On Thu, Aug 8, 2024, 7:44 AM glen <geprope...@gmail.com> wrote: > No. I interact with the bullshit generators enough at work. I don't feel > the need to do so in my personal life, as well. But I appreciate the > invitation. >
Glen, yes "bullshit generators" can be slightly annoying at times ;-p Friam is a space to interact with them as I think they hold our collective wisdom and sometimes generate profound insights that I never would have considered on my own. <grin> > On 8/7/24 19:25, Nicholas Thompson wrote: > > Hmmmm! I wonder how Glenn would react to our requesting him to play this > game. I hate it because it depends so powerfully on the meanings of the > words in the question but I love it because it gives me a number. And of > course because of the company it puts me in. Who couldn’t enjoy a game that > puts me in the same space as Ludvig Wittgenstein > > > > Glen, will you play? Just for kicks! > > > > > > > > { > > "currentVector": { > > "deterministic": 0.5, > > "reductionism": 0.5, > > "empiricism": 1, > > "materialism": 1, > > "teleology": 0.01 > > }, > > "closestPhilosophers": [ > > { > > "name": "Daniel Dennett", > > "cosineDistance": "0.04" > > }, > > { > > "name": "Werner Heisenberg", > > "cosineDistance": "0.05" > > }, > > { > > "name": "David Hume", > > "cosineDistance": "0.05" > > }, > > { > > "name": "Niels Bohr", > > "cosineDistance": "0.05" > > }, > > { > > "name": "Ludwig Wittgenstein", > > "cosineDistance": "0.05" > > } > > ] > > } > > Sent from my Dumb Phone > > > > On Aug 7, 2024, at 2:12 PM, Stephen Guerin <stephen.gue...@simtable.com> > wrote: > > > > > > Nick, > > > > How do we think about "Telos"? I can't help myself - "Dan wheel out our > one-trick TensorPony" :-) > > > > Nick, this time you need to give us your tensor wrt to the philosophers > and scientists that have discussed telos according to Dan so I can get a > sense of where you are coming from. Copy and paste your result here. And > then you can suggest other dimensions or questions to ask to modify the > space. > > > > https://guerin.acequia.io/telosTensor.html < > https://guerin.acequia.io/telosTensor.html> > > <image.png> > > > > > > > > > > > > Dan picked these folks to establish the spanning set of the space. > > > > > > Philosophers and Scientists on Telos > > > > *Aristotle:* Introduced the concept of telos, arguing that everything in > nature has a purpose or goal it strives to achieve, which is fundamental to > understanding natural processes. > > > > *David Bohm:* Proposed the theory of the implicate order, suggesting a > deeper, orderly reality underlying apparent randomness, resonating with > teleological thinking. > > > > *Ludwig Boltzmann:* Focused on statistical mechanics and the behavior of > gases, emphasizing probabilistic interactions without invoking purpose. > > > > *Jean-Paul Sartre:* Proposed the existentialist view that life has no > inherent meaning, and that individuals must create their own purpose, > avoiding teleological explanations. > > > > *Michel Foucault:* Analyzed power, knowledge, and discourse, focusing on > societal structures without invoking teleological explanations, instead > emphasizing historical and social processes. > > > > *Richard Feynman:* Known for a pragmatic and non-teleological approach > to physics, emphasizing mathematical descriptions of physical phenomena > without resorting to purpose or goal-directed explanations. > > > > *Immanuel Kant:* Distinguished between appearances and the noumenal > world, arguing that teleological judgments are heuristic and do not reflect > the actual nature of reality. > > > > *Max Planck:* Believed in a fundamental consciousness underlying > reality, stating that all matter originates and exists by virtue of a force > governed by a conscious and intelligent mind, suggesting a teleological > dimension. > > > > *Erwin Schrödinger:* Explored the fundamental order and purpose in > living systems in his work, suggesting that physical laws govern biological > processes with an underlying direction. > > > > *Daniel Dennett:* Rejected teleological explanations in favor of > evolutionary and mechanistic accounts of consciousness and cognition. > > > > *Friedrich Nietzsche:* Rejected teleological explanations, emphasizing > that life and the universe do not have inherent purposes or goals, and > critiqued teleological views as human projections. > > > > *Roger Penrose:* Proposed ideas about the cyclical nature of the > universe and the role of consciousness in quantum processes, hinting at a > purposeful direction in both physical and mental realms. > > > > *Thomas Aquinas:* Integrated Aristotle's ideas into Christian theology, > emphasizing that everything in nature has a purpose designed by God. > > > > *Albert Einstein:* Believed in an underlying order and simplicity in the > universe, often speaking of the universe as comprehensible and governed by > rational principles, which can imply a teleological perspective. > > > > *Ilya Prigogine:* His work on dissipative structures suggests that > systems self-organize into ordered states, implying a form of goal-directed > evolution toward complexity. > > > > *John Archibald Wheeler:* Suggested that observers play a role in > bringing the universe into existence, hinting at a teleological aspect > where the universe's structure is influenced by the presence of observers. > > > > *Karl Marx:* Rejected teleological views of history, emphasizing > material conditions and class struggles as the drivers of historical change. > > > > *Stephen Guerin:* Explored the idea of autocatalytic processes in the > universe's self-organization, indicating a teleological aspect to the > evolution of complexity and structure. > > > > *Hans Jonas:* Argued that living organisms exhibit a fundamental > purposiveness and that life itself has an inherent teleological nature. > > > > *Henri Poincaré:* Analyzed celestial mechanics and dynamical systems, > focusing on deterministic chaos and system behavior without teleological > implications. > > > > *James Clerk Maxwell:* Developed equations describing electromagnetic > fields in a purely mathematical way, without implying any teleological > purpose. > > > > *Jacques Derrida:* Emphasized the instability of meaning and critiqued > metaphysical systems that impose teleological structures on language and > thought. > > > > *John Archibald Wheeler:* Suggested that observers play a role in > bringing the universe into existence, hinting at a teleological aspect > where the universe's structure is influenced by the presence of observers. > > > > *Ludwig Wittgenstein:* Focused on the use of language and meaning > derived from its context, avoiding metaphysical explanations that imply > purpose or goal-directedness. > > > > *Niels Bohr:* Emphasized probabilistic outcomes in quantum mechanics, > grounded in empirical observations and avoiding teleological > interpretations. > > > > *Paul Dirac:* Developed quantum mechanics and quantum field theory with > a focus on mathematical formalisms, describing particle behavior without > implying purpose. > > > > *Pierre Teilhard de Chardin:* Proposed an evolutionary teleology where > the universe and life progress toward greater complexity and consciousness, > culminating in the Omega Point. > > > > *Richard Feynman:* Developed the path integral formulation, suggesting > that the universe selects the path that minimizes action, which can be seen > as a mathematical form of goal-directed behavior. > > > > *Stuart Kauffman:* Proposed that the universe and life self-organize > through autocatalytic processes, indicating a teleological aspect to the > development of complexity and order. > > > > *Thomas Aquinas:* Integrated Aristotle's ideas into Christian theology, > emphasizing that everything in nature has a purpose designed by God. > > > > *Werner Heisenberg:* Described fundamental limits on measurement and > predictability through the uncertainty principle, avoiding any notion of > purpose in physical systems. > > > > > > > > > > Here's my result copied using the "copy my Elos Tensor" button on the > page showing the closest philosopher/scientists to me, according to Dan. > > > > <image.png> > > > > { > > "currentVector": { > > "deterministic": 0.1, > > "reductionism": 0.1, > > "empiricism": 0.1, > > "materialism": 0.1, > > "teleology": 1 > > }, > > "closestPhilosophers": [ > > { > > "name": "Stephen Guerin", > > "cosineDistance": "0.00" > > }, > > { > > "name": "Aristotle", > > "cosineDistance": "0.23" > > }, > > { > > "name": "Plato", > > "cosineDistance": "0.25" > > }, > > { > > "name": "David Bohm", > > "cosineDistance": "0.30" > > }, > > { > > "name": "Ilya Prigogine", > > "cosineDistance": "0.32" > > } > > ] > > } > > > > > > > > On Tue, Aug 6, 2024 at 3:09 PM Nicholas Thompson < > thompnicks...@gmail.com <mailto:thompnicks...@gmail.com>> wrote: > > > > Dear Phellow Phriammers, > > > > Ever since the days of Hywel White (GRHS) I have puzzled over the > fact that telic language so often appears in physics discussions. I used > to tease Hywel that Psychology must be the Mother of Physics, because he > had to use psychological terms to describe the motion of particles. More > recently, I have the same sort of discussions with Stephen Guerin who wants > to use telic language concerning the path of photons and least action. (I > hope I have this right, Stephen). You all have been tempted to think I am > just trolling, but I don't think I am. I think there may be places where > such descriptions are appropriate. I do think, for instance, that the > relation between the first derivative of a function and any point in that > function is analogous to the relation between the motivation of a behavior > and the behavior itself. > > > > i am back to weather again, after a vacation from it for my > obsession with unsuccessful vegetable gardening. Here is a quote from an > Atmospheric Dynamics text which is laying out the Coriolis Force. > > > > *What happens if we consider the hockey puck moving equator-ward > relative to the rotation of the Earth. In the absence of applied forces it > /must/ conserve angular momentum. Upon being pulled equator-ward in the > northern hemisphere the radius of rotation of the puck begins to > increase.Consequently, an anti-rotational relative motion/develops/ /in > order to/ conserve angular momentum, /[Italics by NST/] * > > > > In the view of folks on this list, is this an appropriate use of > telic language, and why or why not? Stephen has a defensible argument in > favor of it's appropriateness, the only such argument I have ever heard. ( > I don[t buy the premises, but the argument is sound) I am wondering about > the rest of you. > > > > > -- > ꙮ Mɥǝu ǝlǝdɥɐuʇs ɟᴉƃɥʇ' ʇɥǝ ƃɹɐss snɟɟǝɹs˙ ꙮ > > -. --- - / ...- .- .-.. .. -.. / -- --- .-. ... . / -.-. --- -.. . > FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv > Fridays 9a-12p Friday St. Johns Cafe / Thursdays 9a-12p Zoom > https://bit.ly/virtualfriam > to (un)subscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com > FRIAM-COMIC http://friam-comic.blogspot.com/ > archives: 5/2017 thru present > https://redfish.com/pipermail/friam_redfish.com/ > 1/2003 thru 6/2021 http://friam.383.s1.nabble.com/ >
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