Information Ontology of Mind and Body

[Work in Progress – Draft will be edited without notification.]

[Feedback appreciated on the “See / Refs” – where more are needed? Meantime all those indicated will be elaborated and worked into the text. And obviously on the intelligibility of the text so far. Drafting arose out of the “Three Essays” post, particularly “Algorithms for Humans” and the comment thread on “Balancing the Future”. It represents one (of many) draft of my “thesis”.]

[UPDATE(S) : As requested, I will soon be moving this content to a “page” and will continue the updating there, and simply notify “significant” updates in “posts”. This post will become a stub, linking to the page.]

[At this stage I don’t intend any revision-control within the page / document, but if anyone is up for it we could turn it into a collaborative document? As in fact is being done with “coda” in the Active Inference Lab.]

Information & Systems Thinking

I’m going to talk and think in terms of systems, information and processes and some of that will use language often associated with machines and computers. The fact that until recently computers were actual humans doesn’t seem to lighten the mechanistic baggage that we tend to see computers and computing systems as electro-mechanical machines – and indeed much of their research and development uses (eg Turing) machine language.

Using the terms above, almost anyone with a humanist / humanities bent will baulk if I start using them to talk about how humans actually work biologically, psychologically or socially. Any use of them being at best metaphorical in underlying biological processes. Crude talk of living things as machines and brains or minds as computers generates a pretty negative knee jerk response. Part of mechanistic scientism over-reaching into the humanities, and missing – devaluing – its true richness.

Believe me, I share that reaction. My main quest here has for 22 years been precisely to point out the shortcomings of logical, objective, scientific thinking when it comes to human enterprises of all kinds. So, I’m not going to use the language of physical machines or computers if I don’t mean to. What I am going to use is systems thinking, and I will be talking about how it, they, we process information.

So, firstly I need to reassure you that when I say the words – systems, information and processing – and the shorthand of computation – (and god forbid, algorithms) – for what systems that process information do, I’m not, and you mustn’t therefore, be thinking of these as machines or computers, mechanical or electronic.

System is simply the word for any collection of stuff, thought of in terms of the arrangement / architecture of its component systems. Systems made of systems in any arrangement, any level of nesting within each other. Notice I could have said “parts” for the sub-systems, provided you didn’t assume I meant material-physical things. We really are talking any stuff as the subject of any thought or dialogue.

      • Two (or more) dots on this screen. Two (or more) points separated in any frame of reference in fact.
      • A pair of quarks, an electron-proton pair, a DNA molecule …
      • Two hemispheres in a brain, a fore-brain and a mid-brain, a whole brain, a whole brains-trust of many brains.
      • Me writing and you reading this.
      • Two sides of a debate, the set of concepts in a dialogue.
      • The idea of logical positivism, the entire works of Dostoevsky.
      • A trolley problem, a termite mound, the Sagrada Familia.
      • The thought experiments of philosophers everywhere.

The reason to think of them as systems – to use systems thinking – is to focus on their architecture: how they’re arranged, how they relate and communicate with each other and with their parts as more sub-systems.

A system is literally anything conceivable, but thought of in terms of its architecture. Systems Thinking. Literally.

[Communication is a fundamental information exchange process. In fact information, communication and computation are as fundamental as – if not more than – physics itself. See xxx / later.]

[Cybernetics – the root topic in this Psybertron blog – has itself suffered the same skewing of perceptions as the systems and computation talk above. Very much from Plato to the 1946 Macy conference it was about kybernetes, the self-governance of human affairs, but it was taken over in implementation by computer geeks for the past 80 years, to the point that the original human cybernetics became known ironically after 1963 as “the second cybernetics”. In further irony, the term governor had already been  borrowed metaphorically from human affairs to name the mechanical devices regulating the speed of early machines like 19th C steam-engines, long before we reinvented Roman thermostats. See yyy / later.]

[For more on Systems Thinking itself and positively practical application to everyday use by real humans in business and in government, see Anatoly Levenchuk (Ref). Unfortunately, in this piece I’m going to climb & dive into layers further removed from the everyday – using the abstractions of systems thinking to address some fundamental issues with science and humanity.]

Systems & Sub-Systems

When we talk of wholes and parts in everyday life – or of systems and sub-systems in systems thinking – there are common throwaway opinions:

“Some things – significant real-world things – are more than the sum of their parts and anyway, context is everything.”

To which orthodox scientific “rational” responses would be:

“Well no, once you’ve taken proper causal account of “all” component contributions, there can be no more. And, no, context is just more stuff to be taken into account.”

As ever the initial problem is at least partly linguistic – “taking into account” is more than a “sum”. We have apples and pears involved. 2 apples “plus” 2 pears/nuts/shells/seals gives us neither 4 apples nor 4 pears/nuts/shells/seals – but 4 fruit at best, 2 pairs of different kinds. And the process itself introduces or creates kinds we might not have started with. Pairs are not the only fruit. The best solution depends on what was the question.

[Classification / Naming / Definitions / Taxonomies / Good Fences / Tabletop / Rules & Exceptions / Identity Politics / Levels of Abstraction / “Small & Large” Facts]

The combination of component “parts” is more like systems architecture (above) and more like integration than addition. What’s more, an integration / assembly over multiple axes and levels of “kinds” of stuff and “types” of things, not to mention integration of processes over multiple timescales and histories in most real world contexts.

At human, individual and social scales, and at both micro and macro physical levels, and indeed at any number of biological, geological and cosmological scales, the outcomes of so many real world processes are statistical, dependant on probability distributions. Different kinds of distribution over different axes and timescales on top of the distributions on the kinds of stuff and things. Accounting as simple addition doesn’t get us very far. Being charitable, every discipline knows which particular set of mathematical / computational operations helps with their day job.

[History matters – Ergodicity / Uncertainty / Bayes / Taleb]

Complicated, or complex, or both. I don’t intend to make a big thing of the difference here, but different they are. Which is another complication.

It’s complicated.

Leaving aside whether in any real world case it could ever be practical, tractable in a computational sense, to take literally everything into account in a useful finite time, is moot.

In reality we draw control volumes – boundaries – around our problems. Boundaries within which and across which we are either in control or have workable levels of predictability and uncertainty. In a scientific, logical or mathematical context those control boundaries may simply be credible working assumptions, which can themselves be varied and validated in due course. That validation may often be the point of the scientific exercise. In most human endeavours it’s about holding the alligators at bay whilst we drain the swamp, or whatever it was we were trying to achieve.

This process / strategy looks like good practice learned from shared human experience, but it turns out to be much more fundamentally natural than that.

Faced with complexity, systems thinking helps. Remember, that means thinking in terms of stuff being systems as described above, not simply systematic / systemic / disciplined / formalised ways of thinking / planning / acting. Systems Thinking says treat the thing in front of you as a system whether or not it’s called a system in an everyday usage. A computer application or a collection of work processes or protocols or any electro-mechanical network assembly – we readily see as a system. Systems Thinking says treat every collection of stuff whose existence or behaviour depends on interactions with other stuff as a system. Systems Thinking addresses complexity.

[Park the argument for now between the strict orthodox scientist that says everything is ultimately physical, including our thoughts – the kind of thing material / energy / physicalists say – and the humanist who would reject that. Remember we already hinted earlier that information and computation are more fundamental than either physics or thought. More later.]

Thinking of the complex stuff / complicated thing in front of us as a system we will identify component sub-systems – the parts – and we will also identify the context – the super-system outside our control boundary – the world. We can further subdivide our thinking as necessary. Our system its internal sub-systems and that external world super-system can be further divided into as many more sub-sub-systems as suits our task.

Thing, with boundary, with internal view and with external view.

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Now the clever – and surprisingly fundamental bit – that describes and makes an ontological commitment to the reality of both physics and thought evolving from this basic view of systems and information processes within and between them.

At this point you need to believe the whole of the world and everything in it, can at least be thought in these “systems thinking” terms above, without any losses? No point elaborating if there’s already any objection up to this point.

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So given seemingly universal applicability of Systems Thinking, without any other presumptions about what exists in the world, the entire world, micro and macro, past and future, how it all works and fits together – no other presumptions – the world is my oyster. No? Just a way of thinking about stuff, including thinking itself.

I’ve already noted asides in the text so far, and below we have dozens more angles and corollaries to come. And this is the history of the entire world, so far and forever – a very long story – so clearly I’m going to need to be choosy about which bits I try to articulate and why, what for? I need to apply systems thinking to my systems thinking – which details matter where?

Remember I may not mention every detail, or give examples of everything, that has happened or may happen in the entire (previous and future) history of the world, but this story really is about all of that. Seen through systems thinking.

In many ways, apart from my aim to synthesise the story around systems thinking, there is nothing here I’m creating that’s actually new. All my sources and ideas are already published – some of them long ago, some of the syntheses more recently. ‘Twas ever thus. Nothing new under the sun.

And obviously lots has been written scientifically and philosophically, and mythologically or creatively metaphorically in the humanities – in literature generally. And a lot of that reflects prehistorical oral traditions before there was even literature. In some ways, from the humanities side, all I’m doing is clearing a path through ancient wisdom and intuitions that have become overgrown with scientific progress. From the ever-contingent science side, I’m mostly pointing out missed opportunities in choices made to best fit the data at the time, according to the methods of science. Stuff taken to be right – best current model – because it worked for some recognisable STEM purposes. And which touch-points / differences / controversies are invisible in the undergrowth may be obscure archaeology unless they’re part of your specialism.

This story is necessarily polymathic and necessarily of unequal depth and rigour in any given specialism – an occupational hazard of multi-discipline working. Indeed as we shall see – having the courage (*) to know which details do and don’t matter in any given context are a fundamental part of systems thinking. So this is mostly a story of rhetoric and persuasion, bringing together science and humanities where each may have missed a trick in reconciling with the other. Creativity and metaphor are not confined to either. No truth without reconciliation.

[Sun Tzu “Art of War” – Even if he could know them, the general does not need the position of every blade of grass on the battlefield, not even every individual warrior. (*) And “courage” – see risk aversion in “science” generally.]

And, I need to start somewhere. One thing I skipped so far, was that in claiming universality for “systems thinking” – I also mentioned information, processes and computation, and I subsumed them into that systems thinking umbrella without saying much more about them.

[Placeholder – I could come back and branch differently from this point? Why don’t you start with … ]

I can’t quite believe myself, but in order to start talking about information and processes in a systems thinking way, I’m going to start with one of the most abstruse technical areas of philosophy, metaphysics itself as a basis for all existence (ontology) and meaning (epistemology) in the world.

[No prizes for spotting I will be relying on Whitehead when it comes to process metaphysics.]

Information however …

[Counterfactuals and conceivability. Deutsch & Marletto.]

Systems thinking about thinking? Let’s do a thought experiment. Not one of those that asks you to suspend disbelief about whether it could possibly ever be arranged to happen – and please god, not a trolley or a zombie – just literally a thought experiment.

Imagine nothing and imagine the least thing that could conceivably exist in or in addition to that nothing, to make it something other than nothing.

Firstly, whatever you managed to conceive of as nothing (you’ll have done better than Larry Krauss anyway) – whatever you conceived of as that smallest addition would, in some pretty absolute sense, be indivisible – atomic in Democritus original conception, a thing with no parts, a Euclidian point. If it were in any way divisible, you could have conceived of one of those parts (sub-systems) existing, no?

[Avoid the confusion of the pretty complex systems that science first labelled “atoms” in order to make distinctions between chemical elements. Elemental elements in a chemical sense only. These are a long way from the Democritan / Euclidian conception. That’s just naming and language – already noted above.]

It’s not possible to conceive of anything less than the least conceivable thing. No cheating now. (And this is true whatever you had to settle on for that absolute void of no-thingness before you added that thing to it – not surprising that many may have to posit some ill-defined cosmic unity thing for that nothingness, just to be able to have the thought, but no matter.)

We have in mind that no-thing and a thing. If you can think of any things more primitive than that thing and that thing<>no-thing relation, I’d like to hear it. (We’ve not said anything about things like space or time, where or when yet, nor anything else we might call physical or material? This least thing is conceivably the dimensionless thing without any properties a Democritan / Euclidian point.)

If we chose binary notation, this no-thing and point-thing looks very like most primitive 0 & 1 but we don’t have to jump to “bits” quite yet, and anyway as I said above we don’t need this line of thought to be dependent on what we thought of as that 0 (no-thing) in the first place. So patience.

Now imagine a second thing. Hard to imagine it being much different to the first thing – after all we have placed some severe constraints on our thinking so far – no time or space, no materials or physics. Whatever kinds of things these things are they are simply both the same kind of indivisible atomic point-things.

So what makes them different things? What is their difference? What could conceivably be the difference between two point-things? Their difference is their separation, what separates them?

[We might think all that separates them so far is that they arose from two thoughts – but have no fear, we’re not jumping to pan-psychism – we can keep distinct the thought we’re having (here and now in the real world) and the conceivable thing thought about – the map and the terrain, the finger and the moon.]

 

 

 

[Insert magic – aka – Sense and Experience, Free Energy Principle / Markov Blankets / Active Inference / McGilchrist, Solms & Friston / Emperors’s New Clothes / Finger / Moon – Map / Terrain – Model / Reality. Information & Quality / The Subjective Perspective.]

[All models are wrong, or are they? Active Inference makes the ontological commitment as well as providing the model.]

[Corollaries / Negative-Corollaries / un-Adages: It’s the thought that counts. Things that can be counted are not the things that count.
Nothing new under the sun / ‘Twas ever thus / This s all already “out there”. Free Won’t, Vive la Differance, Devil in the Details / Examples / Pennies & Pounds / Butterflies & Cow-farts / One subject & one audience at a time?
]

Meantime, any Psybertron content searches on Markov, Solms, Active Inference, and the Information Metaphysics (2019 version) will all be recast in this Work-in-Progress essay. It’s all there 🙂

Pass me the machete?

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Definitions & Rules in Technology

Another, the first, of Richard Emerson’s interlocutors in his “Rebalancing the Future” podcast series was ex-GP writer James Willis. His “Paradox of Progress” and “Friends in Low Places” were books I reviewed very early in my own journey, and reviewed again when PoP was re-released earlier this year. We’ve been “fellow travellers” riding pillion on Robert Pirsig’s “Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance” and culminating recently in us both finding great value in Iain McGilchrist’s “The Matter With Things”.
(I talked with Richard on these and more last week.)

Early in this conversation on the “paradox” of James’ title, so much reminded me of what had originally resonated with me. You’ll find rules and definitions are regular – and deep – topics of mine here on Psybertron.

Obviously science-led technological process is wonderful, but the paradox is that the way it gets implemented can so easily miss or destroy important human value, and even our humanity itself. (This is a very old sentiment, as old as any romantic resistance to classical science – “we murder to dissect” etc.)

If we implement rules and definitions and best-practices of “experts” in technology in such a way that it constrains what humans can do, ie by physically enforcing rules definitively, we’ve taken away their / our humanity. Accountant managers rarely value this cost-disbenefit.

From me:

Most recently “Definition as a Coffin
Back in 2013 “Hold Your Definition – Dennett
And, the hazards of writing rules around definitions – definitive rules – has formed the basis of my “Rules of Engagement” for even longer.

Rules are for
guidance of the wise
and the obedience of fools.

A long-standing agenda item, that still deserves a considered essay from me is “Good Fences” mentioned earlier in both the Dennett Definition and Definition Coffin links above. There are good reasons to have definitions (fences around things) but even better (identity politics) reasons to understand why these should be respected, but never treated as cast in stone – or “cast in silicon” to use James’ computing version.

There can be no doubt James’ words have been an important inspiration to my own work for two decades.

Rebalancing the Future

Richard Emerson invited me onto his podcast earlier in the week.

We’ve met Richard here before on Psybertron, his personal “Renaissance” book and his “Ancient Worlds” project discovering – rediscovering – the value in ancient wisdom, with Dante’s “cosmology” being the poster boy.

Apart from having a shortlist of topics before we started – and my specialist subject heading of “Cybernetics” – we didn’t have much agenda or preparation other than Richard’s working title for his current podcast series: “Great Conversations about Balance and Rebirth

Whether it’s a great conversation, you can judge, but Richard holds the thread together as I trample over our starting topics: Robert Pirsig’s “On Quality” published this week; and Iain McGilchrist’s “The Matter with Things” from late last year, in my rush to future synthesis.

Hopefully you’ll find it interesting, I certainly found it a useful exercise having to think on my feet and obviously now have half-a-dozen things to write-up based on things I now know I missed in the conversation. How many times for example, did Richard use the word unify, and I failed to make the direct connection between McGilchrist’s hemispherical dualism and Pirsig’s quality monism now reflected in the computational monism of Friston / Solms / Doyle et al under the Active Inference umbrella. You can probably tell, I’m quite excited about these latest practical scientific developments, in the talk as well as the pages of this blog. Onward and upward.

No more spoilers, have a listen. Thanks for the opportunity Richard.

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Three Essays on Brains & Minds

Just place-holders for pieces – or indeed whole comms campaigns (?) – that need to be created: Most generally because there are enormous persistent misunderstandings within science & technology and with public understanding of it, and specifically (topically given Musk!) with socially degenerate aspects of ubiquitous social media.

In no particular order, they’re all connected multiple ways:

AI or AI?

So called “Artificial Intelligence” has so far come nowhere near real (human) intelligence, basically “automation”, although in the right hands, its study / research / experience to date has undoubtedly contributed enormously to understanding real brains and minds. Part of that understanding is essentially Systems Thinking:- from the Free-Energy-Principle / Markov-Blankets / Ergodicity / Strong-Emergence under an “Active Inference” umbrella, also conveniently still AI.

Algorithms for Humans?

Those with a human (humanist / humanities / dare-I-say spiritual) cultural perspective will react negatively to machine (algorithmic / electro-mechanical computer) models of “how real human (hard/intellectual & soft/emotional) intelligence works”. It’s a common sense of science over-reaching into the “human” culture war, the politics, as old as “The Third Culture”. Our mechanistic, imperfect, negative experience of algorithms so far (eg in social media, and marketing) and automatons (eg in robotics and thought experiments) can only reinforce this sense. However there is a perfectly credible story that the softer side of the human condition is explainable by categorical / qualitative “algorithms” in a living, biological “soft machine”.

Subjectivity for Scientists?

A lot of this reasoning is currently hampered by the limitations of orthodox (objective) scientific rationality. Partly general reductionism in causal chains that cannot handle the strong-emergence of causal agents acting independently of their component parts and partly that subjective agents with “minds of their own” are modelled objectively if not explicitly excluded by design. Catch-22. Scientific rationality needs to embrace – empathise with – the subjective perspective – cross Solms’ “Rubicon”.

Subir Sarkar

Subir Sarkar was interviewed by Sabine Hossenfelder last month, but I didn’t capture the link then:

Interesting content in the “Einstein was right when he said he was wrong” domain when it comes to the cosmological constant. Pointing to to some radically “new” ideas being needed to fix anomalies in physics. (That’s new as in old, but ignored.) But as I tweeted at the time, it is a fine interview anyway – proper respect between scientists with different disciplines of expertise and levels of experience.

Was prompted also to read this “Heart of Darkness” by Subir Sarkar on the same topic in a magazine called Inference. More spooky convergences, as “Active Inference” is this month’s topic in Cybernetics & Systems Thinking generally.

Michael Zargham on Cybernetic Infrastructure

A quickie to capture this link:

Very impressed watching this recorded Web3 Foundation talk by Michael Zargham. He’s a name I came across from making contact with the “Active Inference Lab”. I already know Anatoly Levenchuck and Karl Friston on the AIL Advisory Board and discovered that Zargham is another board member.
(I’m intending to participate in the .edu domain of the AIL.)

The Age of Networks
and the
Rebirth of Cybernetics

Highlights:

      • Very positive non-apology for focussing on many layers of abstraction above the bits & bytes. The essence of systems thinking is knowing what details to ignore in various levels of complex systems.
      • Very familiar recap of the history of Cybernetics starting from Plato (Kybernetes) via the Macy conferences. With “systems thinking” and network architectures front and centre of response to complexity.
      • Being comfortable with circular reasoning (Hofstadter for me). “Second Order” Cybernetics, positive as well as negative feedback loops. Future consequences are causal now. (There is active predictive inference involved – hence AI-Lab.)
      • Attention cost of participation (eg in social government). The more the “infrastructure” can handle invisible processes we don’t have to worry about, the better for us. Transparency is a distraction from what really matters. Noise means we always fall back to lowest common denominators. [See Mental Switching Costs]. What we need to trust is that the design of the decentralised system knows its own limitations.

(And, great to hear someone use that quote “All models are wrong, they simply have a valuable domain of intended use.” 3 decades (!) since I heard Julian Fowler use it.)

Anyway, a new “hero” (with no mention of John Doyle).
Connected on Twitter.

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Contrast with this pm’s talk with Iain McGilchrist’s elaboration of his “Sense of the Sacred”. Tremendous audience (and Iain) prejudice against “engineering” and machine language. These two domains just don’t get how close they really are. Same as deep thinking physicists being very close to the same sense of (something) sacred. In the Solms / Friston (bio-psycho) story, the turnaround of Damasio is telling, from the same prejudice against mechanistic algorithms to understanding the human subject involvement.

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Mental Switching Costs

The feeling of the brain being actively engaged with too many thoughts, to properly address any new issue, never mind any of the existing issues, is a common feeling – for me anyway.

Once you have several mental balls in the air that are connected to some strategy to get something delivered productively, it’s impossible to pick up a new one without letting drop at least one. [The other metaphor is the plate-spinning circus act.]

In correspondence today Richard Emerson coined the expression:

Mental Switching Costs

As well as reflecting the existing thought process above, that formulation instantly suggested its relationship to the (Friston) Free Energy Principle and all those systems-thinking consequences of Markov-blankets and active inference for living and sentient organisms. It’s all about efficient and effective use of resources, and when one of those costly resources is conscious attention itself, maximising which tasks can be left to the sub-conscious.

Isn’t it great when a plan comes together?

Come the Revolution

Regular commenter AJOwens (“Staggering Implications“) posted a very astute thought below my post on John C Doyle and Zombie Science.

Whether we see problems with “current” science as a bug or a virus, or simply the current state of ever-contingent, imperfect science, the switch to a new dominant view within science is of course exactly what Kuhn was talking about in his revolutions of scientific paradigms. And they’re always revolutions because – for whatever specific reasons – the existing paradigm naturally resists change. (I’d still say the current shift is special, somewhat meta, in that it’s about science not about any particular content of science. But he makes a good point.)

As an engineer / technologist I had always focussed on the techno-economic industrial paradigms (TEP’s after Freeman & Perez, previously Kondratiev Waves) enabled by advancing science, not the revolutions of or within science itself. Doubly meta here, because the current paradigm we’re struggling to get to terms with is the Electronic Information & Communications “wave” in human culture and economies more widely. This is quite distinct from the science and technology market-place that has enabled it, and quite distinct again from the revolutionary idea that information and communications may in fact be the very foundations of any kind of science.

Understood in [Kuhnian] terms, the “bug” in science is a very old one, and its roots are epistemological. All scientific research is conducted within a paradigm, but the paradigm influences what counts as “evidence.” Phenomena contrary to the reigning theory are at first not even noticed or recognized as important “facts.” If they become more persistent obstacles to current theory, they are explained away, dismissed as anomalies, or otherwise resisted. Eventually the reigning theory becomes so riddled with inconsistencies and beset with contrary observations that its very paradigm is overturned, and a new one is adopted which can accommodate the new evidence.

I believe we are in the middle of such a paradigm shift, and the work of people like McGilchrist and Solms and Doyle are part of it.

AJOwens, comment April 11th, 2022.

(And he goes on to suggest some other current sources.)

The point – we are in the middle of a Kuhnian paradigm shift – and being revolutionary, the process will have its downsides as well as its progress.

And this particular paradigm revolution is a complex, ubiquitous, many layered on multiple meta-axes. It is – or will be when it reaches a tipping point – going to be painful on a profound and grand scale. This is not just horse-drawn canal boats being replaced by steam railways. The e-Comms enabling is running full-steam ahead of the consequences in all aspects of humanity.

“The paradigm influences what counts as evidence.”

Indeed, as I’ve said before.
And resistance is futile.

Robert Pirsig On Quality

Published this week, On Quality is a collection of writings by Robert Pirsig, prefaced and selected by his widow Wendy Pirsig, almost exactly five years after his death.

The Robert Pirsig Story

Apart from introducing us to Bob’s interest in the ubiquitous presence of Quality and to his two main writings, the books Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance (ZMM) and Lila, the preface also gives us “The Robert Pirsig Story”. Ironically, Wendy points out that most relevant parts of Bob’s early biography are to be found in the pages of ZMM, despite the “for rhetorical purposes” warning which led some readers, myself included, to research which aspects did indeed correspond with reality. I say ironically because for quite some time there was speculation, even a direct suggestion from Bob, that Wendy would one day write his biography. Here she gives us an eight page summary – including, despite its brevity, several newly public details – and lets us know that the selections in On Quality are themselves “loosely chronological”.

Previously published selections come not just from Lila and ZMM, and Bob’s paper Subjects, Objects, Data and Values but also from DiSanto & Steele’s Guidebook to ZMM and Dan Glover’s Lila’s Child. New selections come from Bob’s letters (to unattributed correspondents) and from his notes of the very few talks (*) he gave on quality.

[(*) Post note: In fact the whole of the introductory chapter “The Right Way” is a selection from the transcription of a talk he gave just a month after first publication of ZMM – now available in full here.]

On Quality

And the focus really is on quality. Whilst naturally acknowledging that his Metaphysics of Quality is elaborated within Lila, the multi-level “patterns” that form the full ontology – the model of evolved existence in the world -are not mentioned. Dynamic Quality, originally simply “quality” in ZMM, is the fundamental – radical empirical – essence of what is experienced.

‘Quality is just experience. It is the essence of experience of what is sensed. That’s all.’

‘It is not an intellectual category or any kind of thing that is independent of experience itself.’

RMP, Letter October 2, 1993

On Quality focuses on the quality monism itself and on its first division into static and dynamic, contrasted with the more orthodox subject-object split:

‘That line, “Without Dynamic Quality the organism cannot grow. Without static quality it cannot last. Both are needed,” is emerging in retrospect as the most important one in Lila.’

RMP, Letter September 4, 1993.

That statement itself pre-figures what today would be seen as fundamental to “homeostatic” models of life and consciousness in both science and philosophy, where all empirical knowledge is at root “affect” a categorically good or bad felt property before any more specific kinds of thing can develop in biology or in intellect. On Quality includes several references to Bob’s archetypal “hot stove” example of categorically good vs bad immediate experience. Elsewhere he went further and used also the classic “thermostat” example of what would be instantly recognisable as homeostasis today.

Also included in On Quality are selections from Buddhist texts where Bob saw parallels with his original quality thinking and was inspired that quality must indeed be fundamental and ancient, independent of Western scientific progress.

Still Important Today

Existing Pirsig readers – and there are millions – will welcome this sympathetic selection of “the most important” basic thoughts on quality from their source. For those readers, the notes from the few talks he gave form the bulk of the newly published material [(*) above and (**) below]. For a new reader who may have resisted the urge to dive into two rhetorical best-selling and cult road-novels from 1974 and 1991, On Quality provides a gentle introduction to their core thoughts, and may tempt you to follow-up on what all the fuss was about and why they remain important today.

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[For more on Pirsig from me on Psybertron, start from this summary page and follow links to my Pirsig Page short-term and the Robert Pirsig Association page (longer-term)]

[Post Note (**) one such large extract was shared on Literary Hub, by the publisher Harper Collins / Mariner Books.]

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The Elon Musk Effect?

Amazingly, after so many convergent threads on systems architectures and their fragility or resilience to well-placed viruses or bugs – in my agenda that “system” being the whole of science-led rational orthodoxy – I have may times used the systems thinking approach that complex systems (like politics plus media plus social-media) need moderation in the speed of communications in key layers. (As opposed to yes/no censorship of content.) We need this kind of thinking in order not to degenerate to lowest common viral denominators through social-media. (Sadly the prevailing “virus” is that any kind of moderation is a constraint on the much fetishised idol of “freedom of speech”.)

The threat / promise that Elon Musk likes Twitter so much he might buy it, in order to support that fetish, has got a lot of people thinking, and sure enough systems architecture thinking has gained a little traction:

Image

Naturally, I enthusiastically agreed with both.

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Freedom runs on rails.
There are rules of engagement.