S
smcder
Guest
I know you guys are knee deep in it on HCT ... but I frankly don't get it. I've read lots of posts and lots on Pharoah's website and looked at the infographic. I haven't read the book, it's incredibly dense and laden with terminology. (which is not a critique, it's a description)
I understand this:
3.7 Billions of years ago a unique systems construct emerged as an accidental consequence of the uncontrolled evolution of atomic compounds. What was so special about this systems construct?
Well… this construct was able to control the evolution of its systems structures.
But how does this differ from any other evolutionary description of the universe? Of things moving from the simple, the ultimately simple, to the more complex, according to a simple, ultimately simple, set of rules? (evolution through selection ... or what ever endures according to what is selected to endure - according to which chaos is the ultimate evolutionary product, nothing ever de-selects chaos from the system!)
I also don't understand where HCT is a theory that makes predictions? I understand for example where Relativity extends from Newtonian physics, where it comes from - but where does HCT come from?
I know a little about systems theory and cybernetics, but:
Systems theory is the interdisciplinary study of systems in general, with the goal of elucidating principles that can be applied to all types of systems at all nesting levels in all fields of research.
The term does not yet have a well-established, precise meaning,
but systems theory can reasonably be considered a specialization of systems thinking; alternatively as a goal output of systems science and systems engineering, with an emphasis on generality useful across a broad range of systems (versus the particular models of individual fields).
... but I don't know that it has succeed, there seem to be difficulties in saying what a system is and then applying a principle from one system to another that can't just be developed from simpler principles - in other words, if I study 10 random systems what can I know about the 11th that I couldn't know in any other way?
And if I can, it seems to me more akin to taxonomy or behavioral science - how to classify and say how certain things will act - but not explanatory, in other words, what I think we want is a physics of consciousness ... not literally, but that's the granularity of explanation that we want ... because consciousness seems to be as fundamental as matter and if it's not, then our current conceptual vocabulary is indequate to explain it in materialist terms.
I understand this:
3.7 Billions of years ago a unique systems construct emerged as an accidental consequence of the uncontrolled evolution of atomic compounds. What was so special about this systems construct?
Well… this construct was able to control the evolution of its systems structures.
But how does this differ from any other evolutionary description of the universe? Of things moving from the simple, the ultimately simple, to the more complex, according to a simple, ultimately simple, set of rules? (evolution through selection ... or what ever endures according to what is selected to endure - according to which chaos is the ultimate evolutionary product, nothing ever de-selects chaos from the system!)
I also don't understand where HCT is a theory that makes predictions? I understand for example where Relativity extends from Newtonian physics, where it comes from - but where does HCT come from?
I know a little about systems theory and cybernetics, but:
Systems theory is the interdisciplinary study of systems in general, with the goal of elucidating principles that can be applied to all types of systems at all nesting levels in all fields of research.
The term does not yet have a well-established, precise meaning,
but systems theory can reasonably be considered a specialization of systems thinking; alternatively as a goal output of systems science and systems engineering, with an emphasis on generality useful across a broad range of systems (versus the particular models of individual fields).
... but I don't know that it has succeed, there seem to be difficulties in saying what a system is and then applying a principle from one system to another that can't just be developed from simpler principles - in other words, if I study 10 random systems what can I know about the 11th that I couldn't know in any other way?
And if I can, it seems to me more akin to taxonomy or behavioral science - how to classify and say how certain things will act - but not explanatory, in other words, what I think we want is a physics of consciousness ... not literally, but that's the granularity of explanation that we want ... because consciousness seems to be as fundamental as matter and if it's not, then our current conceptual vocabulary is indequate to explain it in materialist terms.
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