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ORB Visualization

(soon)

 

 

 

 

Terminological and linguistic draft

measures of the evolution of catalytic indexical

 

back to bead

 

Mike (McDonald)

 

In your questions to Michael Lissack are posed a number of Socratic inquiries, some of which you know the answers to (and wanted Lissack to address from his point of view) and some which are parts of your own intellectual inquiry.

 

http://www.bcngroup.org/beadgames/MST/twentythree.htm

 

I have done what I can to represent a knowledge science answer to these questions.  Other scientists, yourself included, can continue to develop an articulation of issues within the context of these bead games. 

 

Regarding the one question about presenting histograms to a CEO, we have a mistaken basis for the question, and so I have left this question only with a copy of this inquiry back to you.

 

My inquiry has to do with a recognition that three systems of influence are effective in causing memetic reactions in social systems.

 

The three are

 

business systems of influence

 

political systems of influence and

 

cultural systems of influence

 

My inquiry has to do with the ability of the stereotypical CEO to understand the affordance structure present in cultural systems of influence.  Your question itself establishes a stereotype that is then used in the presentation of the question to Michael Lissack. 

 

I point out, in posing this inquiry to you, that many social scientists - including yourself - have expressed some reservation about both the capability of the stereotypical CEO to understand social systems of influence and the reinforced motivation that CEO intellectual inquire is subject to.

 

So my inquiry would set aside all consideration regarding what a stereotypical CEO might think – based on the observation that this stereotype might never understand memetic technology.

 

Having set aside how this stereotype is introduced, we may get to relevant discussions regarding the development of memetic technology, we then address a second mistake in the question:

 

What are you thinking the histogram would tell a CEO?

 

The second mistake is to feel that the histogram is the proper way to represent any information on memetic measurement.  In fact, the whole point to the innovation that I have created in the Orb provisional patent.

 

Orb visualization