Mary,
Thank you very much for bringing Revelator back in view; it's clear to me
that I studied those papers back when they were first created,
but advancing age and mental deterioration managed to strip me of those
memories; see, I am working with Marc-Antoine Parent and others
to build an epistemic game, one loosely based on the MMO structures of WoW,
but stripped of the 3d graphics and so forth, and instead, blessed with a
structured conversation UX - not for "argumentation" but for research
conversation. Quests have nothing to do with damsels in distress, and
everything to do with wicked - as Douglas Engelbart would say, "complex,
urgent" problems.
I have to belatedly acknowledge some of the intellectual ancestry of this
project: it lies in those papers and our conversations.
As it turns out, back about the same time the first Revelator paper came
out, Jane McGonnigal had built a conversation game for
called
ForesightEngine. In 2009 or thereabouts, I played one of those games, and
won. I was hooked on the game concept, but not of the first-person-shooter
genre of her platform. When a CMU professor asked the question "how can we
have civil conversations online about politics?" in a Palo Alto
conversation group in 2010, I said "World of warcraft meets global
sensemaking". That's when the game as I see it took root.
Our intention is to use the powers of topic mapping, conceptual graphs,
NLP, and other technologies to make this work.
Thanks again for returning Revelator to the conversation.
Cheers
Jack
On Wed, Nov 24, 2021 at 4:07 PM Mary Keeler <mkeeler(a)uw.edu> wrote:
[Let's see if this goes to the list?]
Thank you, Edwina, I have similar interests and agree with your conclusion
about the applicability of the Peircean framework.
I met John Holland before he died, and explained my extension of his CAS
to CAR, leading to the idea of the "game of pragmatism" — which he called
"a flight simulator for the mind"!
Here are a couple of papers that might help to explain (see more at the
Revelator site, below)?
*Complex Adaptive Reasoning:Knowledge Emergence in the Revelator Game*
http://conceptualgraphs.org/revelator/web/papers/keelerkcap09.pdf
*Games of Inquiryfor Collaborative Concept Structuring*
http://conceptualgraphs.org/revelator/web/papers/iccs05.pdf
*Revelator: Game of Complex Adaptive Reasoning*
http://conceptualgraphs.org/revelator/web/research/Papers.php
If pragmatism is essentially the scientific method, and we need that
method for *experimenting with ideas* in order to develop Normative
Science as *the study of habit-change*, then that game might give us a
collaborative way to proceed? It could (and should) incorporate graphical
logic so that players can keep track of the development of effective
arguments.
Here are just a few paragraphs from Peirce in support of this idea
(selected from many more).
Mary
*CP Vol 8 (1891)*
*Chapter 6: *To Christine Ladd-Franklin, On Cosmology†1
316. My work in philosophy has consisted in an accurate analysis of
concepts, showing what is and what is not essential to the subject of
analysis. Particularly, in logic, my motive for studying the algebra of the
subject, has been the desire to find out with accuracy what are the
essential ingredients of reasoning in general and of its principal kinds.
To make a powerful calculus has not been my care.
317. I may mention that my chief avocation in the last ten years has been
to develop my cosmology.†2 This theory is that the evolution of the world
is hyperbolic, that is, proceeds from one state of things in the infinite
past, to a different state of things in the infinite future. The state of
things in the infinite past is chaos, tohu bohu, the nothingness of which
consists in the total absence of regularity. The state of things in the
infinite future is death, the nothingness of which consists in the complete
triumph of law and absence of all spontaneity.†3 Between these, we have on
our side a state of things in which there is some absolute spontaneity
counter to all law, and some degree of conformity to law, which is
constantly on the increase owing to the growth of habit. The tendency to
form habits or tendency to generalize, is something which grows by its own
action, by the habit of taking habits itself growing. Its first germs arose
from pure chance. There were slight tendencies to obey rules that had been
followed, and these tendencies were rules which were more and more obeyed
by their own action. There were also slight tendencies to do otherwise than
previously, and these destroyed themselves. To be sure, they would
sometimes be strengthened by the opposite tendency, but the stronger they
became the more they would tend to destroy themselves. As to the part of
time on the further side of eternity which leads back from the infinite
future to the infinite past, it evidently proceeds by contraries.
*318. I believe the law of habit to be purely psychical. But then I
suppose matter is merely mind deadened by the development of habit. While
every physical process can be reversed without violation of the law of
mechanics, the law of habit forbids such reversal. Accordingly, time may
have been evolved by the action of habit. At first sight, it seems absurd
or mysterious to speak of time being evolved, for evolution presupposes
time. But after all, this is no serious objection, and nothing can be
simpler. Time consists in a regularity in the relations of interacting
feelings. *The first chaos consisted in an infinite multitude of
unrelated feelings. As there was no continuity about them, it was, as it
were, a powder of feelings. It was worse than that, for of particles of
powder some are nearer together, others farther apart, while these feelings
had no relations, for relations are general. Now you must not ask me what
happened first. This would be as absurd as to ask what is the smallest
finite number. But springing away from the infinitely distant past to a
very very distant past, we find already evolution had been going on for an
infinitely long time. But this "time" is only our way of saying that
something had been going on. There was no real time so far as there was no
regularity, but there is no more falsity in using the language of time than
in saying that a quantity is zero. In this chaos of feelings, bits of
similitude had appeared, been swallowed up again. Had reappeared by chance.
A slight tendency to generalization had here and there lighted up and been
quenched. Had reappeared, had strengthened itself. Like had begun to
produce like. Then even pairs of unlike feelings had begun to have
similars, and then these had begun to generalize. And thus relations of
contiguity, that is connections other than similarities, had sprung up. All
this went on in ways I cannot now detail till the feelings were so bound
together that a passable approximation to a real time was established. It
is not to be supposed that the ideally perfect time has even yet been
realized. There are no doubt occasional lacunae and derailments.†4
*Supposing matter to be but mind under the slavery of inveterate habit,
the law of mind still applies to it. According to that law, consciousness
subsides as habit becomes established, and is excited again at the breaking
up of habit. But the highest quality of mind involves a great readiness to
take habits, and a great readiness to lose them [(CP 6.613) 1893]. *
*Pragmatism is the principle that every theoretical judgment expressible
in a sentence in the indicative mood is a confused form of thought whose
only meaning, if it has any, lies in its tendency to enforce a
corresponding practical maxim expressible as a conditional sentence having
its apodosis in the imperative mood [CP 5.18, Lecture 1, “Pragmatism: The
Normative Sciences” (1903)].*
*CP Vol. 5What Pragmatism Is [First of three Monist articles, 1905]*
1. Experimentalist’s View of Assertion
. . .
412. … The laboratory life did not prevent the writer (who here and in
what follows simply exemplifies the experimentalist type) from becoming
interested in methods of thinking; and when he came to read metaphysics,
although much of it seemed to him loosely reasoned and determined by
accidental prepossessions, yet in the writings of some philosophers,
especially Kant, Berkeley, and Spinoza, he sometimes came upon strains of
thought that recalled the ways of thinking of the laboratory, so that he
felt he might trust to them; all of which has been true of other
laboratory-men.
Endeavoring, as a man of that type naturally would, to formulate what he
so approved, he framed the theory that a conception, that is, the rational
purport of a word or other expression, lies exclusively in its conceivable
bearing upon the conduct of life; so that, since obviously nothing that
might not result from experiment can have any direct bearing upon conduct,
if one can define accurately all the conceivable experimental phenomena
which the affirmation or denial of a concept could imply, one will have
therein a complete definition of the concept, and there is absolutely
nothing more in it. For this doctrine he invented the name pragmatism. Some
of his friends wished him to call it practicism or practicalism (perhaps on
the ground that {praktikos} is better Greek than {pragmatikos}. But for one
who had learned philosophy out of Kant, as the writer, along with nineteen
out of every twenty experimentalists who have turned to philosophy, had
done, and who still thought in Kantian terms most readily, praktisch and
pragmatisch were as far apart as the two poles, the former belonging in a
region of thought where no mind of the experimentalist type can ever make
sure of solid ground under his feet, the latter expressing relation to some
definite human purpose. Now quite the most striking feature of the new
theory was its recognition of an inseparable connection between rational
cognition and rational purpose; and that consideration it was which
determined the preference for the name pragmatism.
---------------------
He explains pragmatism as a method that helps us to know what we think,
the meaning of which is interpreted as our willingness to act on that
thought—in terms of its conceived consequences.
*Modern science, with its microscopes and telescopes, with its chemistry
and electricity, and with its entirely new appliances of life, has put us
into quite another world; almost as much so as if it had transported our
race to another planet. Some of the old beliefs have no application except
in extended senses, and in such extended senses they are sometimes
dubitable and subject to just criticism. It is above all the normative
sciences (esthetics, ethics, and logic) that men are in dire need of having
severely criticized, in their relation to the new world created by
science. Unfortunately, this need is as unconscious as it is great. [CP
5.513 (c.1905) "Consequences of Critical Common-Sensism"]“Pragmatism is not
a system of philosophy. It is only a method of thinking ...” (CP 8.206, c.
1905).*
On Mon, Nov 22, 2021 at 9:08 AM Edwina Taborsky <taborsky(a)primus.ca>
wrote:
With the opening of this new site for the open
and exploratory discussion
of, among other things, the use of Peirce in the analysis of the modern
world, I'd like to outline, briefly, my interests in this area.
I consider that the triadic semiosis is both a continuous process in the
generation of matter on this planet - and- can also be understood as the
morphological form of discrete entities. That is, a cell is both a triadic
semiosic unit and an active process of the semiosic processing of
matter...connected and networked to other semiosic units/processes. I
consider this outline well-documented within Peircean texts.
This view also goes along with my understanding that Peirce's 'objective
idealism' is a view that neither Mind nor Matter are primordial but that
both are co-evolving correlates. {See 6.24 and other texts].
And as such - I am interested in examining the world as a Complex
Adaptive System, which means that both variety and stability are correlates
in this generative, adaptive, 'far-from-equilibrium' world - with no final
state.
These are major areas of my interest, which means that I consider that
the Peircean framework is applicable to the physic-chemical, biological and
societal/conceptual realms.
Edwina Taborsky
_______________________________________________
CG mailing list -- cg(a)lists.iccs-conference.org
To unsubscribe send an email to cg-leave(a)lists.iccs-conference.org
_______________________________________________
CG mailing list -- cg(a)lists.iccs-conference.org
To unsubscribe send an email to cg-leave(a)lists.iccs-conference.org