How does #SystemsThinking relate to #Pragmatism? Within #PhilosophyOfScience, #CWestChurchman and #RussellLAckoff continued the #experimentalism of #EdgarASinger to put nonrelativistic pragmatism at the core of systems thinking in an entanglement of facts and values.
https://coevolving.com/blogs/index.php/archive/nonrelativistic-pragmatism-and-systems-thinking/
For those who think that open standards can be easily added on after code had already shipped, there's an extensive case study on Microsoft Office and OOXML. Here's a fun question: how long did it take Microsoft to meet the specification that they themselves wrote?
Threads doesn't initially support ActivityPub open standard, and is not open source. Adding ActivityPub support doesn't preclude withdrawal later.
> Will Meta embrace-extend-extinguish the ActivityPub protocol?
> There are comparisons to be made between Meta adopting ActivityPub for its new social media platform and Meta adopting XMPP for its Messenger service a decade ago. There was a time when users of Facebook and users of Google Talk were able to chat with each other and with people from self-hosted XMPP servers, before each platform was locked down into the silos we know today. What would stop that from repeating? Well, even if Threads abandoned ActivityPub down the line, where we would end up is exactly where we are now. XMPP did not exist on its own outside of nerd circles, while ActivityPub enjoys the support and brand recognition of Mastodon.
https://blog.joinmastodon.org/2023/07/what-to-know-about-threads/
The I Ching (Yi Jing) based in Chinese philosophy might be a more systemic approach, in contrast to the more systematic approach based in Western rationalism, says #CWestChurchman via #DeboraHammond.
https://coevolving.com/blogs/index.php/archive/c-west-churchman-on-the-i-ching/
July 10: Sciencing and Philosophizing on Threads in #SystemsThinking
Extending a presentation from the 67th Annual Meeting of the #InternationalSocietyForTheSystemsSciences, #GarySMetcalf and @daviding are jointly exploring how #systemschange may be approached differently via the philosophical history of American #pragmatism, and post-colonial (contextural-dyadic) thinking.
See the full abstract and presentation at https://wiki.st-on.org/2023-07-10
Preregister at https://sciencing-philosophizing.eventbrite.ca
Web video recording on #SystemsThinking Selected Readings (1969) edited by #FredEEmery, with personal history of science by #DavidLHawk and #JohnPourdehnad .
https://coevolving.com/blogs/index.php/archive/systems-thinking-1969-hawk-pourdehnad/
Book excerpts at https://st1969.daviding.wiki.openlearning.cc/view/welcome-visitors/view/systems-thinking-1969/view/systems-thinking-selected-readings-penguin-1969
Systems Thinking Ontario https://wiki.st-on.org/2023-06-12
What have we learned or forgotten since #SystemsThinking (1969) Penguin reader 18 chapters, edited by #FredEEmery?
Join #DavidLHawk and #JohnPourdehnad online on June 12 6:30pm ET for reflection and discussions.
https://wiki.st-on.org/2023-06-12
https://st1969.eventbrite.ca
https://st1969.daviding.wiki.openlearning.cc
Web video on "The Sustainable Development Goals: Origins, Context, and Perspectives" with Ned #NenadRava from @UN @JointSDGFund in discussion with #SystemsThinking Ontario.
https://coevolving.com/blogs/index.php/archive/sdgs-origins-context-perspectives-st-on-2023-05-08/
> Leading #TVO Today’s Asian Heritage Month lineup for May 2023, TVO Original Big Fight in Little Chinatown premieres on TVO, TVO Today, YouTube and smart TV services on Tuesday, May 9 at 9 pm ET.
Rereading the introduction to the 1969 _Systems Thinking: Selected Readings_ Penguin paperbook surfaces some choices by the editor #FredEEmery that I hadn't previously appreciated.
If you want a large archive for photos that is open source, with the option of self-hosting, you might consider #Piwigo, an option that I took when migrating off #Flickr. https://coevolving.com/blogs/index.php/archive/from-flickr-to-piwigo/ in 2018.
Piwigo has a Social Buttons plugin https://piwigo.org/ext/extension_view.php?eid=673&rid=7992 to share to #Tumblr. I use that for my near-daily photos to https://www.tumblr.com/daviding . The RSS in Tumblr syndicates easily.
Tumblr is now owned by Automattic (developers of #WordPress), and continues to be free of charge. Tumblr is scheduled to support #ActivityPub.
I also post to #Facebook and #Instagram, and occasionally to https://metapixl.com/daviding (#Pixelfed) as an experiment. My primary archive on Piwigo is full resolution photos, that are available as downsampled.
If you don't want to self-host, there's https://piwigo.com/ , @fossheim
With an academic search on #enshittification coined by @pluralistic on Google Scholar, the first link is to @blair_fix , where the tie is made to inflation.
> What’s this enshittification got to do with inflation? Everything! [....]
> It’s inflation through enforced scarcity.
> The ‘enforced’ part is key. Yes, we live in a world in which resources are finite, and hence ‘scarce’. But regardless of a resources’ innate abundance, maintaining high prices requires restriction.
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/764/3/20230126_fix_the_cause_of_stagflation.html
Cory Doctorow @pluralistic reasons through lock-in in markets, with a eucalyptus tree strategy, resulting in enshittification play.
> Amazon – like other platform businesses – externalizes its costs onto its suppliers, then harvests the majority of the reward. Uber drivers take the risks – car and fuel payments, unpaid time waiting for a ride – and then it creams off most of the money that riders pay to get from A to B .....
> You can think of this as the eucalyptus tree strategy: eucalypts drop oily leaves around their base. The leaves pile up, trapping heat among all that oil until, eventually, they burst into flame, burning down all the vegetation for miles around. The only things that survive the conflagration are the eucalypt seed-pods, which need fire to open and begin germinating. Meanwhile, all the potential competitors for water, sunshine and soil nutrients have been incinerated, forming a rich, ashy mulch for the eucalypts to grow in.
https://pluralistic.net/2023/04/25/greedflation/#commissar-bezos
The "doable dozen" is a phrase that #BjornLomborg picked up from #JordanPeterson on the April 3 interview. The list is now more complete at Halftime for the Sustainable Development Goals microsite at https://www.copenhagenconsensus.com/halftime
> The 12 best policies to scale up, that our experts have identified, cover a wide range of areas: tuberculosis, education, maternal and newborn health, agricultural research and development, malaria, e-procurement, nutrition, land tenure security, chronic diseases, trade, child immunization and skilled migration.
> The benefit of these 12 best policies can really only be described as momentous. It will save 4.2 million lives each year and generate $1.1 trillion in additional economic benefits each and every year for the developing world.
A series of articles by #BjornLomborg with leading media outlets has been lined up. This article in Forbes sets a direction.
> But in 2015, when the world replaced the #MDGs [#MillenniumDevelopmentGoals], things went wrong. World leaders could again have chosen to focus on a few, crucial targets. They could even have kept the same targets, since they are so important to the world’s most vulnerable people. We could have focused on pinpointing where the needs are deepest and the opportunities are greatest.
> Instead, the #UnitedNations and world leaders came up with a hodge-podge, absurdly long list of 169 targets for the world to achieve from 2015-2030: the #SustainableDevelopmentGoals.
A new book by #BjornLomborg is coming out, #BestThingsFirst. I listened to the 2-hour interview by #JordanPeterson released on April 3 (as usual, while on my bike and driving). The timing seems related to the upcoming #UnitedNations meeting in October, where we are at the midpoint of the #SustainableDevelopmentGoals #SDGs, and failing.
Here's a text summary of the interview. The list of 12 proposed initiatives isn't given as straightforward, but the idea that we might succeed on some things rather than failing on everything is likely to be appealing to many.
On the #DaveSnowden lecture, with conversation with #MichaelCJackson, @psybertron writes:
> Many practitioners and academics have taken systems thinking down to the most fundamental areas of physics and into cognitive science. Dave is not alone in promoting latest thinking on these topics into systems practice and Mike is not alone in doubting the idea that such science can really be applied to the psychological context of human and social, organisational and political activities. Certainly doubting that law-like science can be applied any more than metaphorically.
Greater appreciation of #SystemsThinking contextual-dyadic thinking of #KeekokLee, with
anatomy as structure / physiology as function (and process);
process ontology / thing ontology;
qi ju as qi-in-concentrating mode / qi san as qi-in-dissipating mode
https://daviding.wordpress.com/2023/04/24/2021-06-17-keekok-lee-philosophy-of-chinese-medicine-2/
On individual versus collective advancement, via @timoreilly :
> I remember once I was working on our property in Sebastopol where I used to live, and I had this landscape architect who came in to help us.
> And she said, “Everybody always wants to put their nice new thing where it’s already beautiful.” She said, “No, you want to put your nice new thing in the worst part of your property, so you will make it better.” And I thought that was really good advice.
"Building a Better Future: A Conversation with Tim O’Reilly" | May 5, 2021 at https://codeforamerica.org/news/building-a-better-future-a-conversation-with-tim-oreilly/
Systems change researcher resident in Toronto, Canada. Past president, International Society for the Systems Sciences. Author of Open Innovation Learning book. Research fellow, CSRP Institute. Alumnus of IBM after 28 years.