Robert,
Now we are getting somewhere.! ! But I need to know, oddly enough, what you mean by deterministic. I assume you mean NOT deterministic but unfathomable. As I understand the term, all complex systems are deterministic, but are unfathomable because of their exquisite dependency on initial conditions. Am I wrong? Nick Nicholas Thompson nickthompson at earthlink.net http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson ----- Original Message ----- From: Robert Holmes To: nickthompson at earthlink.net;The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group Sent: 11/28/2005 9:28:10 PM Subject: Re: [FRIAM] The possibility of self knowledge On 11/28/05, Nicholas Thompson <nickthompson at earthlink.net> wrote: <snip> What is it that you think you are doing when I ask you "How are you?" that a computer couldnt do? Nick Responding emotionally, not deterministically Robert -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://redfish.com/pipermail/friam_redfish.com/attachments/20051128/d932dddd/attachment.htm |
Hi Nick,
Nope, I really do mean deterministic. First up, you can make a complex system out of a bunch of deterministic relations but that doesn't mean you have to. You can make a complex system out of stochastic relations as well. Secondly, you don't always get a sensitivity with respect to initial conditions. For example the logistic equation x <- kx(1-x) is only chaotic for k > 3.57. Below that it has fixed point attractors or shows period-doubling. So what does this have to do with my computer? Well I'm not sure that my computer is a complex system, but even if it is when I'm just playing around with it (like now) it's close enough to an attractor that it gives consistent answers to the question of (say) what is your CPU loading. It doesn't matter whether I opened Word first or Firefox, my CPU still says that it's running around 10%. (Actually that's a pretty convincing proof that a my PC's CPU performance isn't well-described as a complex system. It doesn't display much sensitivity to initial conditions at all.) Anyway, to a pretty good approximation it's a (non-complex) deterministic system. And I'm not. The answer to the question "how are you?" is highly stochastic and is affected (but not determined) by my temporal distance from my last coffee, how well I slept last night, who I've just seen on CNN, whether that irritating pain in my back is still there etc etc. Robert On 11/28/05, Nicholas Thompson <nickthompson at earthlink.net> wrote: > > Robert, > > Now we are getting somewhere.! > ! But I need to know, oddly enough, what you mean by deterministic. I > assume you mean NOT deterministic but unfathomable. As I understand the > term, all complex systems are deterministic, but are unfathomable because of > their exquisite dependency on initial conditions. > > Am I wrong? > > Nick > > Nicholas Thompson > nickthompson at earthlink.net > http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson<http://home.earthlink.net/%7Enickthompson> > > > > ----- Original Message ----- > *From:* Robert Holmes <rholmes62 at gmail.com> > *To: *nickthompson at earthlink.net;The Friday Morning Applied Complexity > Coffee Group <Friam at redfish.com> > *Sent:* 11/28/2005 9:28:10 PM > *Subject:* Re: [FRIAM] The possibility of self knowledge > > > > On 11/28/05, Nicholas Thompson <nickthompson at earthlink.net> wrote: > > > > <snip> > > What is it > > that you think you are doing when I ask you "How are you?" that a > > computer > > couldnt do? > > > > Nick > > > Responding emotionally, not deterministically > > Robert > > An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://redfish.com/pipermail/friam_redfish.com/attachments/20051128/4c34332b/attachment.htm |
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