This description suffers from the same criticism I made before: you're assuming 
a *strict* hierarchy, where the higher order can only operate over whole 
components from the lower order.  I.e. the gun's algorithm 1st chooses the 
type/medium of target (ballistic, air, water), then uses that type to select 
the specific tracking sub-algorithm.

And while this is mostly how it's done in artificial systems, I suspect biology 
does NOT use strict hierarchies.  A higher order function can operate over a 
mixture of operands, some complex wholes in that higher order and some from the 
lower orders.  E.g. if the gun's higher order selection is based not only on 
the 3 types (ballistic, air, water), but also on a lower order measure like 
*speed*, then it may well use he same sub-algorithm for both air and water.  
So, it takes both high order constructs and low order constructs as its 
operands.

You see your assumption of a strict hierarchy peeking through when you say sex 
is the only motive that is ESSENTIALLY social.  What do you mean by 
"essentially"?  Couldn't we say that *all* the behavior of all the social 
animals is, in part, social?  ... including following others to the water hole? 
 So, these functions would be mixed ... do not obey a strict hierarchy.

On 10/27/18 11:32 PM, Nick Thompson wrote:
> But the function that connects the two arrays will be different in the two 
> kinds of gun because a surface target is capable of different sorts of motion 
> from an aerial target.
> [...]
> So, the gun would display two levels of design, the lower level that relates 
> trajectory to firing and the higher level that relates the lower level design 
> to target type.
> [...]
> This conception of multiple hierarchical layers of design is a useful way to 
> describe many of the phenomena that ethologists and socio-biologists are 
> required to explain. …





-- 
∄ uǝʃƃ

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