anonymity/deniability/ambiguity

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anonymity/deniability/ambiguity

jon zingale
Glen,

I really like where you are going with this.
I hope to find some time today to sit with these
ideas and produce some notes for tomorrow.

Jon

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Re: anonymity/deniability/ambiguity

Frank Wimberly-2
Bendito Espinoza (Spanish version) apparently did not believe in the transcendent God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.  Nor did he believe that men are constrained by the Ten Commandments*.  He was declared "herem", a very severe action.

My daughter's former Muslim mother-in-law would say "Haram, Haram" about the alcoholic beverages sold at her husband's convenience store.

Said without authoritatian motive.

*Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

---
Frank C. Wimberly
140 Calle Ojo Feliz,
Santa Fe, NM 87505

505 670-9918
Santa Fe, NM

On Thu, May 21, 2020, 9:34 AM Jon Zingale <[hidden email]> wrote:
Glen,

I really like where you are going with this.
I hope to find some time today to sit with these
ideas and produce some notes for tomorrow.

Jon
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Re: anonymity/deniability/ambiguity

gepr
Ha! Nice one. We have only the "apparently" qualifier to guide our decoder choice.

I forget the phrase Jon used, but I thought "humility signalling" when he mentioned it and I described being accused of false humility (in a friendly way). By peppering one's assertions with "I think" and "in my opinion" and/or regularly denigrating oneself (all of which I do a lot), yet continuing to *act* arrogant and defending one's assertions to the grave, have we descended to playing some game of false humility? ... are we expected to pepper everything we say this way and purposefully hide our arrogance and self-centeredness?

I honestly have no idea. I could easily be a raging narcissist who's *learned* to manipulate people by peppering my language with self-denigration and IMO qualifiers. Or (as it feels internally), I am actually scared to death that I'm a moron surrounded by super-intelligent beings and I'm just desparate to stay in the game. I seriously have no idea which is the case ... probably a little bit of both. 8^D


On 5/21/20 8:46 AM, Frank Wimberly wrote:
> Bendito Espinoza (Spanish version) apparently did not believe in the transcendent God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.  Nor did he believe that men are constrained by the Ten Commandments*.  He was declared "herem", a very severe action.
> [...]
> Said without authoritatian motive.


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uǝʃƃ ⊥ glen
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Re: anonymity/deniability/ambiguity

Frank Wimberly-2
Reminds me of when I was an undergraduate at Berkeley.  I had a TA in History of Philosophy who was a Harvard graduate.  Sport coat, bow tie, horn-rimmed glasses, etc.  In the food court the walked up to one of the workers and said, "I think this milk is spoiled."  The guy said "You THINK it's spoiled?"  "Well, I know it's spoiled.  I was just being more or less polite."

Decoder cues:  Berkeley, history of philosophy.

We're beginning to really communicate, Glen.

Frank


On Thu, May 21, 2020 at 10:19 AM uǝlƃ ☣ <[hidden email]> wrote:
Ha! Nice one. We have only the "apparently" qualifier to guide our decoder choice.

I forget the phrase Jon used, but I thought "humility signalling" when he mentioned it and I described being accused of false humility (in a friendly way). By peppering one's assertions with "I think" and "in my opinion" and/or regularly denigrating oneself (all of which I do a lot), yet continuing to *act* arrogant and defending one's assertions to the grave, have we descended to playing some game of false humility? ... are we expected to pepper everything we say this way and purposefully hide our arrogance and self-centeredness?

I honestly have no idea. I could easily be a raging narcissist who's *learned* to manipulate people by peppering my language with self-denigration and IMO qualifiers. Or (as it feels internally), I am actually scared to death that I'm a moron surrounded by super-intelligent beings and I'm just desparate to stay in the game. I seriously have no idea which is the case ... probably a little bit of both. 8^D


On 5/21/20 8:46 AM, Frank Wimberly wrote:
> Bendito Espinoza (Spanish version) apparently did not believe in the transcendent God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.  Nor did he believe that men are constrained by the Ten Commandments*.  He was declared "herem", a very severe action.
> [...]
> Said without authoritatian motive.


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140 Calle Ojo Feliz
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505 670-9918

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Re: anonymity/deniability/ambiguity

gepr
Don't be fooled. "The problem with communication is the illusion that it exists." Or ie I believe in a stronger form of privacy than you believe in.

On 5/21/20 9:29 AM, Frank Wimberly wrote:
> We're beginning to really communicate, Glen.

--
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Re: anonymity/deniability/ambiguity

Steve Smith
In reply to this post by gepr
I like this "turn of events" where the subject of the discussion is
somewhat self-referential and is peeling away it's own veneers as it were.

Regarding "false humility",  I find myself *avoiding* those qualifiers
sometimes *out of respect* to my audience.   I feel like, in a group
like this, that those qualifiers are painfully implicit, especially
among regular contributors.

For example, I don't read Frank as "aggressively authoritative" (or was
it authoritarian) at all, but perhaps because I've spent a little time
with him in person and recognize that in a long and interesting life, he
has lots of direct or second order encounters with various "authorities"
in different fields, who he can quote with ... ahem... "authority of
personal experience".  (and I may be mischaracterizing this for Frank,
so he may need to correct what I impute/impugne here).

I believe we are generally agreed here that we don't trust "proof by
authority" but most of us still defer to authority for a shared sense of
what has gone before, what is generally accepted, from whence the
language of a topic is rooted.  

I think this extra level of "signalling" you refer to is deeply
instinctual and helps to reinforce (for better AND worse)
ingroup/outgroup structures...  which we tend to think of as *bad
things* but in fact,  I believe that the self-other boundary is key to
complex organization.   CHON molecules form lipid and protein and
carbohydrate chains which then combine and/or fold into macromolecules
which then self-organize into larger structures like cytoskeletal
membrane, cell walls, etc. which continue to "stack" via self-other
differentiation/aggregation on up in complexity.   I'm not sure how many
identifiable layers deep of such stacking humans are (with the conscious
mind as an emergent property of the hominid or mammalian or vertebrate
neurology), but the self-other differentiation is right in the middle of
it all.

mumble,

 - Steve


> Ha! Nice one. We have only the "apparently" qualifier to guide our decoder choice.
>
> I forget the phrase Jon used, but I thought "humility signalling" when he mentioned it and I described being accused of false humility (in a friendly way). By peppering one's assertions with "I think" and "in my opinion" and/or regularly denigrating oneself (all of which I do a lot), yet continuing to *act* arrogant and defending one's assertions to the grave, have we descended to playing some game of false humility? ... are we expected to pepper everything we say this way and purposefully hide our arrogance and self-centeredness?
>
> I honestly have no idea. I could easily be a raging narcissist who's *learned* to manipulate people by peppering my language with self-denigration and IMO qualifiers. Or (as it feels internally), I am actually scared to death that I'm a moron surrounded by super-intelligent beings and I'm just desparate to stay in the game. I seriously have no idea which is the case ... probably a little bit of both. 8^D
>
>
> On 5/21/20 8:46 AM, Frank Wimberly wrote:
>> Bendito Espinoza (Spanish version) apparently did not believe in the transcendent God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.  Nor did he believe that men are constrained by the Ten Commandments*.  He was declared "herem", a very severe action.
>> [...]
>> Said without authoritatian motive.
>


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Re: anonymity/deniability/ambiguity

Steve Smith
In reply to this post by gepr

On 5/21/20 10:32 AM, uǝlƃ ☣ wrote:
> Don't be fooled. "The problem with communication is the illusion that it exists." Or ie I believe in a stronger form of privacy than you believe in.
I KNOW! I know just what you mean!

<note to Frank...  one of the species of animal in this group is "the
Contrarian", but you probably already guessed that>


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Re: anonymity/deniability/ambiguity

thompnickson2
Trolling alert:

Are there circumstances in which Frank might have a better decoder of Glen's behavior than Glen have?   Come to think of it, what is it to have a 'good' decoder?  

N

Nicholas Thompson
Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology
Clark University
[hidden email]
https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/
 


-----Original Message-----
From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Steve Smith
Sent: Thursday, May 21, 2020 10:50 AM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] anonymity/deniability/ambiguity


On 5/21/20 10:32 AM, uǝlƃ ☣ wrote:
> Don't be fooled. "The problem with communication is the illusion that it exists." Or ie I believe in a stronger form of privacy than you believe in.
I KNOW! I know just what you mean!

<note to Frank...  one of the species of animal in this group is "the Contrarian", but you probably already guessed that>


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Re: anonymity/deniability/ambiguity

Marcus G. Daniels
In reply to this post by Steve Smith
I notice now that when I make e-mails Glen-ready, that some mechanized editors advise that the text should be more direct, and strongly-worded.  (

On 5/21/20, 9:48 AM, "Friam on behalf of Steve Smith" <[hidden email] on behalf of [hidden email]> wrote:

    I like this "turn of events" where the subject of the discussion is
    somewhat self-referential and is peeling away it's own veneers as it were.

    Regarding "false humility",  I find myself *avoiding* those qualifiers
    sometimes *out of respect* to my audience.   I feel like, in a group
    like this, that those qualifiers are painfully implicit, especially
    among regular contributors.

    For example, I don't read Frank as "aggressively authoritative" (or was
    it authoritarian) at all, but perhaps because I've spent a little time
    with him in person and recognize that in a long and interesting life, he
    has lots of direct or second order encounters with various "authorities"
    in different fields, who he can quote with ... ahem... "authority of
    personal experience".  (and I may be mischaracterizing this for Frank,
    so he may need to correct what I impute/impugne here).

    I believe we are generally agreed here that we don't trust "proof by
    authority" but most of us still defer to authority for a shared sense of
    what has gone before, what is generally accepted, from whence the
    language of a topic is rooted.  

    I think this extra level of "signalling" you refer to is deeply
    instinctual and helps to reinforce (for better AND worse)
    ingroup/outgroup structures...  which we tend to think of as *bad
    things* but in fact,  I believe that the self-other boundary is key to
    complex organization.   CHON molecules form lipid and protein and
    carbohydrate chains which then combine and/or fold into macromolecules
    which then self-organize into larger structures like cytoskeletal
    membrane, cell walls, etc. which continue to "stack" via self-other
    differentiation/aggregation on up in complexity.   I'm not sure how many
    identifiable layers deep of such stacking humans are (with the conscious
    mind as an emergent property of the hominid or mammalian or vertebrate
    neurology), but the self-other differentiation is right in the middle of
    it all.

    mumble,

     - Steve


    > Ha! Nice one. We have only the "apparently" qualifier to guide our decoder choice.
    >
    > I forget the phrase Jon used, but I thought "humility signalling" when he mentioned it and I described being accused of false humility (in a friendly way). By peppering one's assertions with "I think" and "in my opinion" and/or regularly denigrating oneself (all of which I do a lot), yet continuing to *act* arrogant and defending one's assertions to the grave, have we descended to playing some game of false humility? ... are we expected to pepper everything we say this way and purposefully hide our arrogance and self-centeredness?
    >
    > I honestly have no idea. I could easily be a raging narcissist who's *learned* to manipulate people by peppering my language with self-denigration and IMO qualifiers. Or (as it feels internally), I am actually scared to death that I'm a moron surrounded by super-intelligent beings and I'm just desparate to stay in the game. I seriously have no idea which is the case ... probably a little bit of both. 8^D
    >
    >
    > On 5/21/20 8:46 AM, Frank Wimberly wrote:
    >> Bendito Espinoza (Spanish version) apparently did not believe in the transcendent God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.  Nor did he believe that men are constrained by the Ten Commandments*.  He was declared "herem", a very severe action.
    >> [...]
    >> Said without authoritatian motive.
    >


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Re: anonymity/deniability/ambiguity

gepr
In reply to this post by thompnickson2
Marcus' post hides my own response to your question. There is no good decoder. There is only a good choice of decoders, fit to purpose. Going back to Lovecraft, I used to live next door to someone who believed in the Illuminati, the bad formulation, and the "12 men who rule the world". I'm confident he actually believed it because we had many many conversations over badly made margaritas watching the rafters go by on the river. His goal was to make just enough money to go off grid before they recognized him as a threat.

When I'd talk to him, I decoded Lovecraft as a Freemason for the purpose of a) confirming his ideas just enough to get him to listen to me (e.g. there *is* something very much like the Illuminati) and b) show him that *some* of those guys aren't as Machiavellian or as Evil as he may think they are.

But when I talk to my fantasy/sci-fi friends, Lovecraft is just a super-dork in the EA Poe, D&D, gamer, category.

You choose your decoder.

On 5/21/20 9:51 AM, [hidden email] wrote:
> Are there circumstances in which Frank might have a better decoder of Glen's behavior than Glen have?   Come to think of it, what is it to have a 'good' decoder?  


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uǝʃƃ ⊥ glen
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Re: anonymity/deniability/ambiguity

Marcus G. Daniels
< There is no good decoder. There is only a good choice of decoders, fit to purpose. >

Did you decode something other than Batshit Crazy?  

I took my dog to the vet, suspecting congestive heart failure.   The vet took some x-rays, and directed me to a cardiologist.  Meanwhile he agreed to the usual treatment which worked.   After waiting for an opportunity to see the cardiologist (now with a functioning dog) he said it was a standard case after taking more x-rays and an echocardiogram.

My point is sometimes things are just as they seem to be.    No fancy decoders needed and only time wasted sorting it out.

Marcus

From: Friam <[hidden email]> on behalf of uǝlƃ ☣ <[hidden email]>
Sent: Thursday, May 21, 2020 11:07 AM
To: FriAM <[hidden email]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] anonymity/deniability/ambiguity
 
Marcus' post hides my own response to your question. There is no good decoder. There is only a good choice of decoders, fit to purpose. Going back to Lovecraft, I used to live next door to someone who believed in the Illuminati, the bad formulation, and the "12 men who rule the world". I'm confident he actually believed it because we had many many conversations over badly made margaritas watching the rafters go by on the river. His goal was to make just enough money to go off grid before they recognized him as a threat.

When I'd talk to him, I decoded Lovecraft as a Freemason for the purpose of a) confirming his ideas just enough to get him to listen to me (e.g. there *is* something very much like the Illuminati) and b) show him that *some* of those guys aren't as Machiavellian or as Evil as he may think they are.

But when I talk to my fantasy/sci-fi friends, Lovecraft is just a super-dork in the EA Poe, D&D, gamer, category.

You choose your decoder.

On 5/21/20 9:51 AM, [hidden email] wrote:
> Are there circumstances in which Frank might have a better decoder of Glen's behavior than Glen have?   Come to think of it, what is it to have a 'good' decoder? 


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Re: anonymity/deniability/ambiguity

Frank Wimberly-2
In reply to this post by Steve Smith
Clinicians often call that "being oppositional".  

You say that I've known authorities.  I was just talking to John Baez about my advisor Errett Bishop, often called the inventor of constructive mathematics.  Here is a constructive proof, with no use of the excluded middle, of the irrationality of sqrt(2) that I found in Wikipedia.  Apologies to those who don't care:

In a constructive approach, one distinguishes between on the one hand not being rational, and on the other hand being irrational (i.e., being quantifiably apart from every rational), the latter being a stronger property. Given positive integers a and b, because the valuation (i.e., highest power of 2 dividing a number) of 2b2 is odd, while the valuation of a2 is even, they must be distinct integers; thus |2b2 − a2| ≥ 1. Then[17]

{\displaystyle \left|{\sqrt {2}}-{\frac {a}{b}}\right|={\frac {|2b^{2}-a^{2}|}{b^{2}\left({\sqrt {2}}+{\frac {a}{b}}\right)}}\geq {\frac {1}{b^{2}\left({\sqrt {2}}+{\frac {a}{b}}\right)}}\geq {\frac {1}{3b^{2}}},}

the latter inequality being true because it is assumed that a/b ≤ 3 − 2 (otherwise the quantitative apartness can be trivially established). This gives a lower bound of 1/3b2 for the difference |2 − a/b|, yielding a direct proof of irrationality not relying on the law of excluded middle; see Errett Bishop (1985, p. 18). This proof constructively exhibits a discrepancy between 2 and any rational.


On Thu, May 21, 2020 at 10:50 AM Steve Smith <[hidden email]> wrote:

On 5/21/20 10:32 AM, uǝlƃ ☣ wrote:
> Don't be fooled. "The problem with communication is the illusion that it exists." Or ie I believe in a stronger form of privacy than you believe in.
I KNOW! I know just what you mean!

<note to Frank...  one of the species of animal in this group is "the
Contrarian", but you probably already guessed that>


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Frank Wimberly
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Re: anonymity/deniability/ambiguity

Frank Wimberly-2
The badly rendered part:

{\displaystyle \left|{\sqrt {2}}-{\frac {a}{b}}\right|={\frac {|2b^{2}-a^{2}|}{b^{2}\left({\sqrt {2}}+{\frac {a}{b}}\right)}}\geq {\frac {1}{b^{2}\left({\sqrt {2}}+{\frac {a}{b}}\right)}}\geq {\frac {1}{3b^{2}}},}



On Thu, May 21, 2020 at 11:30 AM Frank Wimberly <[hidden email]> wrote:
Clinicians often call that "being oppositional".  

You say that I've known authorities.  I was just talking to John Baez about my advisor Errett Bishop, often called the inventor of constructive mathematics.  Here is a constructive proof, with no use of the excluded middle, of the irrationality of sqrt(2) that I found in Wikipedia.  Apologies to those who don't care:

In a constructive approach, one distinguishes between on the one hand not being rational, and on the other hand being irrational (i.e., being quantifiably apart from every rational), the latter being a stronger property. Given positive integers a and b, because the valuation (i.e., highest power of 2 dividing a number) of 2b2 is odd, while the valuation of a2 is even, they must be distinct integers; thus |2b2 − a2| ≥ 1. Then[17]

{\displaystyle \left|{\sqrt {2}}-{\frac {a}{b}}\right|={\frac {|2b^{2}-a^{2}|}{b^{2}\left({\sqrt {2}}+{\frac {a}{b}}\right)}}\geq {\frac {1}{b^{2}\left({\sqrt {2}}+{\frac {a}{b}}\right)}}\geq {\frac {1}{3b^{2}}},}{\displaystyle \left|{\sqrt {2}}-{\frac {a}{b}}\right|={\frac {|2b^{2}-a^{2}|}{b^{2}\left({\sqrt {2}}+{\frac {a}{b}}\right)}}\geq {\frac {1}{b^{2}\left({\sqrt {2}}+{\frac {a}{b}}\right)}}\geq {\frac {1}{3b^{2}}},}

the latter inequality being true because it is assumed that a/b ≤ 3 − 2 (otherwise the quantitative apartness can be trivially established). This gives a lower bound of 1/3b2 for the difference |2 − a/b|, yielding a direct proof of irrationality not relying on the law of excluded middle; see Errett Bishop (1985, p. 18). This proof constructively exhibits a discrepancy between 2 and any rational.


On Thu, May 21, 2020 at 10:50 AM Steve Smith <[hidden email]> wrote:

On 5/21/20 10:32 AM, uǝlƃ ☣ wrote:
> Don't be fooled. "The problem with communication is the illusion that it exists." Or ie I believe in a stronger form of privacy than you believe in.
I KNOW! I know just what you mean!

<note to Frank...  one of the species of animal in this group is "the
Contrarian", but you probably already guessed that>


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Frank Wimberly
140 Calle Ojo Feliz
Santa Fe, NM 87505
505 670-9918


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505 670-9918

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Re: anonymity/deniability/ambiguity

thompnickson2
In reply to this post by gepr
"You choose your own decoder."

Right there, is the distinction between Jamesian and Peircean Pragmatism.  

N

Nicholas Thompson
Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology
Clark University
[hidden email]
https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/
 


-----Original Message-----
From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of u?l? ?
Sent: Thursday, May 21, 2020 11:08 AM
To: FriAM <[hidden email]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] anonymity/deniability/ambiguity

Marcus' post hides my own response to your question. There is no good decoder. There is only a good choice of decoders, fit to purpose. Going back to Lovecraft, I used to live next door to someone who believed in the Illuminati, the bad formulation, and the "12 men who rule the world". I'm confident he actually believed it because we had many many conversations over badly made margaritas watching the rafters go by on the river. His goal was to make just enough money to go off grid before they recognized him as a threat.

When I'd talk to him, I decoded Lovecraft as a Freemason for the purpose of a) confirming his ideas just enough to get him to listen to me (e.g. there *is* something very much like the Illuminati) and b) show him that *some* of those guys aren't as Machiavellian or as Evil as he may think they are.

But when I talk to my fantasy/sci-fi friends, Lovecraft is just a super-dork in the EA Poe, D&D, gamer, category.

You choose your decoder.

On 5/21/20 9:51 AM, [hidden email] wrote:
> Are there circumstances in which Frank might have a better decoder of Glen's behavior than Glen have?   Come to think of it, what is it to have a 'good' decoder?  


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Re: anonymity/deniability/ambiguity

gepr
In reply to this post by Marcus G. Daniels
Ha! Not in the end. He refused to be rational right up until they evicted him and his family for not paying rent. And I agree completely with you. By hook or crook, we CNS governed animals are fast and fantastic at choosing the right decoder instantaneously. Everything else is post-hoc and often a complete waste of time. But if you're gonna waste time *anyway*, may as well waste it in a fun way ... as long as your dog won't die or your neighbor doesn't brandish his 9mm.

On 5/21/20 10:29 AM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
> < There is no good decoder. There is only a good choice of decoders, fit to purpose. >
>
> Did you decode something other than Batshit Crazy?  
>
> I took my dog to the vet, suspecting congestive heart failure.   The vet took some x-rays, and directed me to a cardiologist.  Meanwhile he agreed to the usual treatment which worked.   After waiting for an opportunity to see the cardiologist (now with a functioning dog) he said it was a standard case after taking more x-rays and an echocardiogram.
>
> My point is sometimes things are just as they seem to be.    No fancy decoders needed and only time wasted sorting it out.


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uǝʃƃ ⊥ glen
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Re: anonymity/deniability/ambiguity

Steve Smith
In reply to this post by Frank Wimberly-2

Frank -

Clinicians often call that "being oppositional". 

I think "oppositional" is one *motive* for contrarianism, and maybe contrarianism is one *mode* of being oppositional?  I'm far from up on the clinical definitions, and my own *contrarianism* tends toward nitpicking and hairsplitting (this is an example of that?), for what *I perceive* to be removing minor occlusions incurred by the specific point of view that a specific word (especially drawn from a highly specialized lexicon like DSM2?) creates.  

I don't remember if you were actively tracking/participating "back in the day" when Doug was (hyper?) active here and his last words were (probably paraphrasing mildly but I hope capturing the essence) "Glen, you can be SUCH an a****** sometimes!" which shocked but did not surprise me.   (these were, I'm pretty sure literally his last words on the list, but not his last words in life, which I hope I can get out of Ingrun someday, though it will probably involve sharing a full bottle of scotch...  a taste all three of us shared, but with differing levels of quality/price amongst us... anecdotes abound). 

Back to the anecdote at hand...   *I* didn't find whatever Glen had said (it is all in the record but I have a sort of anti-nostalgia that keeps me from digging it out) as him "being an a*******" but rather simply being *contrarian*....   Doug (IMO) was generally pretty *oppositional* himself (if my read on the term is at all appropriate) so Glen's contrarian style (which is only one of his modes) was received by Doug *as* oppositional (in the extreme?).   *I* thought Glen was just sparring with Doug in the mode I think he spars with everyone here from time to time.  I didn't get the word for some weeks after that incident, but it was Ingrun who shut down his FriAM access (not literally).  She put her German foot down that  Doug had "done his time" with his LANL Blogs which were probably more of an outlet than an irritation.  I don't know what she threatened him with, but I'm sure it was the same tone of voice I'd heard more than a few times, and it started with a slightly elevated in volume, but pitched slightly lower in tone "Douglas! .... "    He went back to gaming the stock market, talking to his birds and cats, gathering peacock feathers from their property in Nambe, having his knees replaced, riding his motorcycle, playing Sax with one or two bands in town, and rigging up media servers from Raspberry Pis.

FriAM was definitely a source of morbid (irritation) fascination for Doug, from our private conversations...  It is definitely a morbid fascination for me as well, but not particularly irritating nor frustrating (with a few very minor/fleeting exceptions).   I never learned to play well with others as a child (or a teen)...  I learned to move semi-fluidly between cliques and "pass" in most of them if needed, but I almost always had to either minimize my engagement or eventually "fire myself" from the clique because I could feel the cognitive dissonance/mismatch.   My cohorts through 12th grade probably remember me as a mildly "odd duck" but not to the extreme some of you here probably find me.   Here, I trust that most can (and do) simply click <next> or <delete> and that a few choose to skim, while others find a germ of interest if not truth in my ramblings.  For the more sophisticated, there are mailtools that would automatically route me to a spam (or similar) folder.

You say that I've known authorities.  I was just talking to John Baez about my advisor Errett Bishop, often called the inventor of constructive mathematics
One of the great boons of this list for me is to flesh out (in my mind) the intellectual/social networks of influence that impinge here.  You and I have shared our "Erdos" numbers which I understand to be nearly irrelevant by many measures, but nevertheless "of interest" in *this* regard.   Your Erdos number of 1 (as his habitual bouncer from the UCB library in grad school?) is similar to a friend of mine whose Bacon number is 1 because his old pickup truck was enlisted on-set for the bad SciFi movie "Worms", and Bacon's stunt double wasn't on set (and Kevin couldn't drive stick) when the director was  ready to film the scene, so my friend *played* Bacons character for a few seconds as his old pickup careened through a scene.   I in turn "stood in" in a play my friend's wife wrote and directed in which he *also* stood in while trying to develop it as a film.   I believe the film *was* finally made (not a major release or even screened at any indie festivals except maybe here in SF) so when pressed I like to claim a Bacon number of 2 (thin as it is).
.  Here is a constructive proof, with no use of the excluded middle, of the irrationality of sqrt(2) that I found in Wikipedia.  Apologies to those who don't care:

In a constructive approach, one distinguishes between on the one hand not being rational, and on the other hand being irrational (i.e., being quantifiably apart from every rational), the latter being a stronger property. Given positive integers a and b, because the valuation (i.e., highest power of 2 dividing a number) of 2b2 is odd, while the valuation of a2 is even, they must be distinct integers; thus |2b2 − a2| ≥ 1. Then[17]

{\displaystyle \left|{\sqrt {2}}-{\frac
                    {a}{b}}\right|={\frac
                    {|2b^{2}-a^{2}|}{b^{2}\left({\sqrt {2}}+{\frac
                    {a}{b}}\right)}}\geq {\frac {1}{b^{2}\left({\sqrt
                    {2}}+{\frac {a}{b}}\right)}}\geq {\frac
                    {1}{3b^{2}}},}

the latter inequality being true because it is assumed that a/b ≤ 3 − 2 (otherwise the quantitative apartness can be trivially established). This gives a lower bound of 1/3b2 for the difference |2 − a/b|, yielding a direct proof of irrationality not relying on the law of excluded middle; see Errett Bishop (1985, p. 18). This proof constructively exhibits a discrepancy between 2 and any rational.

This is the chewy nougat of FriAM for me... stuff outside my specific interest but within the liminal boundaries of my ken otherwise. 

I don't read FriAM because it feeds the things I am most interested in, I read it because it expands the things I am interested in (or reminds me of things I forgot I was interested in).  

- Sieve


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Re: anonymity/deniability/ambiguity

Frank Wimberly-2
The last thing Doug said to me on Facebook was, "Growing old gracefully is an oxymoron."

Sorry about the munged part of the constructivist proof.  It looked fine in my mail client when I sent it.

By the way, who was evicted for non-payment of rent?  I lost the context.

Frank


---
Frank C. Wimberly
140 Calle Ojo Feliz,
Santa Fe, NM 87505

505 670-9918
Santa Fe, NM

On Thu, May 21, 2020, 12:17 PM Steve Smith <[hidden email]> wrote:

Frank -

Clinicians often call that "being oppositional". 

I think "oppositional" is one *motive* for contrarianism, and maybe contrarianism is one *mode* of being oppositional?  I'm far from up on the clinical definitions, and my own *contrarianism* tends toward nitpicking and hairsplitting (this is an example of that?), for what *I perceive* to be removing minor occlusions incurred by the specific point of view that a specific word (especially drawn from a highly specialized lexicon like DSM2?) creates.  

I don't remember if you were actively tracking/participating "back in the day" when Doug was (hyper?) active here and his last words were (probably paraphrasing mildly but I hope capturing the essence) "Glen, you can be SUCH an a****** sometimes!" which shocked but did not surprise me.   (these were, I'm pretty sure literally his last words on the list, but not his last words in life, which I hope I can get out of Ingrun someday, though it will probably involve sharing a full bottle of scotch...  a taste all three of us shared, but with differing levels of quality/price amongst us... anecdotes abound). 

Back to the anecdote at hand...   *I* didn't find whatever Glen had said (it is all in the record but I have a sort of anti-nostalgia that keeps me from digging it out) as him "being an a*******" but rather simply being *contrarian*....   Doug (IMO) was generally pretty *oppositional* himself (if my read on the term is at all appropriate) so Glen's contrarian style (which is only one of his modes) was received by Doug *as* oppositional (in the extreme?).   *I* thought Glen was just sparring with Doug in the mode I think he spars with everyone here from time to time.  I didn't get the word for some weeks after that incident, but it was Ingrun who shut down his FriAM access (not literally).  She put her German foot down that  Doug had "done his time" with his LANL Blogs which were probably more of an outlet than an irritation.  I don't know what she threatened him with, but I'm sure it was the same tone of voice I'd heard more than a few times, and it started with a slightly elevated in volume, but pitched slightly lower in tone "Douglas! .... "    He went back to gaming the stock market, talking to his birds and cats, gathering peacock feathers from their property in Nambe, having his knees replaced, riding his motorcycle, playing Sax with one or two bands in town, and rigging up media servers from Raspberry Pis.

FriAM was definitely a source of morbid (irritation) fascination for Doug, from our private conversations...  It is definitely a morbid fascination for me as well, but not particularly irritating nor frustrating (with a few very minor/fleeting exceptions).   I never learned to play well with others as a child (or a teen)...  I learned to move semi-fluidly between cliques and "pass" in most of them if needed, but I almost always had to either minimize my engagement or eventually "fire myself" from the clique because I could feel the cognitive dissonance/mismatch.   My cohorts through 12th grade probably remember me as a mildly "odd duck" but not to the extreme some of you here probably find me.   Here, I trust that most can (and do) simply click <next> or <delete> and that a few choose to skim, while others find a germ of interest if not truth in my ramblings.  For the more sophisticated, there are mailtools that would automatically route me to a spam (or similar) folder.

You say that I've known authorities.  I was just talking to John Baez about my advisor Errett Bishop, often called the inventor of constructive mathematics
One of the great boons of this list for me is to flesh out (in my mind) the intellectual/social networks of influence that impinge here.  You and I have shared our "Erdos" numbers which I understand to be nearly irrelevant by many measures, but nevertheless "of interest" in *this* regard.   Your Erdos number of 1 (as his habitual bouncer from the UCB library in grad school?) is similar to a friend of mine whose Bacon number is 1 because his old pickup truck was enlisted on-set for the bad SciFi movie "Worms", and Bacon's stunt double wasn't on set (and Kevin couldn't drive stick) when the director was  ready to film the scene, so my friend *played* Bacons character for a few seconds as his old pickup careened through a scene.   I in turn "stood in" in a play my friend's wife wrote and directed in which he *also* stood in while trying to develop it as a film.   I believe the film *was* finally made (not a major release or even screened at any indie festivals except maybe here in SF) so when pressed I like to claim a Bacon number of 2 (thin as it is).
.  Here is a constructive proof, with no use of the excluded middle, of the irrationality of sqrt(2) that I found in Wikipedia.  Apologies to those who don't care:

In a constructive approach, one distinguishes between on the one hand not being rational, and on the other hand being irrational (i.e., being quantifiably apart from every rational), the latter being a stronger property. Given positive integers a and b, because the valuation (i.e., highest power of 2 dividing a number) of 2b2 is odd, while the valuation of a2 is even, they must be distinct integers; thus |2b2 − a2| ≥ 1. Then[17]

{\displaystyle \left|{\sqrt {2}}-{\frac {a}{b}}\right|={\frac {|2b^{2}-a^{2}|}{b^{2}\left({\sqrt {2}}+{\frac {a}{b}}\right)}}\geq {\frac {1}{b^{2}\left({\sqrt {2}}+{\frac {a}{b}}\right)}}\geq {\frac {1}{3b^{2}}},}{\displaystyle \left|{\sqrt {2}}-{\frac
                    {a}{b}}\right|={\frac
                    {|2b^{2}-a^{2}|}{b^{2}\left({\sqrt {2}}+{\frac
                    {a}{b}}\right)}}\geq {\frac {1}{b^{2}\left({\sqrt
                    {2}}+{\frac {a}{b}}\right)}}\geq {\frac
                    {1}{3b^{2}}},}

the latter inequality being true because it is assumed that a/b ≤ 3 − 2 (otherwise the quantitative apartness can be trivially established). This gives a lower bound of 1/3b2 for the difference |2 − a/b|, yielding a direct proof of irrationality not relying on the law of excluded middle; see Errett Bishop (1985, p. 18). This proof constructively exhibits a discrepancy between 2 and any rational.

This is the chewy nougat of FriAM for me... stuff outside my specific interest but within the liminal boundaries of my ken otherwise. 

I don't read FriAM because it feeds the things I am most interested in, I read it because it expands the things I am interested in (or reminds me of things I forgot I was interested in).  

- Sieve

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Re: anonymity/deniability/ambiguity

Steve Smith
F-
> The last thing Doug said to me on Facebook was, "Growing old
> gracefully is an oxymoron."
Which is why we like to say "Youth is wasted on the young"...   part of
the ungraceful part I think...
>
> By the way, who was evicted for non-payment of rent?  I lost the context.

Lovecraft I think?   His landlord apparently had his own decoder (ring)...


-S

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Re: anonymity/deniability/ambiguity

David Eric Smith
In reply to this post by Frank Wimberly-2
Signal to Nick:

You commented on wanting to understand the conversation about formalists and intuitionists which I have been using in various conversations with Glen and Jon.  Now is the chance to do it at low cost.

Frank has provided two proofs of irrationality of the square root of 2, one formalist (using proof by contradiction requiring acceptance of the law of the excluded middle) a few days ago, this most recent one being constructive, meaning that it constructs a degree of difference that you can point to concretely, rather than concluding from the syntax that there must be such.  One gets at the core of anything I was trying to say by looking at these two proofs, and deciding whether one can see what is different in their sense.

For me, these concrete, super-simple minimal pairs are the mental tools to get at the difference between one style of thought and another.  I can then try to decide whether, in some much more difficult context, where it is very hard to be concrete, I think I see the same kind of contrast in style.  Since I am too slow to almost ever work out the watertight version of anything, and some of these would be too hard for me to do at all, I don’t even seriously intend to check whether my imagistic impression is reliable.  I am willing to use the simple cases I do understand as perceptive filters to try to make some kind of approximate sense of the hard cases, as the alternative to just letting it all go by.

You commented in one of these emails that you could accept “irreducible” as long as it didn’t mean “can’t be described”, and I have been thinking over the past days whether I can come down on one side of that or the other.  You might also have said, “as long as it didn’t mean `can’t be observed’ “.

I decided I don’t know.  To know what can or can’t be observed, can or can’t be described, is or isn’t behavior, one has to operationalize any of those and decide how reliable the operationalization is.  The exchange mostly of Glen, EricC, and Jon about what is or isn’t behavior, often quite tedious, seemed like it took seriously the right caution.  One could build comparable tedious harangues around “observe” and “describe”, and perhaps must to resolve this.

You might think you can say, as a matter of syntax, that “of course it must be observable” or else one is denying science.  Physicists though for almost 200 years that that “of course” was unproblematic, that they had an operationalization that was both flexible enough to extend to more and more subjects, restrictive enough to have content, and expressible in equivalence to mathematical objects.  Then they learned that the way they had assumed “of course” it could be done wasn’t the correct formalization to be extended to quantum mechanics.  That didn’t mean that there wasn’t a correct formalization, only that a different one was required, to subsume all that had worked before, and also extend where the former one couldn’t go.  The proof of inadequacy of the former was only demonstrated by putting one that was more correct in its place and exhibiting the difference (constructive); it seems like it would have been hopeless to anticipate, in the pre-quantum days, that the notion of observability was inadequate in the way it actually was, and even more hopeless to try to use a syntactic argument (formalist) either to assert its sufficiency or identify the specific defect that quantum mechanics would ultimately reveal.  So when I ask “what is the value of a formalist-style declaration that inner-ness can’t be a real property, if one is not constructing something to show that to be the case”, this is the style difference I am using as a reference to put that question.

I don’t imagine that what we learned about definitions of observability in physics will have any direct relevance to whatever challenges the term may pose in psychology.  The physics example is just a nice reminder of ways in which it can be very hard to decide when one is really saying something, and likewise an example that constructing the alternative sometimes seems to give the only perspective from which to see that there had formerly been a problem.  

Because Pierce et seq. have done so much to try to be precise, practical, and useful in defining what science is, it allows me to be lazy, say “yes I accept and defend all that”, and then ask for an ultra-stripped-down abstraction of what science is then.

I may already have written this (senility), but my imagistic definition would be that science is the premise that mistakes aren’t all sui generis, but that they have family resemblances, and that there are methods of practice that give one a better-than-random chance of recognizing that something may be a mistake even short of knowing what ‘the' (or ‘a better’) answer is.  I choose that framing in part because it is also the framing that formalizes the notion of error correction in computer science (so I have a mental image to refer to as an exemplar accompanied by some formal tools).  One wants to identify the fact that a message contains an error, without having to know, for every message in advance, what it was supposed to have contained (else you didn’t need to be sending messages in the first place).  

I use the stripped down form in the hope of building a recursive tree of mutual refereeing, for all elements of scientific practice, now appealing to my mental image of Peter Gacs’s error-correcting 1D cellular automaton, which does this by nesting correcting structure within correcting structure.  Then I can look for every aspect of our practice that is trying to play this role in some way.  A subset include:
1. Intersubjectivity to guard against individual delusion, ignorance, oversight, and similar hazards.
2. Experimentation to guard against individual and group delusion etc, and to provide an additional active corrective against erroneous abduction from instances to classes.
3. Adoption of formal language protocols:
3a. Definitions, with both operational (semantic) and syntactic (formalist) criteria for their scope and usage
3b. Rigid languages for argument, including logic but also less-formal standards of scientific argument, like insistence on null models and significance measures for statistical claims

There must be more, but the above are the ones I am mostly aware of in daily work.

These are, to some extent, hierarchical, in that those further down the list are often taken to have a control-theoretic-like authority to tag those higher-up in the list as “errors”.  However, like any control system, the controller can also be wrong, and then its authority allows it to impose cascades of errors before being caught.  Hence, I guess Kant thought that a Newtonian space x time geometry was so self-evident that it was part of the “a priori” to physical reasoning. It was a kind of more-definite-than-a-definition criterion in arguments.  And it turned out not to describe the universe we live in, if one requires sufficient scope and precision.  Likewise, the amount of a semantics that we can capture in syntactic rules for formal speech is likely to always be less than all the semantics we have, and even the validity of a syntax could be undermined (Godel).  But most common in practice is that the syntax could be used as a kind of parlor entertainment, but the interpretation of it becomes either invalid or essentially useless when tokens that appeared in it turn out not to actually stand for anything.  This is what happens when things we thought were operational definitions are shown by construction of their replacements to have been invalid, as with the classical physics notion of “observable”, or the Newtonian convention of “absolute time”.

I would like to give Pierce’s “truth == reliable in the long run” a modern gloss by regarding the above the way an engineer would in designing an error-correction system.  The instances that are grouped in the above list are not just subroutines in a computer code, but embodied artifacts and events of practice by living-cognizing-social behavers and reasoners.  And then decide from a post-Shannon vantage point what such a system can and cannot do.  What notions of truth are constructible?  How long is the long run, for any particular problem?  What are the sample fluctuations in our state of understanding, as represented in placeholders for terms, rules, or other forms we adopt in the above list in any era, relative to asymptotes that we may or may not yet think we can identify?  How have errors cascaded through that list as we have it now, and can we use those to learn something about the performance of this way of organizing science?  (Dave Ackley of UNM did a lovely project on the statistics of library overhauls for Linux utilities some years ago, which is my mental model in framing that last question.)  Formal tools to answer more interesting versions of questions like those.

I mentioned some stuff about this in a post a month or two ago, and EricC included in a later post by way of reply that Pierce did a lot of statistics, so I understand I can’t take anything here outside the playpen of a listserve until I have first read everything Pierce wrote, and everything others wrote about what Pierce wrote, etc.  I suspect that, since Pierce lived before the publication of at least part of what is now understood about reliable error correction, large deviations, renormalization, automata theory, etc., there should be something new to say from a modern standpoint that Pierce didn’t already know, but that assertion is formalist, and thus valueless.  I have to do the exhaustive search through everything he actually did know, to point out something new that isn’t already in it (constructivist).  

Which is why I won’t have time, resources, or ability to do it.  So I will never know whether the things said above actually mean something.

Eric




On May 22, 2020, at 2:44 AM, Frank Wimberly <[hidden email]> wrote:

The badly rendered part:

{\displaystyle \left|{\sqrt {2}}-{\frac {a}{b}}\right|={\frac {|2b^{2}-a^{2}|}{b^{2}\left({\sqrt {2}}+{\frac {a}{b}}\right)}}\geq {\frac {1}{b^{2}\left({\sqrt {2}}+{\frac {a}{b}}\right)}}\geq {\frac {1}{3b^{2}}},}


On Thu, May 21, 2020 at 11:30 AM Frank Wimberly <[hidden email]> wrote:
Clinicians often call that "being oppositional".  

You say that I've known authorities.  I was just talking to John Baez about my advisor Errett Bishop, often called the inventor of constructive mathematics.  Here is a constructive proof, with no use of the excluded middle, of the irrationality of sqrt(2) that I found in Wikipedia.  Apologies to those who don't care:

In a constructive approach, one distinguishes between on the one hand not being rational, and on the other hand being irrational (i.e., being quantifiably apart from every rational), the latter being a stronger property. Given positive integers a and b, because the valuation (i.e., highest power of 2 dividing a number) of 2b2 is odd, while the valuation of a2 is even, they must be distinct integers; thus |2b2 − a2| ≥ 1. Then[17]
{\displaystyle \left|{\sqrt {2}}-{\frac {a}{b}}\right|={\frac {|2b^{2}-a^{2}|}{b^{2}\left({\sqrt {2}}+{\frac {a}{b}}\right)}}\geq {\frac {1}{b^{2}\left({\sqrt {2}}+{\frac {a}{b}}\right)}}\geq {\frac {1}{3b^{2}}},}{\displaystyle \left|{\sqrt {2}}-{\frac {a}{b}}\right|={\frac {|2b^{2}-a^{2}|}{b^{2}\left({\sqrt {2}}+{\frac {a}{b}}\right)}}\geq {\frac {1}{b^{2}\left({\sqrt {2}}+{\frac {a}{b}}\right)}}\geq {\frac {1}{3b^{2}}},}
the latter inequality being true because it is assumed that a/b ≤ 3 − 2 (otherwise the quantitative apartness can be trivially established). This gives a lower bound of 1/3b2 for the difference |2 − a/b|, yielding a direct proof of irrationality not relying on the law of excluded middle; see Errett Bishop (1985, p. 18). This proof constructively exhibits a discrepancy between 2 and any rational.

On Thu, May 21, 2020 at 10:50 AM Steve Smith <[hidden email]> wrote:

On 5/21/20 10:32 AM, uǝlƃ ☣ wrote:
> Don't be fooled. "The problem with communication is the illusion that it exists." Or ie I believe in a stronger form of privacy than you believe in.
I KNOW! I know just what you mean!

<note to Frank...  one of the species of animal in this group is "the
Contrarian", but you probably already guessed that>


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Re: anonymity/deniability/ambiguity

jon zingale
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EricS,

goddamn.

Jon

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