Selection, Reproductive rate, and Karrying Kapacity.

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Selection, Reproductive rate, and Karrying Kapacity.

Nick Thompson

All,
 
Here are some comments on various comments.   I succumb, reluctantly, to the community norm about caps.
 
[grumble, grumble]
 
Glen Said ====>
 
The idea of expansion and contraction is
interesting: rapid expansion of populations
(when selection is relaxed) vs. rapid contraction
of populations (when selection is intensified).
 
The human population went indeed through a
phase of rapid expansion in the last decades while
natural selection was released through cultural
and technological progress.
 
Seed Magazine has an article about human
evolution and relaxed selection, too
 
Nick Replies ===>
 
I think this is a confusion between carrying capacity and selection.  When, for some reason, carrying capacity is increased, the whole population can expand, but this does not stop selection.  It may change the nature of selection from tracking how well individuals can make use of limited resources to how fast they can reproduce when times are flush, but there is no reason to think that raising the carrying capacity should "relax" selection. 
 
Russell Wrote ===>
 
Any extinction event is a collapse of the food web. And selection only
proceeds by means of extinction. So I'm not really quite sure what
you're trying to nuance here.
 
Nick Replies ===>
 
OK.  Here is where we disagree, I think.  Let's worry this a bit, before we talk about anything else, because it seems absolutely central:  When talking about selection, at what level of organization are we speaking?  Gene, individual, small group, "deme", species, ecosystem?  etc.  I grew up under the influence of George Williams who argued that no entity above the individual could serve as a level of selection and  of Richard Dawkins, who argued that no entity above the level of the gene could serve as a level of selection.  So, in my world, species level selection is not a powerful cause of evolution.   Indeed, on some definitions, species, by definition, cannot compete.  Now, in the last decade, I have thrown off Williams' shackles and started to talk about selection at the level of the small group.  And, indeed, I do know that some others have started talking about species-level selection.   But species level selection has not become the received view, has it????  If not, the statement above must be EXTREMELY [whoops, _extremely_] controversial. 
 
Let's pause here and see what others say. 
 
 
Nick
 
 
Nicholas S. Thompson
Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Ethology,
Clark University ([hidden email])
 
 
 


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Re: Selection, Reproductive rate, and Karrying Kapacity.

glen ep ropella

No.  That wasn't me that said that.  It was Jochen.  I added the
content-less post quoting Ehrlich.

Thus spake Nicholas Thompson circa 10/13/2008 11:18 AM:

> Glen Said ====>
>
> The idea of expansion and contraction is interesting: rapid expansion
> of populations (when selection is relaxed) vs. rapid contraction of
> populations (when selection is intensified).
>
> The human population went indeed through a phase of rapid expansion
> in the last decades while natural selection was released through
> cultural and technological progress.
>
> Seed Magazine has an article about human evolution and relaxed
> selection, too
> http://www.seedmagazine.com/news/2008/10/how_we_evolve_1.php <===
>
> Nick Replies ===>
>
> I think this is a confusion between carrying capacity and selection.
> When, for some reason, carrying capacity is increased, the whole
> population can expand, but this does not stop selection.  It may
> change the nature of selection from tracking how well individuals can
> make use of limited resources to how fast they can reproduce when
> times are flush, but there is no reason to think that raising the
> carrying capacity should "relax" selection.

--
glen e. p. ropella, 971-219-3846, http://tempusdictum.com


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Re: Selection, Reproductive rate, and Karrying Kapacity.

Phil Henshaw-2
In reply to this post by Nick Thompson

I agree with most of Nick’s hesitations (except re: all caps…. :-))     Population expansion would increase the variety of individuals to be selected from, though.    I think that was the idea behind Terry Deacon’s theory, still with variation being random and constant, and using the same old tautology that change is caused by what survives.     That there are several levels of (mostly unexplained) organization and the need for selection to somehow differentiate between them, and to do so differently for every organism in the environment, has always been a problem for me in seeing selection as the primary hand of ‘design’.   When I build things that way it never works…    Still, if there are times of great variety in emerging designs and generous environmental capacities for all to flourish, one of the newbies may be the one that survives when the tide turns to drought and famine…   That’s sure how it works in economies, and ecologies are indeed natural economies.

 

One thing I don’t see addressed by changing selective pressures to vary rates of evolution is the possibility of, and apparent need for, ‘mutations’ that have low rates of destroying the whole organism.    Punctuated equilibrium seems to imply that there are rare periods when the success rate of diverse interrelated mutations is a lot higher than the rest of the time.    That there is some kind of switch that turns whole system malleability on and off.      If you just had a little greater likelihood of mutations at the periphery of the genome’s design, whatever that is, in preference to it’s central structures, it would produce a lot more variation in functional design in proportion to dysfunctional design.      In that plankton paper of mine I also broadly speculate on particular mechanisms for that.   That seems to be the same issue Kirschner and Gerhart are getting at when subtitling their book “resolving Darwin’s dilemma” and by some of the other EvoDevo models I keep hearing about where variation trees rather than random disruptions are the key to inventing new things that work .     

 

Phil

 

From: [hidden email] [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Nicholas Thompson
Sent: Monday, October 13, 2008 2:18 PM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: [FRIAM] Selection, Reproductive rate, and Karrying Kapacity.

 

All,

 

Here are some comments on various comments.   I succumb, reluctantly, to the community norm about caps.

 

[grumble, grumble]

 

Glen Said ====>

 

The idea of expansion and contraction is

interesting: rapid expansion of populations

(when selection is relaxed) vs. rapid contraction

of populations (when selection is intensified).

 

The human population went indeed through a

phase of rapid expansion in the last decades while

natural selection was released through cultural

and technological progress.

 

Seed Magazine has an article about human

evolution and relaxed selection, too

 

Nick Replies ===>

 

I think this is a confusion between carrying capacity and selection.  When, for some reason, carrying capacity is increased, the whole population can expand, but this does not stop selection.  It may change the nature of selection from tracking how well individuals can make use of limited resources to how fast they can reproduce when times are flush, but there is no reason to think that raising the carrying capacity should "relax" selection. 

 

Russell Wrote ===>

 

Any extinction event is a collapse of the food web. And selection only

proceeds by means of extinction. So I'm not really quite sure what

you're trying to nuance here.

 

Nick Replies ===>

 

OK.  Here is where we disagree, I think.  Let's worry this a bit, before we talk about anything else, because it seems absolutely central:  When talking about selection, at what level of organization are we speaking?  Gene, individual, small group, "deme", species, ecosystem?  etc.  I grew up under the influence of George Williams who argued that no entity above the individual could serve as a level of selection and  of Richard Dawkins, who argued that no entity above the level of the gene could serve as a level of selection.  So, in my world, species level selection is not a powerful cause of evolution.   Indeed, on some definitions, species, by definition, cannot compete.  Now, in the last decade, I have thrown off Williams' shackles and started to talk about selection at the level of the small group.  And, indeed, I do know that some others have started talking about species-level selection.   But species level selection has not become the received view, has it????  If not, the statement above must be EXTREMELY [whoops, _extremely_] controversial. 

 

Let's pause here and see what others say. 

 

 

Nick

 

 

Nicholas S. Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Ethology,

Clark University ([hidden email])

 

 

 


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Re: Selection, Reproductive rate, and Karrying Kapacity.

Russ Abbott
In reply to this post by Nick Thompson
One of my favorite books of the year is David Sloan Wilson's Evolution for Everyone. Wilson has been arguing for multi-level selection for quite a while -- and as far as I'm concerned he makes very good points.

The fundamental insight is that everything is both a group and an individual.  And hence virtually anything can evolve at the individual level -- even if it's a group.

Wilson likes talking about religions (or religious groups united by religious practices) as an example of a group that competes evolutionarily.  He argues that religious that promote hard work, support of fellow members of one's religious community, etc. tend to succeed.

He also tells the story of the experient in which groups of hens were allowed to evolve. It was done in two ways.

1. Start with (say) a dozen cages, each with a certain number of hens. At the end of a given time, the best egg-layer in each cage were bred to create a second generaation of cages.  Continue for a certain number of generations.

2. Start the same way, but after each generation, breed the best cage, regardless of how its individual members performed.  Continue for a certain number of generations.

The result: breeding cages was much more successful than breeding individuals. In this case it turns out that breeding individuals produced macho hens who pecked each other to death. Breeding cages produced cooperative hens who lived happily with each other and produced lots of eggs.

The larger lesson is that groups often embody structures that support the group's success. To enable those structures the group needs members who play various roles. Simply selecting the most productive members of a group and rewarding them breaks down the group structure.

-- Russ


On Mon, Oct 13, 2008 at 11:18 AM, Nicholas Thompson <[hidden email]> wrote:

All,
 
Here are some comments on various comments.   I succumb, reluctantly, to the community norm about caps.
 
[grumble, grumble]
 
Glen Said ====>
 
The idea of expansion and contraction is
interesting: rapid expansion of populations
(when selection is relaxed) vs. rapid contraction
of populations (when selection is intensified).
 
The human population went indeed through a
phase of rapid expansion in the last decades while
natural selection was released through cultural
and technological progress.
 
Seed Magazine has an article about human
evolution and relaxed selection, too
 
Nick Replies ===>
 
I think this is a confusion between carrying capacity and selection.  When, for some reason, carrying capacity is increased, the whole population can expand, but this does not stop selection.  It may change the nature of selection from tracking how well individuals can make use of limited resources to how fast they can reproduce when times are flush, but there is no reason to think that raising the carrying capacity should "relax" selection. 
 
Russell Wrote ===>
 
Any extinction event is a collapse of the food web. And selection only
proceeds by means of extinction. So I'm not really quite sure what
you're trying to nuance here.
 
Nick Replies ===>
 
OK.  Here is where we disagree, I think.  Let's worry this a bit, before we talk about anything else, because it seems absolutely central:  When talking about selection, at what level of organization are we speaking?  Gene, individual, small group, "deme", species, ecosystem?  etc.  I grew up under the influence of George Williams who argued that no entity above the individual could serve as a level of selection and  of Richard Dawkins, who argued that no entity above the level of the gene could serve as a level of selection.  So, in my world, species level selection is not a powerful cause of evolution.   Indeed, on some definitions, species, by definition, cannot compete.  Now, in the last decade, I have thrown off Williams' shackles and started to talk about selection at the level of the small group.  And, indeed, I do know that some others have started talking about species-level selection.   But species level selection has not become the received view, has it????  If not, the statement above must be EXTREMELY [whoops, _extremely_] controversial. 
 
Let's pause here and see what others say. 
 
 
Nick
 
 
Nicholas S. Thompson
Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Ethology,
Clark University ([hidden email])
 
 
 


============================================================
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Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org


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Re: Selection, Reproductive rate, and Karrying Kapacity.

Nick Thompson
In reply to this post by Nick Thompson
Russ,
 
Yes.  I agree.  However, the problem with the chicken experiment is that the chickens in the cages were SISTERS.  Not a problem, obviously, for the purposes of egg production, but for peace and quiet of group selection theorists, not so great. 
 
You could double the readership my paper on this subject by going to http://www.behavior.org/journals_bp/index.cfm?page=http%3A//www.behavior.org/journals_bp/BP_welcome.cfm
 

Behavior and Philosophy, 28, 83-101 (2000). © 2000 Cambridge Center for Behavioral Studies

Take care,

 
Nick Nicholas S. Thompson
Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Ethology,
Clark University ([hidden email])
 
 
 
 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: 10/13/2008 3:14:43 PM
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Selection, Reproductive rate, and Karrying Kapacity.

One of my favorite books of the year is David Sloan Wilson's Evolution for Everyone. Wilson has been arguing for multi-level selection for quite a while -- and as far as I'm concerned he makes very good points.

The fundamental insight is that everything is both a group and an individual.  And hence virtually anything can evolve at the individual level -- even if it's a group.

Wilson likes talking about religions (or religious groups united by religious practices) as an example of a group that competes evolutionarily.  He argues that religious that promote hard work, support of fellow members of one's religious community, etc. tend to succeed.

He also tells the story of the experient in which groups of hens were allowed to evolve. It was done in two ways.

1. Start with (say) a dozen cages, each with a certain number of hens. At the end of a given time, the best egg-layer in each cage were bred to create a second generaation of cages.  Continue for a certain number of generations.

2. Start the same way, but after each generation, breed the best cage, regardless of how its individual members performed.  Continue for a certain number of generations.

The result: breeding cages was much more successful than breeding individuals. In this case it turns out that breeding individuals produced macho hens who pecked each other to death. Breeding cages produced cooperative hens who lived happily with each other and produced lots of eggs.

The larger lesson is that groups often embody structures that support the group's success. To enable those structures the group needs members who play various roles. Simply selecting the most productive members of a group and rewarding them breaks down the group structure.

-- Russ


On Mon, Oct 13, 2008 at 11:18 AM, Nicholas Thompson <[hidden email]> wrote:

All,
 
Here are some comments on various comments.   I succumb, reluctantly, to the community norm about caps.
 
[grumble, grumble]
 
Glen Said ====>
 
The idea of expansion and contraction is
interesting: rapid expansion of populations
(when selection is relaxed) vs. rapid contraction
of populations (when selection is intensified).
 
The human population went indeed through a
phase of rapid expansion in the last decades while
natural selection was released through cultural
and technological progress.
 
Seed Magazine has an article about human
evolution and relaxed selection, too
 
Nick Replies ===>
 
I think this is a confusion between carrying capacity and selection.  When, for some reason, carrying capacity is increased, the whole population can expand, but this does not stop selection.  It may change the nature of selection from tracking how well individuals can make use of limited resources to how fast they can reproduce when times are flush, but there is no reason to think that raising the carrying capacity should "relax" selection. 
 
Russell Wrote ===>
 
Any extinction event is a collapse of the food web. And selection only
proceeds by means of extinction. So I'm not really quite sure what
you're trying to nuance here.
 
Nick Replies ===>
 
OK.  Here is where we disagree, I think.  Let's worry this a bit, before we talk about anything else, because it seems absolutely central:  When talking about selection, at what level of organization are we speaking?  Gene, individual, small group, "deme", species, ecosystem?  etc.  I grew up under the influence of George Williams who argued that no entity above the individual could serve as a level of selection and  of Richard Dawkins, who argued that no entity above the level of the gene could serve as a level of selection.  So, in my world, species level selection is not a powerful cause of evolution.   Indeed, on some definitions, species, by definition, cannot compete.  Now, in the last decade, I have thrown off Williams' shackles and started to talk about selection at the level of the small group.  And, indeed, I do know that some others have started talking about species-level selection.   But species level selection has not become the received view, has it????  If not, the statement above must be EXTREMELY [whoops, _extremely_] controversial. 
 
Let's pause here and see what others say. 
 
 
Nick
 
 
Nicholas S. Thompson
Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Ethology,
Clark University ([hidden email])
 
 
 


============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org


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Re: Selection, Reproductive rate, and Karrying Kapacity.

Russell Standish
In reply to this post by Nick Thompson
On Mon, Oct 13, 2008 at 12:18:11PM -0600, Nicholas Thompson wrote:

>
> Russell Wrote ===>
>
> Any extinction event is a collapse of the food web. And selection only
> proceeds by means of extinction. So I'm not really quite sure what
> you're trying to nuance here.
>
> Nick Replies ===>
>
> OK.  Here is where we disagree, I think.  Let's worry this a bit, before we talk about anything else, because it seems absolutely central:  When talking about selection, at what level of organization are we speaking?  Gene, individual, small group, "deme", species, ecosystem?  etc.  I grew up under the influence of George Williams who argued that no entity above the individual could serve as a level of selection and  of Richard Dawkins, who argued that no entity above the level of the gene could serve as a level of selection.  So, in my world, species level selection is not a powerful cause of evolution.   Indeed, on some definitions, species, by definition, cannot compete.  Now, in the last decade, I have thrown off Williams' shackles and started to talk about selection at the level of the small group.  And, indeed, I do know that some others have started talking about species-level selection.   But species level selection has not become the received view, has it????  If no!
>  t, the statement above must be EXTREMELY [whoops, _extremely_] controversial.  
>
> Let's pause here and see what others say.  
>

I don't think there is disagreement, more a difference in
perspective. You are focussing on short term evolutionary change, aka
microevolution. I'm more interested in long term evolutionary change,
or macro evolution, which is composed of speciation and extinctions.

Of course evolution must proceed via changing genetic frequencies, as
otherwise how will a single mutation come to dominate an entire gene
pool. However, once established, a given haplotype will rarely become
extinct in a sexually reproducing population unless that population is
very small, and that will only happen in a genetic bottleneck or true
species extinction.

Nothing of what I said earlier has anything to do with the group
selection debate (although I do tend to think, along with EO Wilson,
that group selection effects exist). It just comes from think of the
mechanics of evolution at an ecosystem scale, where species are the
individual components of the ecosystem. In this view, a dramatic
change in behaviour of a species (say radical alteration of prey
species, or successful defence against some previous predator) that is
not in response to a change elsewhere in the food web, would
really constitute a new species, even if technically the new and old
versions could still interbreed.

--

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Mathematics                        
UNSW SYDNEY 2052                 [hidden email]
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Re: Selection, Reproductive rate, and Karrying Kapacity.

Phil Henshaw-2
In reply to this post by Russ Abbott

Russ,

 

That’s a good example about the difference between breeding for the best bird vs. the best bird environment, but they don’t immediately seem to address whether variation is developmental or random.     It’s tricky to find the hard evidence, but I don’t know of anyone saying they could show statistically that random variation would be constructive either.     My hint is that the organizational processes we can observe the workings of generally do exhibit developmental variation, like we use in any programming or other design process.  

 

Once you think of the first part in the design, the process that seems to work better for people is adding a second related part, *if the first seemed to work*, and that way extending variations from prior variations experimentally, rather than randomly.    It takes some effort to imagine how genetic variation could be ‘tree like’ instead of helter skelter…  but there a number of ways.  What you need is for competitive advantage to multiply related variations.   

 

In any case individual organism growth and development is clearly a branching process, and speciation seems to clearly be an extension of a prior branching process.   Maybe speciation occurs by a branching process too.    In speciation the form of the organism appears to extend its developmental trees as whole, all at once, something that a tree like variation process could do and a random variation process very likely not.   So that’s what I think would be sensible to look for.     

 

Besides, tree-like development could do one thing that random variation can’t, produce developmental step changes that begin and end.  That’s what is apparently displayed by my little plankton.  I’d really love to have the $’s to do a photo animation of how the smooth to then bulgy shapes on it’s shell changed through the dips and turns of it’s dramatic changes in size from one to another stable form.

 

Phil

 

From: [hidden email] [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Russ Abbott
Sent: Monday, October 13, 2008 5:15 PM
To: [hidden email]; The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Selection, Reproductive rate, and Karrying Kapacity.

 

One of my favorite books of the year is David Sloan Wilson's Evolution for Everyone. Wilson has been arguing for multi-level selection for quite a while -- and as far as I'm concerned he makes very good points.

The fundamental insight is that everything is both a group and an individual.  And hence virtually anything can evolve at the individual level -- even if it's a group.

Wilson likes talking about religions (or religious groups united by religious practices) as an example of a group that competes evolutionarily.  He argues that religious that promote hard work, support of fellow members of one's religious community, etc. tend to succeed.

He also tells the story of the experient in which groups of hens were allowed to evolve. It was done in two ways.

1. Start with (say) a dozen cages, each with a certain number of hens. At the end of a given time, the best egg-layer in each cage were bred to create a second generaation of cages.  Continue for a certain number of generations.

2. Start the same way, but after each generation, breed the best cage, regardless of how its individual members performed.  Continue for a certain number of generations.

The result: breeding cages was much more successful than breeding individuals. In this case it turns out that breeding individuals produced macho hens who pecked each other to death. Breeding cages produced cooperative hens who lived happily with each other and produced lots of eggs.

The larger lesson is that groups often embody structures that support the group's success. To enable those structures the group needs members who play various roles. Simply selecting the most productive members of a group and rewarding them breaks down the group structure.

-- Russ

On Mon, Oct 13, 2008 at 11:18 AM, Nicholas Thompson <[hidden email]> wrote:

All,

 

Here are some comments on various comments.   I succumb, reluctantly, to the community norm about caps.

 

[grumble, grumble]

 

Glen Said ====>

 

The idea of expansion and contraction is

interesting: rapid expansion of populations

(when selection is relaxed) vs. rapid contraction

of populations (when selection is intensified).

 

The human population went indeed through a

phase of rapid expansion in the last decades while

natural selection was released through cultural

and technological progress.

 

Seed Magazine has an article about human

evolution and relaxed selection, too

 

Nick Replies ===>

 

I think this is a confusion between carrying capacity and selection.  When, for some reason, carrying capacity is increased, the whole population can expand, but this does not stop selection.  It may change the nature of selection from tracking how well individuals can make use of limited resources to how fast they can reproduce when times are flush, but there is no reason to think that raising the carrying capacity should "relax" selection. 

 

Russell Wrote ===>

 

Any extinction event is a collapse of the food web. And selection only

proceeds by means of extinction. So I'm not really quite sure what

you're trying to nuance here.

 

Nick Replies ===>

 

OK.  Here is where we disagree, I think.  Let's worry this a bit, before we talk about anything else, because it seems absolutely central:  When talking about selection, at what level of organization are we speaking?  Gene, individual, small group, "deme", species, ecosystem?  etc.  I grew up under the influence of George Williams who argued that no entity above the individual could serve as a level of selection and  of Richard Dawkins, who argued that no entity above the level of the gene could serve as a level of selection.  So, in my world, species level selection is not a powerful cause of evolution.   Indeed, on some definitions, species, by definition, cannot compete.  Now, in the last decade, I have thrown off Williams' shackles and started to talk about selection at the level of the small group.  And, indeed, I do know that some others have started talking about species-level selection.   But species level selection has not become the received view, has it????  If not, the statement above must be EXTREMELY [whoops, _extremely_] controversial. 

 

Let's pause here and see what others say. 

 

 

Nick

 

 

Nicholas S. Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Ethology,

Clark University ([hidden email])

 

 

 


============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org

 


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Re: Selection, Reproductive rate, and Karrying Kapacity.

Phil Henshaw-2
In reply to this post by Russell Standish
Russ & Nick,
Regarding multilevel selection, aren't there multi-level systems involved?
Certainly a change in cell behavior affects the organism, and the local
pack, and larger population, and the local ecology too.  But you also have
reverse effects in that the larger scale orders greatly alter what each
lower order differences will make a difference.  Then there's the
interesting aspect that some kinds of complex systems overlap in lots of
ways, like complexly varied ecosystems with many intersecting levels, and so
a simple hierarchy is not what is operating either.  

What can, if you follow it through, straighten all that out is considering
systems as individual exploratory networks.  Then you can still have
independent ones that overlap and they still work fine, and all of them can
have a role in mediating selection for all the others.


Phil Henshaw                                  ¸¸¸¸.·´ ¯ `·.¸¸¸¸
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
680 Ft. Washington Ave NY NY 10040                      
tel: 212-795-4844   e-mail: [hidden email]     explorations:
www.synapse9.com   
"it's not finding what people say interesting, but finding the interest in
what they say"




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