Holotopia: Narrow frame

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H O L O T O P I A:    F I V E    I N S I G H T S



Science gave us a completely new way to look at the world. It gave us powers that the people in Galilei's time couldn't dream of. What might be the theme of the next revolution of this kind?

Science was developed as a way to find causal explanations of natural phenomena. Consequently, it has served us well for some purposes (such as developing science and technology) and poorly for others (such as developing culture).

But its main disadvantage in the role of 'headlights' is that it constitutes a 'hammer'; it coerces the creative elite to look for the 'nail'—and ignore the needs of the people and the society.


This is not an argument against science.

Science has served us excellently in the role it was created for. There is no reason to believe that it will not continue to do so.

Our theme here is how we create truth (what we collectively believe in) and meaning, about the matters of which our daily life and interests are composed. And also those other matters, which demand our attention but remain ignored.

We have an urgent need for orientation and guidance.

In all walks of life—so that we may see things as we need to see them; and direct our efforts productively and wisely.

Our point of departure is the fact that nobody really thought about and created the way we create truth and meaning about the themes that matter. What we have, and use, is a patchwork made out of fragments from the 19th century science (which were there when our trust in tradition failed, and our trust in science prevailed), and popular myths. We tend to take it for granted, for instance, that something is trustworthy, true, legitimate or real, (only) if it is "scientifically proven"—or follows as from scientific "laws", by a causal argument.

Our point is that we can do better.

And that our task at hand (federating Aurelio Peccei's call to action, to pursue "a great cultural revival") requires that.


We must return to reason

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Stephen Toulmin's book "Return to Reason" provides a historical view of our theme, from the pen of a prominent philosopher of science. Toulmin's point is that for historical reasons, academic research got caught up in a disciplinary pattern deriving from the 19th century physics—which obstructs and confines academic creativity. Toulmin's call to action is to "return to reason"—and apply it creatively and freely (see our summary).


Insights from physics

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In "Physics and Philosophy" (subtitled "Revolution in Modern Science"), Werner Heisenberg observed that the way of looking at the world that our general culture adopted from the 19th century physics constituted a "rigid and narrow frame", which was damaging to culture. Heisenberg explained why the results in contemporary physics amounted to a scientific disproof of the narrow frame (see our summary here).

Heisenberg foresaw that the epistemological insights reached in modern physics would naturally lead to cultural revival. Click here to hear Heisenberg say that

Most people believe that the atomic technique is the most important consequence. It was different for me. I believed that the philosophical consequences from atomic physics will make a bigger change than the technical consequences in the long run. (...) So we know because of atomic physics and what was learned from it that general problems look different than before. For example, the relationship between science and religion, and more generally, the way we see the world.



Insights from the humanities

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In the humanities, it is common knowledge that the ways of looking at the world we have inherited from the past will not serve us in this time of change. See our comments that begin here.



Insights from philosophy

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Wittgenstein observed that words and expressions acquire their meanings only as parts of specific familiar situations, or language-games. His arguments suggest the conclusion that we cannot really use language to "change the game", which is our task at hand (see our comments here; take a look at the reflection that follows, about Robert Oppenheimer's "Uncommon Sense", where it is indicated why not only our language, but also our "common sense" might be a hindrance).

So far we have been repeating what everyone knows—that the way we see the world and make sense of the world is determined by our cultural paradigm. So can we at all liberate ourselves from this entrapment, and communicate in a way that changes the paradigm?

Einstein will give us a clue.



Insights from Einstein

Knowledge can grow 'upward'

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Einstein's "Autobiographical Notes" is, roughly, Einstein's equivalent of Heisenberg's just mentioned book—where Einstein looks back at the whole experience of modern physics, and draws conclusions. Einstein first lists all the successes that were derived directly from Newton's approach, then the "anomalies"—phenomena that could not be handled in that way. Then he offers a somewhat dramatic conclusion, as shown above.

Science on Crossroads.jpeg Science on a Crossroads ideogram

We condense the whole thing to the above ideogram (an alternative to the one given below?). The moment Einstein was describing was that Newton created a method and a set of concepts, which offered only an approximation of "physical reality"—which was good enough for a couple of centuries of progress, but not any longer. Immediately, Einstein explains that they will have to be replaced (by physicists, of course) by ones "further removed from ...", i.e. ones that are more technical and less intuitive. Science, following its own course, continued to evolve 'downwards'.

But a completely different direction at that point also became possible: To do what Newton did in all walks of life! Create concepts and methods that work approximately, but well enough...

The method we are proposing builds on Einstein's "epistemological credo", given in Autobiographical notes (which we commented on here).

I shall not hesitate to state here in a few sentences my epistemological credo. I see on the one side the totality of sense experiences and, on the other, the totality of the concepts and propositions that are laid down in books. (…) The system of concepts is a creation of man, together with the rules of syntax, which constitute the structure of the conceptual system. (…) All concepts, even those closest to experience, are from the point of view of logic freely chosen posits, just as is the concept of causality, which was the point of departure for this inquiry in the first place.


To be continued


Polyscopy.jpg
Polyscopy ideogram

The Polyscopy ideogram, with which we summarize the narrow frame insight, points to its core message: When we understood that the methods developed in the sciences are human-made ways of looking at things or scopes (recall Einstein's "epistemological credo")—it became natural to adapt them to the purposes that need to be served; such as seeing things whole.



Keyword

Keywords are concepts defined by convention. <p>By defining concepts by convention, we depart from the narrow frame—as far as the concepts and expressions are concerned. Such definitions remain valid in the context of a given article, or methodology or prototype, and are independent of what the defined words "really mean".

This practice is analogous to the usual practice in mathematics and computer programming, to define the main keywords at the beginning.


Methodology

A methodology is a collection of methods, which includes an explicitly defined (by convention) specification of underlying assumptions (criteria and principles).

By designing a methodology we become capable of

  • designing methods by which we create truth and meaning, and hence departing from the inherited ones
  • making our methods flexible, or subject to further federation
In sum, the methodology creation allows us to depart from the narrow frame when conceiving the method.


Scope

Defined by convention, concepts become part of a scope— which is a way of looking. In the holoscope, a multiplicity of ways of looking are deliberately designed to illuminate a chosen theme in the right way.

A core element of a justification of a certain piece of information is to show that its choice of scopes is correct.

Pattern and ideogram

In the generalized approach to knowledge that is based on science, as modeled by the holoscope, the pattern and the ideogram roughly correspond to the mathematical function and the corresponding symbolic representation. "E = mc2" is a familiar example. By why use only mathematics? The patterns and the ideograms generalize the approach to science completely; they can be, in principle, any claim or message.

Many of the keywords we've introduced are defined as patterns. The power structure is an example. Defined in this way, the power structure is not a thing, but a way of looking, and a tendency or deformation that can be present in very many things, which this way of looking reveals.

An early summary of the concept and the applications of the ideogram is presented here.


Gestalt

The keyword gestalt allows us to model what it means to be "informed". To be "informed", one must have a gestalt that is appropriate to the situation at hand. "Our house is on fire" is a canonical example.

In the holoscope order of things, multiple ways to interpret the data, or multiple gestalts are possible (see the Gestalt ideogram on the right). Hence the challenge we are continually facing is to find new ways to look at situations and issues, so that our gestalts may be corrected.

Gestalt.gif
Gestalt ideogram


Information holon

Consider the academia as a system. Selected creative people come in, and they are given certain tools to work with, which will decide how socially useful or usable the results of their life work will be. Are the traditional books and articles, which the printing press-related evolution left us with, still the best solution? <p>The solution we proposed federates certain core challenges and insights reached in computer programming; and corresponding solution in terms of the Object Oriented Methodology (they are summarized here.

The information holon is offered as a counterpart to "object" in object oriented methodology.

The Information idogram, shown on the right, explains its principle of operation.

The ideogram shows an "i", which stands for "information", as composed of a circle placed on top of a square. The square stands for the details; and also for looking at a theme of choice from all sides, by using diverse kinds of sources and resources. The circle, or the dot on the "i", stands for the function or the point of it all. That might be an insight into the nature of a situation; or a rule of thumb, pointing to a general way to handle situations of a specific kind; or a project, which implements such handling.

Information.jpg Information ideogram

By showing the circle as founded on the square, the Information ideogram points to knowledge federation as a social process (the 'principle of operation' of the socio-technical 'lightbulb'), by which the insights, principles, strategic handling and whatever else may help us understand and take care of our increasingly complex world are kept consistent with each other, and with the information we own.

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Holoscope

As a keyword, holoscope points to a method that allows us to "see things whole"; or metaphorically, to functional 'headlights'.

The Holoscope ideogram serves to explain the role the above-described details have in the inner workings of the holoscope. If one should inspect a hand-held cup, to see whether it is cracked or whole, one must be able to look at it from all sides; and perhaps also bring it closer to inspect some detail, and take it further away and see it as a whole. The control over the scope is what enables the holoscope to make a difference.

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Holoscope ideogram

The difference between the paradigm modeled by the holoscope and the traditional science can easily be understood if one considers the difference in the purpose, or epistemology. When our goal is to "see things whole", so that we can make them whole, a discovery of a way of looking that reveals where a 'crack' might exist, although we might not (yet) be able to see it, can be a valuable contribution to knowledge, as a warning to take precaution measures against the potential consequences of an undetected 'crack'. In science, on the other hand, where our goal is to discover only the most solid 'bricks', with which we can construct the edifice of a "scientific reality picture"—such ways of looking and hypothetical 'cracks' are considered worthless, and cannot even be reported.

To fully understand this idea, it is important to consider what those 'cracks' might mean in practice: They are 'crevices on the road', they are 'wrong turns'—which we as people or as a civilization must be able to avoid.

Hence holoscope makes a new kind of "result" possible—a "discovery" of new ways of looking or scopes, which reveal something essential about our situation, and perhaps change our perception of it, and the way we act.

Polyscopy

Polyscopy, or Polyscopic Modeling methodology, is a concrete prototype of the holoscope.


Information Must Be Designed

This book is both a description of polyscopy, and its application—to produce a new kind of book; and a new kind of result.

The book is structured as information holon

The result is a justification of the claim presented in the title—and by the Modernity ideogram; namely that we cannot simply inherit the ways we handle information; we must design a way that truly works (the book's introduction is made available here).