Well, I can't speak for the people advocating the AP, which I couldn't do 
because I'm too ignorant of what the users of the term mean by it.  But I agree 
with you they seem to be talking about social systems more so than biological 
systems.  It reminds me of Luhmann's extrapolation of autopoiesis into social 
systems to some extent ... and maybe even the forking of pragmatism that you 
seem to care about.

But my *guess* is that these nudges you're talking about would fit well.  I like to think 
of things like the credit default swap snafu back in 2008 as technology.  They're 
certainly in the category of "economic goods".  And combining such financial 
tech with traditional real property seems like a perfect example of a move into an AP ... 
to questionable result.  In that spirit, manipulating clock time to sell more/less ice 
cream ... or to limit brown outs of the power grid or some other such thing, seems to fit 
as well.  But, again, unless someone who knows what they're talking about speaks up, I 
wouldn't trust my guesses.

On 4/1/19 11:10 PM, Nick Thompson wrote:
Would these be social examples of the principle you are talking about?  One of the ways 
in which I "nudge" myself (being a diabetic) is to get me to stop eating 
icecream I mandate that this is the last bite, I scoop it out with a spoon, as LARGE as 
the spoon can hold, but then I put the icecream back in the freezer, and, carrying the 
spoon with me, go into another room before I eat it.

This is a classic nudge.


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