Pat et al, 

Interesting.  This seems to me like differences in the stage of understanding.

Nick 

Nicholas S. Thompson
Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology
Clark University
http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/


-----Original Message-----
From: Friam [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of glen
Sent: Tuesday, December 29, 2015 9:21 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[email protected]>
Subject: [FRIAM] thick and thin (was Physicists and Philosophers ...)


I'm not very satisfied with the granularity of the thick/thin metaphor.  My 2 
stints in the valley caused me to describe most of the solutions being 
generated as "flat", contrasted with the "deeper" solutions I enjoy more. But I 
gradually stopped using that and went back to using "systemic" to describe the 
more plaited and layered solutions.  Even that's flawed, but tends to get at 
the point with less metaphor.

Although it may seem like a dual, talking of the problems rather than the 
solutions, also changes the conversation.  (Something obliquely broached at the 
end of that blog entry "... Or, sometimes, once you have developed the answer, 
there is a ‘thin’ way of confirming your answer ...".

The point being that this "Silicon Valley style" (because it's everywhere, not 
just there) involves an assumption that there are simple solutions to complex 
problems.  To me, that's the mistake.  _Sometimes_ perhaps there is.  But more 
often, the solution is just as, if not more, complex than the problem.  This is 
why Shannon's Theorem 10 lodged itself in my mind.  While it's true that the 
"rationalists" (and other idealists) seem to fail in recognizing the complexity 
of the problem, the "Silicon Valley style" (SVS) doesn't make that mistake very 
often.  The mistake it makes is assuming there is a 10-fold RoI waiting to be 
plundered _when_, not if, the simple solution is found to that complex 
problem.[*]

That's why I balk when libertarianism is associated with SVS.  Big "L" 
Libertarianism makes 2 errors, whereas SVS (usually) only makes the 1.

Another feature of SVS is the older accusation of adhering to the "Great Man 
Theory", which is rampant in self-help books, which are an offspring of New 
Thought and prophet-based religions. (John Galt was a minor, ignorable fable.)  
This may seem like a non sequitur, but it's directly related to the "thin 
confirmation of an answer to a thick problem".  It's the oversimplification and 
abstraction of the solution from the context.  And it also relates directly to 
the distinction between types of empiricism in that the idealization of an 
actual person (e.g. Einstein) distorts the scientific content surrounding that 
period of history.  It's most obvious in all the garbage produced by cranks who 
claim, say, that the Michelson-Morley experiment was flawed and Einstein was 
wrong.  Empiricists who rely on citations (rather than the ability to perform 
their own tests) have to tolerate the cranks to some extent, and rely on 
meta-scientific bureaucracy like peer review and credentials (like degr ees).

Anyway, I think the thick vs. thin metaphor might be just as guilty of 
oversimplification as the other ideals being discussed in the thread.


[*] I submit that the solutions are almost never simple, but the context (time, 
place, right group of people, right complement of tech, etc.) is arranged in a 
configuration so that the solution "clicks" ... like a complicated puzzle with 
lots of pieces coming together to exhibit a phenomenon "more than the sum of 
its parts".  The SVS pattern is to cherry-pick some arbitrary part of that 
configuration and say "There's the simple solution!"  As Pamela pointed out, 
it's useless to talk about the other parts of the solution being ignored.


On 12/29/2015 12:43 AM, Patrick Reilly wrote:
> On thick & thin problems:
> 
> Excerpt:
> 
> I would call this a classic ‘thick’ problem, one in which an analyst 
> needs to deal with an enormous amount of data of varying quality.  
> Being smart is necessary but not sufficient: you also need to know lots of  
> stuff.
> 
> 
> 
> Link:
> 
> https://westhunt.wordpress.com/2012/06/06/thick-and-thin/

--
--
⊥ glen ⊥

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