Phil, 

"Loosing one's temper" is a wonderful example, because it contains all the 
paradoxes we are discussing and more.  You point to loosing temper as if were 
something knowable in an instant.  But the knowledge required to perceive a 
loosing of temper is smeared across history and space.  I did not have enough 
of that history to recognize loss of temper in the present instance, although, 
given your longer history with you, I yield to your authority in the matter. 
But note that I grant you that authority NOT because you had privileged access 
to the state of your mind or brain at the moment of losing, but because of your 
greater experience with your responses to being bent in the heat of argument 
over time . 

For any who have the patience to read further, let me say that this 
conversation has made me look like a dyed in the wool Hempelian, which it would 
be bad form to confess to.  Hempelians believe in the Rule of Law;  they think 
explanations are just a matter of showing that a present event accords to a 
lawful relation in the past.  If my ringing of bells in Santa Fe had been 
correlated with the absence of alligators in the past, then that historical 
(exceptionless) association would constitute an explanation of the present 
absence of alligators.  

I think if myself as a Hessean.  Hesseans believe in the rule of metaphor.  If 
agreed that "Phil had lost his temper", I would be importing my knowledge of 
the properties of steel bars under heating (vast knowledge!!!) to the 
description of my prior knowledge of variation's in peoples resiliency in the 
heat of the moment.  Thus, not only is causality immanent in the past (rather 
than being evident in the present) it involves a metaphor applied from 
situations where the relation is less ambiguous ... billiard balls, etc.  

If anybody is listening and has wondered how to be a Hempelian Hessean, I need 
all the help I can get.  

Nick 




----- Original Message ----- 
From: Phil Henshaw 
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED];The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Sent: 11/18/2007 7:13:17 AM 
Subject: RE: [FRIAM] FRIAM and causality


Nick,
Well, ... You say causation is not the sort of thing one can point to.   I can, 
however, point to my loosing my temper, be readily understood, and surmise 
accurately that if I had better sense I might say the same things more 
helpfully without that...   Thanks for not taking offense!

I think maybe you're not using the physical system sense of 'cause', but the 
abstract association of images sense of 'cause'.   You would be completely 
correct that as close as one might inspect physical hammers and nails you'll 
never find an '=' sign.   I think that's what you may be looking for, though.   
I'm trying to offer the perspective that the very lack of an '=' sign in 
physical processes indicates they arrange their causations in a different way.  
 

The procedure I found fruitful for that was to carefully study individual 
measures over time of changes in individual events involving things such as 
hammers and nails.   I didn't rest the inspection of the data on the remarkable 
synchrony of events sometimes visible.    I found an even more telling bit of 
info in their asynchrony, specifically all the time lags of apparent 
disconnection.   There are truly suspicious gaps in any sequence of energy 
transfers, filled with 'natural system dead air' it seems.  During them there 
is either nothing observable happening or there are growth processes that 
indicate independent local development.  My conclusion is that it's in those 
time lags that physical system causal processes locally develop.

You can locate them with a series of logical questions.  For example, it's hard 
to begin the hammer stroke that ends in hitting the nail with a down stroke... 
First you need an up stroke, etc.   That leads you back to the moments after 
the carpenter formed an image of the hammer hitting the nail, followed by the 
arousal of his arm in preparation for the targeted explosion of effort, and 
then the cascade of numerous complex muscular and body flesh and frame 
processes producing the growth of energy transfer that first infinitesimally 
disturbs the hammer's quiet, first beginning its uplift.  It's not just that 
the measure of the hammer's movement appears disconnected in relation to the 
measures of other things.  Its that the growth process that begins its movement 
and is observable in the measure, can be traced to an independent local complex 
network developmental process.

I don't have the equipment to record it, but I'm fairly sure such equipment 
exists, to show the same sort of complex developmental lags at each stage.  In 
the contact of hammer head and nail head there would be the same lags and 
explosions of local emerging system processes.  They would reflect the 
individual molecular organization processes instrumental to the energy 
transfer.   The physics is that the laws of conservation absolutely require 
them, i.e. periods of progressive change to eliminate infinite rates of change, 
and usually you can find them.

Certainly, it's a lot of bother to think of all the details, and handy to just 
clip one or two static images and throw in an '=' sign in our minds.  That's 
often an effective 'stand-in' for the physical events, and we just ignore the 
remainder...   Ignoring the remainder, and offering our own abstractions as the 
more profound form of nature, does not make them a useful substitute for 
physical causation when the ruse doesn't work, even if it is titillating and 
works great for long periods.

Sorry for the rancor, though.     I'm very concerned that the global 
sustainability movement is making the largest possible mistake.    We're well 
on our way to wasting the very narrow time lag between seeing the wall of 
consequences approaching and loosing any chance of changing our method of 
approach.



Phil Henshaw                       ¸¸¸¸.·´ ¯ `·.¸¸¸¸
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
680 Ft. Washington Ave 
NY NY 10040                       
tel: 212-795-4844                 
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]          
explorations: www.synapse9.com    
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Nicholas Thompson
Sent: Sunday, November 18, 2007 2:00 AM
To: friam@redfish.com
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] FRIAM and causality


Phil, 

I dont think I denied anything off the sort.  You sure can point at a hammer; 
you sure can point at a nail. You an even point at the hammer in contact with 
the nail.  I would even stipulate that you can point at the hammer hitting the 
nail.   What you cannot point at is the hammer causing the nail to enter the 
wood, because causing is not the sort of thing that can be pointed at.  .  

Nick 


----- Original Message ----- 
From: phil henshaw 
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED];The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group 
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]; caleb.thompson
Sent: 11/17/2007 9:32:21 PM 
Subject: RE: [FRIAM] FRIAM and causality


But why can't you accept the existence of physical things?   

All language derives its meaning from connecting you with things outside its 
structure after all, since anything purely self-referential is meaningless.   
Why even attempt to eliminate pointing at things that are beyond definition, 
the age old functional method, and why not treat images alone, however high you 
pile them, as hopelessly flimsy and inadequate contraptions to substitute for 
the simple useful act of 'look'? Don't we need to get off the kick of thinking 
what's in our brains is so all fired important?

We live in a world that is truly physically exploding with the unmanageable 
complexity of our multiplying overlapping contraptions, which we try to act 
like we don't notice, though the evidence is starkly clear in the daily 
accelerating change in how we all live.    You thought endless growth in 
multiplying resource extraction was bad for the earth.   Wait till you see 
growth without resources, on pure complication.   That's what those economist 
fellows call 'decoupling', the  perpetual motion machines the authors of the 
IPCC climate models decided will allow mankind to continually multiply wealth 
without effect.   We might just as well propose the whole lot of us lift off 
the planet in a swirl of pixy dust!    This is our planet and our watch, and 
we're missing the physical process about to destroy several centuries of hard 
forged real investment in making it a descent place to live, because we won't 
intellectually tolerate the existence of things that aren't in our minds.    
What's 'out there' beyond our minds may well be completely undefinable, and 
even 'meaningless' in the sense that it's not something our minds are able to 
make, but it's what actually does matter.    You might even find it oddly 
familiar, perhaps looking from the perspective with which our natural faculties 
evolved...  :-,)

Phil


Phil, 

OK.  So, it's images all the way down, so we cant get any traction there.  I 
suppose one might argue that a single hammering and a pattern of hammerings (if 
you will) exist at different levels of organization, and you might prefer one 
level to another for some reason external to this argument.  So far, so good.

But my position is that the attribution of causality forces you either to 
myth-making OR to the higher level of organization.  The first level of 
organization at which one can know hammer causality is the level many 
experiences with hitting nails with hammers and seeing them go into wood or or 
not, and not hitting nails with hammers and not seeing them go into wood or 
not, etc., ad nauseam.  So, in my idiotic postivisitic mode, I assert,   that 
pattern IS what causality is.  I mean why would one bother to attribute it 
anywhere else than where we know it.  

I have been thinking this way with respect to such mental attributions as 
motivation, emotion, feeling, etc, for years and only recently realized that 
these arguments apply as well to such  "hard-science" terms as disposition, 
cause and probability.  This tendency to hypostize complex relations into 
phantom single instances seems to go deep.  In fact, where would differential 
calculus be without it???!  

With respect to probability, Frank Wimberly has shaken my confidence a bit by 
reminding me that some probability attributions arise by deduction from theory, 
rather than induction from experience.   I guess I have to qualify my basic 
assertion to say that to the extent that the attribution that the hammer drove 
the nail into the wood derives from experience, it derives  from our experience 
with hammers and nails, etc., in general, rather than our experience with this 
hammer and this nail in this instance.  

All the best, 

Nick 




----- Original Message ----- 
From: Phil Henshaw 
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED];The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group 
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]; caleb.thompson
Sent: 11/16/2007 4:41:46 PM 
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] FRIAM and causality


NIck, 
Didn't you place the only things that physcally cause anything, the individual 
hammers and the individual nails in the direct action of driving a nail, in the 
place of the 'unreal' in you argument?    The things that don't actually exist 
except in our minds, the categories of hammers and of nails and their 
presumptive relation in an orderly arrangement of ideas, you seemed to treat as 
being real and causal.    Doesn't that what you mean depends on what you're 
using the words to refer to, the physical things on one hand, or the relations 
of images on the other?    Perhaps they're different, and a good bit of the 
con-fusion occurs as a result of not being clear about which we're referring 
to. 

Phil

 
On 11/12/07, Nicholas Thompson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 
"The truth arises from arguments amongst friends" -- David Hume

One of my goals at Friam, believe it or not, is actually to get some 
fundamental issues settled amongst us.  We had, last week, a brisk discussion 
about causality.   I don't think I was particularly articulate, and so, to push 
that argument forward, I would like to try to state my position clearly and 
succinctly.    

The argument was between some who felt that causality was "real" and those that 
felt that it was basically a figment of our imaginations.    The argument may 
seem frivolous, but actually becomes of consequence anytime anyone starts to 
think about how one proves that X is the cause of Y.  Intuitively, X is the 
cause of Y if Y is X's "fault".  To say that X is the cause of Y is to accuse X 
of Y.   Given my current belief that story-telling is at the base of 
EVERYTHING, I think you convince somebody that X is the cause of Y just by 
telling the most reasonable story in which it seems obvious that Y would not 
have occurred had not X occurred.  But there is no particular reason that the 
world should always be a reasonable place, and therefore, it is also ALWAYS 
possible to tell an UNREASONABLE story that shows that Y's occurrence was not 
the responsibility of X, no matter how reasonable the original causal 
attribution is.  One of us asked for a hammer and nail, claiming that if he 
could but drive a nail into the surface of one of St. John's caf? tables, none 
of us would be silly enough to doubt that his hammering had been the cause of 
the nails penetration of the table.  Not withstanding his certainty on this 
matter, several of us instantly offered to be JUST THAT SILLY!  We would claim, 
we said, that contrary to his account, his hammering had had nothing to do with 
the nail's penetration, but that the accommodating molecules of wood directly 
under the nail had randomly parte d and sucked the nail into their midst.   

How validate a reasonable causal story against the infinite number of 
unreasonable causal stories that can always be proposed as alternatives.   By 
experience, obviously.  We have seen hundreds of cases where nails were driven 
into wood when struck by hammers (and a few cases where the hammer missed the 
nail, the nail remained where it was, and the thumb was driven into the wood.)  
 Also, despite its theoretical possibility, none of us has EVER seen a real 
world object sucked into a surface by random motion of the surface's molecules. 
 So it is the comparative analysis of our experience with hammers and nails 
that would have convinced us that the hammering had driven in the nail.   

            So what is the problem?  Why did we not just agree to that 
proposition and go on?  The reason to me is simple: the conventions of our 
language prevent us from arriving at that conclusion.   We not only  say that 
Hammers Cause Nails to embed in tables, which is what we know to be true, we 
also  say that THIS Hammer caused THIS nail to be embedded in the wood.  Thus 
our use of causality is a case of misplaced concreteness.   Causality is easily 
attributed to the pattern of relations amongst hammers and nails, but we err 
when we allow ourselves to assert that that higher order pattern is exhibited 
by any of its contributory instances.   In fact, that in our experience the 
missed nails have not been driven into the wood is as much a real part of our 
notions of causality and hammering as the fact that a hit nail is.    Causality 
just cannot be attributed to an individual instance.   

            The fallacy of misplaced concreteness is so widespread in our 
conversation that we could barely speak without it,  but it is a fallacy all 
the same.  Other instances of it are intentions, dispositions, personality 
traits, communication, information etc., etc., and such mathematical fictions 
as the slope of a line at a point.    Whenever we use any of these terms, we 
attribute to single instances properties of aggregates of which they are part.  

            Now, how do we stop arguing about this?  First of all, we stop and 
give honor to the enormous amount of information that actually goes into making 
a rational causal attribution that hammering causes embedding, information 
which is not available in any of its instances.   Second, we then stop and give 
honor to  the incredible power of the human mind to sift through this data and 
identify patterns in it.  Third, and finally,  we stop and wonder at whatever 
flaw it is in our evolution, our neurology, our cognition, our culture, or our 
language that causes us to lodge this knowledge in the one place it can never 
be … single instances.  

            Are we done?

Nick 


Nicholas S. Thompson
Research Associate, Redfish Group, Santa Fe, NM ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Professor of Psychology and Ethology, Clark University ([EMAIL PROTECTED])




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-- 

Phil Henshaw                       ¸¸¸¸.·´ ¯ `·.¸¸¸¸ 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
680 Ft. Washington Ave 
NY NY 10040                       
tel: 212-795-4844                 
explorations: www.synapse9.com 
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Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
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