Like with natural selection, every critter is reaching for something, food or sex or security. The engine of life is this ever present absence. — frank
He says it's when we see arrangements, especially ones we love, that's when we attribute the cause to something absent. — frank
Thirty spokes share the wheel's hub;
It is the center hole that makes it useful.
Shape clay into a vessel;
It is the space within that makes it useful.
Cut doors and windows for a room;
It is the holes which make it useful.
Therefore benefit comes from what is there;
Usefulness from what is not there. — Lao Tzu
But natural selection is based on natural profligacy of species, environmental chaos, and shear dumb luck of being in the right place just at the right time. Natural selection is not directional nor emergent. — magritte
I suspect there is no qualitative difference here, that "strong emergence" is just what a billion years of "weak emergence" looks like.↪Olivier5 ↪ChatteringMonkey ↪schopenhauer1 ↪magritte
What if we worked toward a basic definition and then conquered Chalmers strong and weak emergence? — frank
I would add a few criteria, as follows:The IEP puts it this way:
"If we were pressed to give a definition of emergence, we could say that a property is emergent if it is a novel property of a system or an entity that arises when that system or entity has reached a certain level of complexity and that, even though it exists only insofar as the system or entity exists, it is distinct from the properties of the parts of the system from which it emerges. However, as will become apparent, things are not so simple because “emergence” is a term used in different ways both in science and in philosophy, and how it is to be defined is a substantive question in itself."
Structural strength: for an emerging form to perdure at all, the form must be structurally cohesive and/or self-sustaining. Otherwise the slightest perturbation in the environment would erase the form. A structure that emerges and then vanishes (like the waves in the OP) is not building up any emerging property over the long term. It emerges and then goes back to zero, and so does the next wave.
Cumulative: for emergence to go anywhere over the long run, it needs to build upon past emergence. So to qualify as real emergence, a structure or form has to maintain some of its structural gains over time (criteria of structural strength), long enough for another emerging form to happen, AND this new emerging form has to build upon the previous one (i.e. be cumulative).
Self-maintainance: because of entropy, an emerging form is generally subject to degenerescence and destruction. In order to satisfay criteria of structural strength and cumulativeness, an emerging form must therefore be able to repair itself, otherwise it is not going to last long enough for cumulative emergence to happen. — Olivier5
Good question. I suppose that various chemical bonds and forces would need to exist between components, bindings them in certain ways, for an emerging object or form to have any solidity. So one level of solidity is chemical.At what level is solidification happening? — schopenhauer1
So one level of solidity is chemical. — Olivier5
It is just arrangement of matter. Solid, liquid and gaseous phases are well known physical concepts about how atoms "connect" or not with one another. — Olivier5
I guess I should say, at what perspective is this happening? — schopenhauer1
I think I'll make another thread to discuss the book in, this one can remain for more general discussion of emergence. — frank
It implies - me think - a capacity for small emerging events to build up to something bigger, hence emergence needs to be somewhat cumulative and self-sustaining over long periods of time. — Olivier5
Ok, I wouldn't limit emergence to that just yet... but fair enough. — ChatteringMonkey
So at what epistemic level is a non-viewer based emergent event happening. — schopenhauer1
This is a contradiction in terms, because "epistemic" implies a viewer. More generally, there is no such thing as a view from nowhere. — Olivier5
I agreed with you. It also think some kind of perspective-taking is baked into the concept of emergence. That's not to say there not something there regardless of our perception of it which we capture with the concept. Just that it doesn't make sense to try to look at it completely divorced from any perspective... because the concept is invented so that we - who necessarily view things from a certain perspective - could make sense of the world. — ChatteringMonkey
"epistemic" implies a viewer. More generally, there is no such thing as a view from nowhere. — Olivier5
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