll leave it there. — apokrisis
The OP hasn't seen fit to reply to me — fishfry
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