Because to recognise a pattern is to simplify, — unenlightened
Because to recognise a pattern is to simplify, and it is the thing that science and philosophy and literature and music all lean towards; the making sense of complexity and its subsumption into a pattern.
It is the very substance of the faculty of understanding, and the whole basis of prediction. It is surely what big brains are evolved to do. — unenlightened
And this would seem to have it, but with some care in reading. The genus making - creating - the species recognising, and a part of recognising is use of memory. Pattern, then, a capacity to associate perception with memory and recognize similarities.Because to recognise a pattern is to simplify, and it is the thing that science and philosophy and literature and music all lean towards; the making sense of complexity and its subsumption into a pattern. — unenlightened
I have a vague memory of Wittgenstein's mentioning templates. All perception being a matter of the template laid over reality by the observer. — tim wood
the question as to what a pattern is — tim wood
No. "Recognition" is the term that denotes the mental aspect. You are muddying the waters. You define pattern as the ability to recognise similarities and that implies that pattern recognition is the capacity to recognise the capacity to to recognise similarities. Ugh!Pattern, then, a capacity to associate perception with memory and recognize similarities. — tim wood
I think that's all horseshit. — Srap Tasmaner
the noise within the signal in the noise — 180 Proof
Horses**t, eh? I refute you both jointly and severally thus: fuck you both.I think that's all horseshit.
— Srap Tasmaner
And so do I. — unenlightened
What is it (usually) made of? — tim wood
Yawn. The presumption behind this question is that substance is the only real. But take an example "some ducks in a row". And you doubt that this row and ask me what are rows usually made of. So I reply, usually they are made of fence posts, but in this case, it is made of ducks. Does that answer your question? — unenlightened
as a practical matter, rows make sense; a lot of things make sense. But but does not mean they exist out there — tim wood
It means you provide it. It isn't out there. Ducks in a row. Have you ever seen or watched ducks in a row? Whatever you understand by "row" ducks will give you cause to reassess and expand that understanding - or there were never were ducks in a row.So what does it mean? — unenlightened
Which naturally enough leads to - or should lead to - the question as to what a pattern is. — tim wood
Isn’t the fundamental characteristic of a pattern that it is a repeating sequence? — Wayfarer
from Chinese culture, an example comes to mind, which is the principle of ‘li’, derived from ‘the grain in wood’. It suggests a quality of naturalness or spontaneity which is esteemed in Chinese art. But it’s not a repeating pattern - unlike for example the patterned motifs you find in Greek pottery or Islamic architecture. So it’s not really a pattern, but still a principle, if that distinction can be made. — Wayfarer
And I do not think you will find disagreement. But answer this: what is a pattern? That is, pattern as pattern is a something or a nothing. If something, then what are some of its qualities/accidents, or even its substance. But it can certainly be an idea and without substance or accidents. Which, do you say?So, yeah, from where I'm standing at, philosophy is about patterns. — TheMadFool
And I do not think you will find disagreement. But answer this: what is a pattern? That is, pattern as pattern is a something or a nothing. If something, then what are some of its qualities/accidents, or even its substance. But it can certainly be an idea and without substance or accidents. Which, do you say? — tim wood
Interesting but I'm inclined to disagree. I think instead "the essence of philosophy" is pattern-less (pattern-loss) recognition within "pattern recognition", that is, meta-cognitively making explicit (i.e. less transparent to ourselves) the many 'holes fissures lacunae discontinuities gaps elisions ...' which our instinctive / habitual simplifications (i.e. generalizations) usually occlude, or course-grain out of our conceptual and theoretical discourses. "The essence" is to find the noise within the signal in the noise – never completely knowing what we think we know (Laozi, Democritus, Socrates, Pyrrho, Sextus Empiricus ...) After all, it's that crack in 'everything' that lets in (some) lumen rationale, no? — 180 Proof
It's a tendency in philosophy to look for the generalization that covers all the cases and we always lose but we can't resist trying. — Hillary Putnam
What is a row? Answer: nothing in itself, but that you make it so. — tim wood
Repeat? Repeat? Nothing in the world repeats. Repetition is a seeming. Or do you have an example of something in the world that repeats?that repeat in them — TheMadFool
Repeat? Repeat? Nothing in the world repeats. Repetition is a seeming. Or do you have an example of something in the world that repeats? — tim wood
That they're nothing else. They're ideas. Again, if anyone differs, thinking them real, make them real!You mentioned row and pattern. What exactly is it about these entities that make makes them mental , — Joshs
Seems so. And again, the utility of patterns as a practical matter is not challenged, but as with many things, the idea is projected onto and then supposed to originate in the thing or things. And this is supported by definition, (a) pattern is defined as. But that merely makes of the word a term of art, obscuring almost completely just what a pattern actually isFor instance , is what a row and a pattern have in common the fact they they are abstract relational concepts? — Joshs
I get up in the morning. Breakfast. Go to work. Lunch. Get home. Dinner. Sleep. Lather, rinse, repeat (Shampoo algorithm). — TheMadFool
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