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Emergence

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Title: Emergence


1
Emergence
  • John Martin
  • For OUSyS AGM 27-1-07

2
Too much theory?
  • So far, we have never hired speakers for
    particular topics, so OUSyS presentations have
    depended on unpaid volunteers and their
    enthusiasms
  • My topic is, indeed, theoretical, but my view
    is that traditional Systems concepts contain a
    number of subtle traps and biases that have
    practical implications.
  • Personally, I feel quite trapped by the classic
    Systems concepts, and the very poor linkage to
    related fields, so this topic is part of a wider
    personal project to unpick these traps

3
EMERGENCE how, when and why the whole is
greater than the sum of its parts (EPSRC
sandpit Oct 06 budget 1.45 M)
  • For the first time since the enlightenment
    we have started to understand that there are
    non-causal systems in which some things just
    are. The concept of emergence accepts that
    even with the same starting conditions the same
    pattern would not necessarily repeat.
  • Complexity is not the only factor influencing
    emergence, for example human and animal activity
    are also driven by context and instinct,
    climate change is influenced by human activity as
    well as weather patterns, disease transference is
    influenced by technology , social and
    commercial factors as well as human contacts.
  • Emergence occurs in a very broad range of areas,
    so cross-fertilisation of ideas and approaches is
    essential. From anti-terrorism to zoology, and
    from understanding behaviour to meeting the
    requirements of society the level of uncertainty
    in managing the future is on the increase.
  • Topics to be considered in the sandpit might
    include
  • Is complexity a metaphor, a reality or both?
  • What types of research method are appropriate to
    study emergence in human systems or physical
    systems?
  • What is the role of modelling and simulation in
    systems with emergent properties? What are their
    limits?
  • How could an understanding of complexity improve
    policy formation and practice in both Government
    and Industry?
  • Examples of disciplines and research areas that
    could be potential contributors include
  • Anthropology, Art, Behavioural sciences,
    Biology, Chemistry, Cognitive Science, Complexity
    Science, Computer Science, Computer modelling,
    Design, Economics, Engineering, Human Factors,
    Management, Medicine, Meteorology, Mathematics,
    Philosophy, Physics, Psychology, Sociology,
    Statistics, Technology, Zoology

4
Gianfranco Minati (UKSS, 2006)
  • Emergence refers to the core theoretical
    problems of the processes by which systems are
    established.
  • We are now facing the process by which GST is
    becoming more and more a Theory of Emergence ...
    , searching for suitable models and
    formalizations of its fundamental bases.

5
Explanations and examples
A transcript of the definitions and examples
generated in this exercise is in the file
Ovals.rtf
6
Similarities and differences
  • The handout sheet lists some of the potentially
    emergence-related events, properties, etc. that I
    came across in the literature, and you have just
    generated some more!
  • Spend 10 minutes working with one or two others
    to see if you can identify any clusters or
    distinctions that seem helpful in making sense of
    this sea of alleged examples
  • For each cluster or distinction you come up with,
    name it on an oval and stick it up on the wall.
  • Be selective! Just pick out what catches your
    attention

The handout sheet is available as
EmergenceEGs.rtf A transcript of the resulting
categories is in Ovals.rtf
7
So what is emergence?
8
The traditional Systems view
A
B
A is not the same as B A is a whole with
emergent properties
9
Water the many disciplines needed to study its
many aspects, such as
  • Atomic structure
  • Ice/water/steam state changes
  • Compressibility, surface tension, cohesion,
    adhesion, capillarity
  • Dynamics of temperature change
  • Buoyancy
  • Patterns of flow and turbulence
  • Tidal action
  • Waters role in world climate
  • Adapted from Corning, 2002

10
But be warned (!!)
  • We're often told that certain wholes are more
    than the sum of their parts. We hear this
    expressed with reverent words like holistic and
    gestalt, whose academic tones suggest that they
    refer to clear and definite ideas.
  • But I suspect the actual function of such terms
    is to anesthetize a sense of ignorance.
  • We say gestalt when things combine to act in
    ways we can't explain, holistic when we're
    caught off guard by unexpected happenings and
    realize we understand less than we thought we
    did.
  • Minsky, 1986, quoted in Ronald, Sipper and
    Capcarrère, 1999

11
contradictory opinions abound
  • There is no universally acknowledged definition
    of emergence, nor even a consensus about such
    hoary (even legendary) examples as water.
  • And if emergence cannot be defined in concrete
    terms so that you will know it when you see it
    how can it be measured or explained?
  • As Jeffrey Goldstein noted in his Emergence
    article, "emergence functions not so much as an
    explanation but rather as a descriptive term
    pointing to the patterns, structures or
    properties that are exhibited on the
    macro-scale.
  • Corning, 2002

12
Origins
  • The whole is something over and above its
    parts, and not just the sum of them all
  • (Aristotle, Book H, 10458-10)
  • Every resultant is either a sum or a difference
    of the co-operant forces their sum, when their
    directions are the same their difference, when
    their directions are contrary. Further, every
    resultant is clearly traceable in its components,
    because these are homogeneous and
    commensurable....
  • It is otherwise with emergents, when, instead of
    adding measurable motion to measurable motion, or
    things of one kind to other individuals of their
    kind, there is a cooperation of things of unlike
    kinds.... The emergent is unlike its components
    in so far as these are incommensurable, and it
    cannot be reduced to their sum or their
    difference.
  • G.H.Lewes (1874-79)

13
Samuel Alexander - 1920
  • the emergence of a new quality from any level
    of existence means that at that level there comes
    into being a certain constellation or collocation
    of motions belonging to that level, and this
    collocation possesses a new quality distinctive
    of the higher-complex.
  • To adopt the ancient distinction of form and
    matter, the kind of existent from which the new
    quality emerges is the matter which assumes a
    certain complexity of configuration and to this
    pattern or universal corresponds the new emergent
    quality.
  • Quoted in Rueger, 2000

14
Subsequent history
  • 19th century - teleological ideas about
    evolution Lamarck, Lloyd Morgan, Alexander,
    Broad, Smuts, Lovejoy, etc. Quantitative,
    incremental, change can lead to unpredictable
    qualitative changes, irreducible to their parts.
    Tended to include creative divinity, vitalism,
    etc.
  • Early 20th century - quashed by reductionists
    McDougall, Carnap, Russell, etc.
  • Goes underground in the 30s Needham, Huxley,
    Novikoff, Tansley (Ecosystem), Lindeman.
  • GST in the 50s von Bertalanffy, Boulding,
    Ashby, von Foerster, Ackoff, Beer, and many
    others.
  • Complexity theory starting in the 70s Sperry,
    Haken, Prigogine, Santa Fe Institute, Kauffman,
    Holland, etc.
  • Adapted from Corning, 2002

15
Alife as a modern influenceE.g. cellular
automata such as Conways Game of Life
(Gardner, 1988)
  • There is a two-dimensional rectangular grid of
    cells, such as a checker board.
  • A cell's state at a given time is determined by
    the states of its eight neighbouring cells at the
    preceding moment, according to the birth-death
    rules
  • A living cell dies if fewer than 2 neighbours are
    alive. (loneliness)
  • A dead cell becomes alive if 3 neighbours are
    alive (breeding)
  • A living cell dies if more than 3 neighbours are
    alive. (overcrowding).
  • Adapted from Bedau, 1997

16
A Game of Life in progress
17
Some rather simple Alife emergence criteria
  • Design The system has been constructed by a
    designer, by describing local elementary
    interactions between components (e.g. artificial
    creatures and elements of the environment) in a
    design language.
  • Observation The observer is fully aware of the
    design, but describes global behaviors and
    properties of the running system, over a period
    of time, using an observation language.
  • Surprise The design language and the observation
    language are distinct, and the causal link
    between the programmed elementary interactions
    and the observed behaviors is non-obvious to the
    observerwho therefore experiences surprise.
  • In other words, there is a cognitive dissonance
    between the observer's mental image of the
    system's design and his contemporaneous
    observation of the system's behavior.
  • Adapted from Ronald, Sipper and Capcarrère, 1999

18
Some more specific Alife criteria for emergence
  • Bedau argues that even though Game of
    Life-type processes are determinate,
    nevertheless the only way we can work out how
    they will turn out is to try them out, and see
    what happens they are beyond any short-cut
    calculation.
  • So for him, the definition of an emergent
    property is that its behaviour can only be
    derived by experimental observation.
  • Bedau 1997

19
A more mathematical approach
  • Rueger explains novelty and irreducibility in
    terms of structural instability, parameters
    that bifurcate and differences in scale (e.g.
    Einstein v. Newton)
  • From Rueger, 2000

20
Emergence as a sub-set of synergies
  • Joint environmental conditioning
  • Information sharing
  • Joint decision making
  • Risk-sharing
  • Mutual catalysis Etc.
  • Functional complementarities (Velcro, NaCl)
  • Division of labour
  • Symbiosis (ruminants)
  • Scale (avalanche, Emperor penguins, gregarious
    nesting)

Synergies become emergent (Corning suggests) if
they are based on dissimilar things that generate
qualitatively novel effects. They do NOT depend
(he argues) on a perceiver, or on
self-organisation. Corning, 2002
21
But there are also observer-dependant
explanations
  • In this view emergence is a process of
    detection by the observer of the formation of new
    collective properties (different from those of
    the individual components), self-organized by the
    coherent behaviour of interacting components.
  • The observer detects properties as new depending
    on the cognitive model used, suitable for
    detecting (i.e., cognitively generating)
    coherence.
  • Minati, 2006

22
Goldstein (1999)(in inaugural issue of
Emergence)
  • The arising of novel and coherent structures,
    patterns and properties during the process of
    self-organization in complex systems.
  • Common characteristics include
  • Radical novelty (features not previously observed
    in the system)
  • Coherence or correlation (meaning integrated
    wholes that maintain themselves over some period
    of time)
  • A global or macro "level" (i.e., a property of
    "wholeness")
  • Being the product of a dynamical process (it
    evolves)
  • Being "ostensive" (it can be perceived)
  • Supervenience (downward causation)
  • Quoted in Corning, 2002

23
Some useful distinctions
  • Designed vs unpredicted
  • Resultant vs emergent properties
  • Composition vs emergence
  • Weak vs strong
  • Diachronic vs synchronic
  • Different sources of wholeness or surprise
  • Different kinds of component entity

24
Designed vs. unpredicted
  • Designed emergence These are the intended
    properties of an assembly that arise from the
    inter-connections we have built into it. E.g. a
    car has emergent properties that are deliberately
    built into its components and how they are
    arranged. If the car breaks down, a mechanic
    knows how to fix it.
  • Unpredicted emergence Events or properties may
    emerge unpredictably in a situation, and may
    often be qualitatively unlike other properties in
    the situation.
  • In unpredicted emergence, we are, of course,
    free to look (retrospectively) for a system
    that might have generated those
    events/properties, but NB that this kind of
    emergence reflects our reaction to the event,
    not the explanation we adopt for it.

25
Resultant vs emergent properties
  • Resultant properties arises simply from combining
    components in predictable ways. So if you add
    three 3 kg weights to make a 9 kg weight, it has
    new properties, but they are not emergent.
  • Emergent properties tend to be structural the
    components are arranged so that they construct
    something very unlike the components themselves.
  • See Reuger, 2000

26
Composition vs. Emergence
  • Processes of composition between elements take
    place, for instance, by reacting, merging or
    diluting, when elements take on new positions or
    new roles in a structure. A typical example is
    given by crystal or molecular structure
    formation. Processes of composition give rise (as
    their result) to new stable or unstable entities
    having properties different from those of the
    components.
  • Emergence takes place during and not as a result
    (such as a new state) of the process of
    interaction. In the process of emergence new
    properties are established thanks to the
    continuous process of interacting. This process
    sustains emergence (e.g., swarming).
  • Minati, 2006

27
Weak vs. strong emergence
  • In weak emergence, it is accepted that the
    causal properties of the emergent property are in
    principle derivable from the causal properties of
    its components and their arrangement. Causality
    is always upwards. This is consistent with
    normal materialist philosophy.
  • In strong emergence, the emergent higher level
    properties are said to acquire forms of downward
    causality that can intervene in normal upward
    causality. This is controversial.

28
Strong emergence
  • O'Conner wants
  • to capture a very strong sense in which an
    emergent's causal influence is irreducible to
    that of the micro-properties on which it
    supervenes.
  • It bears its influence in a direct 'downward'
    fashion, in contrast to the operation of a simple
    structural macro-property, whose causal influence
    occurs via the activity of the micro-properties
    which constitute it.
  • OConner, (1994) quoted in Bedau, 1997

29
But does it make sense?
  • Although strong emergence is logically
    possible, it is uncomfortably like magic. How
    does an irreducible but supervenient downward
    causal power arise, since by definition it cannot
    be due to the aggregation of the micro-level
    potentialities?
  • Such causal powers would be quite unlike
    anything within our scientific ken. This
    indicates how they will discomfort reasonable
    forms of materialism. Their mysteriousness will
    only heighten the traditional worry that
    emergence entails illegitimately getting
    something from nothing.
  • Bedau, 1997

30
Strong emergence rides again!
  • emergent phenomena in the natural world
    involve multilevel systems that interact with
    both lower- and higher-level systems
  • Furthermore, these emergent systems in turn
    exert causal influences both upward and downward
    not to mention horizontally. (If determinism is
    stratified, it is also very often "networked.").
  • The search for "laws" of emergence, or some
    quantum theory of living systems, is destined to
    fall short of its goal because there is no
    conceivable way that a set of simple laws, or
    one-level determinants, could encompass this
    multilayered "holarchy" and its inescapably
    historical aspect.
  • Corning, 2002

31
Supervene (From Wikipaedia article)
  • Suppose two objects, X and Y, both share a
    particular set of properties (B), and this
    automatically means that they must therefore also
    share another set of properties (A). Then A
    is super-venient on B (which is sub-venient
    on A).
  • E.g. if psychological properties supervene on
    physical properties, then any two persons who are
    physically indistinguishable must also be
    psychologically indistinguishable or
    equivalently, any two persons who are
    psychologically different (e.g., having different
    thoughts), must be physically different
  • Supervenience has traditionally been used to
    describe relationships between sets of properties
    in a manner which does not imply a strong
    reductive relationship.
  • For example, many hold that economic properties
    supervene on physical properties, in that if two
    worlds were exactly the same physically, they
    would also be the same economically.
  • However, this does not entail that economics can
    be reduced in any straightforward way to physics.
  • Thus, supervenience allows one to hold that
    "high-level phenonema" (like those of economics,
    psychology, or aesthetics) depend, ultimately, on
    physics, without assuming that one can study
    those high-level phenomena using means
    appropriate to physics.
  • Concept introduced by the US philosopher, Donald
    Davidson

32
Diachronic and synchronic
  • Diachronic emergence This refers to surprising
    new events that appear over time. So if your
    computer crashes, that could be described as
    diachronic emergence.
  • Synchronic emergence This is the traditional
    notion, where emergent properties or states
    at high levels are built on lower level
    arrangements of components i.e. the high and
    low levels are present at the same time.
  • See Rueger, 2000

33
Different sources of wholeness or surprise
  • From wholes that have an independent reality
  • Natural processes e.g. wholes that are the
    result of statistical attractors in complex
    random structures. Often very sensitive to
    starting conditions
  • Self-organization i.e. where control loops
    are self-maintaining
  • Enactment i.e. wholes that we have designed
    and built so that they are discrete objects
  • Embedding i.e. we tend to break up reality in
    ways that will provide structures that are
    economically or socially optimal for us
  • Reifying the surprising i.e. processes that
    are important to us but are not understood tend
    to be labelled as nouns (e.g. a disaster)
  • Embodiment i.e. human neurology processes or
    categorises information in this way e.g.
    chunking, linguistic labels, and Lakoffs
    basic categories
  • to wholes that exist only in our minds

34
Different kinds of component entity
  • E.g. Minatis notions of Multiple Systems (MS)
    and Collective beings (CB)
  • An MS is a set of systems established by the
    same elements interacting in different ways
    i.e. having multiple simultaneous roles (e.g.
    models with multiple memory systems).
  • A CB is an MS established by agents possessing
    the same (natural or artificial) cognitive
    system
  • Minati, 2006

35
Two closing questions
  • Did any of those distinctions echo the
    distinctions you made?
  • A discussion-provoker Could brain surgeons
    operate on their own brains (presumably an
    example of downward causality)?
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