Why does it be hierarchical? I do not see why it is so necessary to put Chemistry above social sciences. Is this means that one is more important than the other? — javi2541997
I am disagree when he states: Psychology is not applied biology, nor is biology applied chemistry. Why? I guess everything could be connected together, just a little bit. — javi2541997
In the other hand, where can we put philosophy itself in the levels? We can say, probably, that philosophy is above all the list, maybe? Because if we keep in mind the Greek classical thought we can be agree that critical thought, thus philosophy, has developed those hierarchical list — javi2541997
The hierarchy is of scale and complexity, not importance. Anderson is very clear about that. That's really the whole point of his paper and this thread. — T Clark
Philosophy isn't included in the hierarchy, it created it. — T Clark
I am disagree with him in terms that chemistry is more "complex" than social science. — javi2541997
That’s where the hierarchy of scale comes in. It represents an artificial division of the universe into manageable pieces. — T Clark
I think it's really about the questions we make. Or the answers we want to have.I think it reinforces my understanding that each level on the hierarchy of scale provides information and understanding not provided at the other levels. — T Clark
I think it's really about the questions we make. Or the answers we want to have. — ssu
As having read economics and as an economic historian, which the latter basically some even don't consider a "science", the obvious problem is subjectivity.But we shouldn't then think reality is mechanical. We should also work on an understanding of reality that is properly holistic. — apokrisis
Now when you make the leap from biology to sociology, the questions are so much different, that the answers basic biology can give hardly matter anymore. — ssu
Hence what is the role of "economics", can it be a "purely objective model of reality?" — ssu
Yet economics is the belief part. That belief part of believing that it can organize itself to survive and thrive is the problem. Belief is the problem.So the way to understand economics in the most general sense is that it is the way the organism that is a society believes it can organise itself to survive and thrive in a material and efficient cause fashion. — apokrisis
Because you look at it with the idea: "OK, let's organize the society to survive and thrive" and go with central planning or then say: "OK, let's have the society organize itself to survive and thrive" and go with free market capitalism. Or anything between. — ssu
Reductionists and holists mean different things when they talk about hierarchical order. — apokrisis
But a holist thinks dualistically in terms of upwards construction working in organic interaction with downwards constraint. So you have causality working both ways at once, synergistically, to produce the functioning whole. — apokrisis
(as hierarchy theorist, Stan Salthe, dubs it) — apokrisis
A simple analogy. If you want an army, you must produce soldiers. You must take average humans with many degrees of freedom (all the random and unstable variety of 18 year olds) and mould them in a boot camp environment which strictly limits those freedoms to the behaviours found to be useful for "an army". You must simplify and standardise a draft of individuals so that they can fit together in a collective and interchangeable fashion that then acts in concert to express the mind and identity of a "military force". — apokrisis
For example, it makes everything historically or developmentally emergent - the upward construction and the downward constraint. There is no fundamental atomistic grain - a collection of particles - that gets everything started. Instead, that grain is what gets produced by the top-down constraints. The higher order organisation stabilises its own ground of being in bootstrap fashion. It gives shape to the very stuff that composes it. — apokrisis
When you talk about downward constraints, are you just talking about the normal rules of the more complex level of the hierarchy, e.g. are chemical interactions constrained by the rules of biology, or is it something else? Where did those constraints come from if not constructed from below? — T Clark
I went to his web page and I'm reading some of his articles. — T Clark
This is a good analogy. It clarified things for me. I still don't get the mechanism that generates the constraints. — T Clark
Like termites and their castle — EugeneW
Constraints (or universals) only "exist" if they have proved to be of the right type to conjure a Cosmos into being out of raw possibility. — apokrisis
And that selection principle means nature is the product of whatever global rules did the best job at stabilising the means of its own bootstrapping existence. — apokrisis
How? Maximize what? How do you maximize "social cohesion" and "individual independence"? What do you really measure, if you want to maximize the two? Because to maximize something, you have to have the ability measure it.. It will be organised to maximise its social cohesion and its individual independence. — apokrisis
What burn rate?The larger problem is then the ecological setting of the sociocultural system in question - the thermodynamic equation that defines what is a functional "burn rate". — apokrisis
What general constraint? What is a functional, stable and persisting social organisation? We can have many ideas of just what is a "functional, stable and persisting social organisation". Yet shouldn't the society be dynamic, capable of adapting to changes where stability and the persistence of social organization might be a bad thing?The rate at which you can afford to eat your world sets the general constraint on what will prove to be a functional, stable and persisting social organisation. — apokrisis
It's not science. I have absolutely no clue of what kind of actual policies you would implement with that kind of description. It could be just anything... because you could give nearly any kind of definitions to the issue referred to.It's not rocket science. — apokrisis
the enclosure of exist in scare quotes is significant - because these constraints must pre-exist, in other words, existence itself depends on them, were they not so, then nothing would exist. — Wayfarer
Peirce said ' I call your attention to the fact that reality and existence are two different things.' — Wayfarer
But those rules can't be the result of an evolutionary process - they must pre-exist it. — Wayfarer
And so the irony is that complexity is mechanical - but the causal action reaches down from above rather than works its way up from below. — apokrisis
But those [global] rules can't be the result of an evolutionary process - they must pre-exist it. Biological evolution at least assumes the existence of species of some kind for any kind of natural selection to operate on, because species uniquely possess the attribute of seeking to continue surviving. — Wayfarer
Because to maximize something, you have to have the ability measure it. — ssu
What burn rate? — ssu
As I said, one person could define a "functional, stable and persisting social organisation" one way and another totally differently. So we have a problem. — ssu
I have absolutely no clue of what kind of actual policies you would implement with that kind of description. — ssu
Sure, in a laboratory we can make things, but nature doesn't think things out beforehand. But I doubt that either proposed upwards or downwards direction of natural complex development is logically possible or practicable. — magritte
Sure, in a laboratory we can make things, but nature doesn't think things out beforehand. — magritte
Start her up and see why she don't go!
In my mind, this argument started with the idea that everything we deal with on a day to day basis is at human scale, the scale of baseballs and baloney sandwiches. — T Clark
What do you make of theoretical physics, by and large an extension of math, math itself a very abstract (mental) subject/field? — Agent Smith
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