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emergent properties and masses - from sci.lang
>From another posting on sci.lang, i saw this, which seems highly
relevant to the nature of Lojban masses.
>1: Sandpile emergence: self-organising systems, from - well - sandpiles to
> crystals, spontaneously form ordered structures of which it is necessary
> to take account when describing the system. The model used - as Aaron
> points out - transcends the model needed to describe the parts; although
> this 'lower' model may well (and usually does) allow one to explain how
> the 'higher' order system came to be. Going beyond models, however, the
> crystal (or sandpile) has properties which effect photons and pinpong balls
> in ways which the unemerged shambles of sand and atoms does not. It is not
> a matter of our explaining it, it is what it does that changes what is.
> Emergence does stuff.
>
> 2: Dynamic emergence: Prigogine turf. I forget the derivation, but a number of
> equilibrium equations take the form of a second order polynomial, having
> two roots. Thus such systems are capable of resolving themselves into two
> equilibria, with appropriate surfaces connecting such poles. Hence
> Belouzov-Zhabotinski (sp?) waves in chemical systems. Taps drip; reeds
> oscillate in streams; periodic and quasiperiodic phenomena dissect the
> natural world and prevent the smooth approach to equilibrium. Attractors
> attract, chaos spirals; dynamic systems emit complex properties which both
> require complex models for them to be understood and which change things
> in complex ways. Prigogine shows how closed, far from equilibrium systems
> can temporarily and locally reverse Thermodynamics II; life as we know it,
> Captain.
>
> 3: Information-based emergence: nice Mr Darwin. Differing from the other
> forms, information-based emergent systems have a storage medium and a
> transcription system. This is a critical distinction: one can (vaguely)
> think about a wave of chemical disequilibrium - depletion, saturation -
> as being 'memory' or 'data', but it is easier to view it in chemical terms.
> The point is that the choice is one of viewpoint; whereas in information
> based emergence, no such ambiguity exists. There is storage - genes,
> habituated neurons, resonant loops - and there is a distinctive and
> seperate mechanism of transcription; neither work alone, both together have
> properties which are transcendent of the component parts. The data stored
> is usually only interpretable in terms of what it does: that is to say, it
> has a unique role which is "called" in an algorithmic way. It is not a
> "language". Turing rules, ko.
>
> 4: Syntactical emergence, to coin a phrase. Emergent structures have, as
> indicated, properties of which they are the unique suppliers. Nothing else
> has these properties. Two such entities, brought together and allowed to
> interact, may generate another emergent structure, having its own unique
> properties. (We can see this in designed things - telescopes and teacups -
> but here, the Designer gets in the way of the concept.) Focusing on the
> natural world, therefore, we find that trees - together - make something
> which trees, separately do not: a forest, an entity with its own
> properties, structures, niches and opportunities. Trees adapt themselves
> for the forest environment. Forests are thereby changed; making new niches,
> new properties. A species of grammar emerges, with chunks that have
> properties capable of being arranged by chance and adaptation to fal into
> new patterns of mutual interaction.
>
> 5: Intentional emergence: Brentano's baby. Systems built up from the various
> flavours of emergence have distinct boundaries. It may be tautological to
> say that within these, the entities are primarily driven by internal
> processes and that beyond them, they are responsive to and effective upon
> exogenous events. What makes it more than tautological in some specific
> cases is that these systems show signs of recognising this boundary and
> acting to police it. Where this occurs unambiguously, it is helpful to
> refer to the entity concerned as intentional, as recognising the other. One
> can, of course, suggest that a chemotactic bacterium is intentional: it
> wiggles its little flagellae in order to drive itself up desirable chemical
> gradients. Close examination of what actually happens in such a system,
> however, suggests a purely push-button 'informational' emergence: what
> distinguishes intentional emergence is the processing of abstractions.
A Lojban mass may have emergent properties that are not properties of
the components of the mass. We use Lojban masses to represent
combinations of components in such a way that the reference
simulataneously recognizes emerging qualities of the mass, while
preserving recognition of the existence of components and their distinct
properties that explain the emerging properties. I would presume that any
reference to a Lojban mass invokes some aspect of the emergent properties.
I'm not sure whether all five of the above can be represented as Lojban
masses (indeed, I am pretty sure I don't *understand* all 5 of them),
but I am pretty sure that I have used masses to discuss emergent
properties related to 1. and 4.
lojbab