Back

commented on Context Changes Everything by Alicia Juarrero

Alicia Juarrero: Context Changes Everything (2023, MIT Press, The MIT Press) 1 star

#JuarreroBook Chapter 6 Part 1 There's a lot in this chapter, and some of it I find hard to understand. So I'd like to split things up. We are now on context dependent constraints, the nature of which is to "take conditions away from independence"

The ch. outlines "three examples of the emergence of long-range correlations generated in virtue of context-dependent constraints. The first serves as a metaphor of phase transitions. The second illustrates inter-dependent dynamics among oscillators. The third is the textbook case of self- organizing, nonlinear, and far from equilibrium processes in the natural world. All three show how context-dependent constraints, operating against a backdrop established by context-independent constraints, weave global forms of order".

The examples are: 1. the phase transition of a random graph with sufficiently many links that it moves to connectedness

  1. synchronising pendulum clocks on a shelf

  2. convection patterns such as Bernard cells

What do …

@uh @UlrikeHahn@fediscience.org @dcm@social.sunet.se

Indeed this is a much longer chapter! I stopped at p. 73 for now.

I share your concern about the ontology here: Juarrero talks constantly about constraints 'doing' things, and even being a form of causality (though she doesn't say how). But her examples suggest that what she calls constraints are just ways of describing patterns that appear when certain entities interact with each other in specific organised ways. This impression is reinforced by the apparently circular treatment of context-dependent constraints on p.70: they are characterised by appeal to constrained interactions...

But then, rather than being something ontologically additional that does things, constraints are just ways of talking about features of such patterns, which are in their turn constituted by the familiar kinds of causal interactions between entities. So, nothing ontologically new, just, at most, new-ish alternative explanatory tools.

(This connects, I think, to the Deacon vs …

@dcm@social.sunet.se @NicoleCRust @dcm@bookwyrm.social @awaisaftab @uh thanks for the paper! I had a quick read through and it is helpful, but I wanted to draw attention to something that already struck me when I went back and read van Gelder, which is that dynamical systems and complex systems are not the same thing, though related, and some of the aspects of J’s book that I’m most interested in like the mereological (part/whole) issues aren’t really part of the discussion of DS (in cogsci)

@dcm@social.sunet.se @NicoleCRust @dcm@bookwyrm.social @awaisaftab @uh indeed! It’s just that, for me, the notion of constraint seems potentially really useful in a way that DS on its own is never going to be for me….see the exchange about rationality and psych a few weeks back - DS (certainly of the anti-representational bent) is just a step in the wrong direction for the things I’m interested in ;-)

so I wanted to highlight the bit that’s (?) different and new about J relative to those past debates…