Thanks, Auke and John, for your inputs, which are enlightening.
In my A Transaction-oriented architecture for enterprise systems - Sheffield Hallam
University Research Archive (shu.ac.uk)<https://shura.shu.ac.uk/7988/> paper, I
refer to Stamper’s Semiotic Ladder thus (pp.73-75):
“…the ‘cost imposing’ layers in [Stamper’s] ladder structure illustrate the areas in which
the productivity of computers (‘the technology platform’) benefits information
(enterprise) systems much better than manual systems. It is where computers are much
better than humans, hence the success of technologies such as data processing that we
cannot imagine being without nowadays. The ‘value producing’ layers are where humans are
better than computers. Classical experiences with Artificial Intelligence have shown how
poorly computers perform…” [note: I wrote the article in 2013.]
If you visit those pages through the above link, you’ll notice I used Conceptual Graphs
and Formal Concept Analysis to convey the broader dimensions of balancing business
transactions, e.g. Psychological Stimulation (which, as a side note, I incorrectly—or
perhaps correctly—refer to as Psychical Stimulation 🤔 ). These broader dimensions arguably
resonate with Stamper’s ladder.
Cheers,
Simon
Dr Simon Polovina
Department of Computing, Sheffield Hallam University, UK
Profile<https://ontologforum.com/index.php/SimonPolovina> │
Email<mailto:S.Polovina@shu.ac.uk?subject=Enquiry>
From: Auke van Breemen via CG <cg(a)lists.iccs-conference.org>
Sent: Monday, July 22, 2024 11:02 AM
To: CG <cg(a)lists.iccs-conference.org>
Subject: [CG] Re: Stamper's semiotic ladder
John, list,
Thanks, this answer offers the possibility to address Simons ladder question.
In my opinion the semiotic ladder didn't get the attention it deserves.
Also for the reason John wrote about:
And by the way, these issues are the primary reason why I am very critical of the claims
about LLMs as a foundation for intelligence or cognition. Most of the people who develop
them are unaware of (or deliberately ignore) the challenging problems of mapping any kind
of formalism to and from natural languages.
--
The difference in the ladder between the IT layers (exclusively technical, see Hall) and
the higher layers (beside the technical we find formal and informal elements, following
Hall again) address this problem. The distinction of the antropologist Hall between
technical,formal and informal culture is pointed at by Stamper. This concerns the
translation problem.
But not only for this reason. A second challenge for LLMs is to deal with differences in
goal orientation. An identical question may be asked for different goals and also the
proximate goal of a question is an answer, but the remote goal remains hidden unless
explicated. The social and pragmatic layers of the ladder provide a scaffolding for
dealing with those issues.
Interestingly Stamper started with responding to Morris threefold distinction between a
syntactical, a semantical and a pragmatical level. Due to his work in IS, he felt obliged
to enlarge and refine the list. This resulted in his ladder.
The group around Kecheng Liu in Reading continued Ronalds work, working their way further
up the ladder. Eventually resulting in work on the Assessment of pragmatic
interoperability for process alignment. But still this is work done from the perspective
of an IT system as an affordance and it only covers horizontal alignment (between similar
layers).
In
https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-319-94541-5_10 (The social layer of
Stamper ladder, just scoll down after the link to get to the text.) I axplore the social
layer.
Abstract
The social layer of Stampers ladder addresses the problem of responsible agents
interacting with each other. It is the layer at which in organizations decisions are made
and transformations negotiated. The method we present supports this human interplay. It
combines principles of actualism, ontology charts, the knowledge in Formation process
model and the Cynefin framework to gather and combine quantitative data with qualitative
data, expressing attitudes and perceptions in meaningful diagrammatic representations of
business processes. The analytic tool Sensemaker can be used to support decision making.
--
At the same time the ladder needs an extension if we want to shift focus drom IS as a
system/object, to an interaction of IS systems/ a semiotic definition of information
processes. For that we need Peirce's theory of interpretants as I argue in
https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/6e1e/b1d74909a117c71d89e8c697c382c7ab7137.…df>.
In daily use the ladder offers a possibility to ask for vertical alignment. This implies
that we must be specific about what can be rigidly defined and what not. The ontology
chart mediates between my vague approach in the social layer and Stampers S(emantic)AM
(the pragmatic /semantic layer , from this we can go to CG. For one part in order to go
down the road towards technial realisation. but also to loop back to the social layer. For
which we again need Stampers work.
Best,
Auke van Breemen
PS LLMs cannot deal with the dicent or also dynamical interpretant position in the KiF
scheme; it is the moment in the interpretation process the specific goals and
context/history of the interpreting system comes ino play in getting at a conclusion or
response. see p 93 in
https://www.scitepress.org/papers/2010/32587/32587.pdf
Op 21-07-2024 03:38 CEST schreef John F Sowa
<sowa@bestweb.net<mailto:sowa@bestweb.net>>:
Auke,
My formal education emphasized math & logic, but I designed conceptual graphs as a
logical foundation for mapping computational data to and from natural languages.
Languages have always been one of my strong interests.
All four of my grandparents migrated from Poland around 1900 to 1905, and my maternal
grandmother lived with us. So Polish was the language I heard and spoke all day long
while my father was working. When you start with two languages, learning a few more is
easy.
Peirce's father taught him mathematics, Greek, and Latin from early childhood. I
developed my first version of conceptual graphs while I was taking Minsky's course on
AI and a course on psycholinguistics. When I came across Don Roberts' book on
existential graphs, I saw the parallels between CGs and Peirce's EGs. Since Peirce
had also addressed the mappings between language and logic, I adopted similar methods.
For the problems and challenges, see the concluding chapter 7 of my book on conceptual
structures:
https://jfsowa.com/pubs/cs7.pdf .
I met Stamper at various conferences, and I found his outlook and methods to be congenial.
He addressed the mappings between natural languages and computational representations in
a way that could be mapped to and from EGs or CGs in similar ways. I didn't map CGs
to his charts directly, but his methods address the issues of choosing rigid formal
patterns (graphs or charts) that can approximate flexible informal words and phrases.
And by the way, these issues are the primary reason why I am very critical of the claims
about LLMs as a foundation for intelligence or cognition. Most of the people who develop
them are unaware of (or deliberately ignore) the challenging problems of mapping any kind
of formalism to and from natural languages.
John
________________________________
From: "Auke van Breemen"
<a.breemen@upcmail.nl<mailto:a.breemen@upcmail.nl>>
John,
It is a pity indeed that he passed away, he was a scientist of the constructive type.
Since I always saw a similarity in your and Ronalds approach in how you deal with Peirce
maybe it is a good time ta ask your opinion about this.
Both of you differ from the main sentiment on peirce-list, which concentrates on
interpretations on what peirce might have ment. So the theoretical fight is about the
right interpretation of the masters writings. Concentration on the signs in itself, seems
an adequate label.
Alternatively, the both of you use Peirce in order to contribute to his goal with
semiotics, which is to understand interpretation processes as sign processes. But, the
perspectives differ offering different views on the processes.
In my opinion you concentrate on the semantic dimension, while Ronald had a keen eye for
the pragmatic dimension, the pragmmatic and social layers of his ladder. This shows in his
ontology charts in which always society is the most remote root node. Thus it becomes
possible to adress the problem of differing knowledge systems in any actual situation,
hence also Ronalds heavy interest in 'responsible behavior'.
I am curious after your view on the relation between your graphs and Stampers charts.
Best,
Auke van Breemen
PS. In
https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-319-94541-5_10 I elaborate on
Stampers take.