• unenlightened
    8.7k
    I don't have a question or a thesis, I'm just going to throw some shit out there, and see what sticks.If anything sticks to you, throw some back or complain to the mods, or take a shower, or whatever.

    Wiki disambiguates, but I am trying to recognise a pattern in the ambiguities.

    The obvious beginning is in psychology, and from there the connection to machine learning seems natural, medicine is just an application of the psychology. The biology things a surprise to me and if anyone can explain it in words of less than five syllables and two hyphens, I'll be most grateful.

    Sherlock Holmes (based on a medic by the way) comes to mind as a recogniser of patterns; reader of footprints and human motivations and so on, like the mythic 'tracker' reading the animal trails. Like the reader of confused posts looking for a point or a topic.

    And so I arrive finally at the beginning, which was @Tim Wood 's thread, Simplicity, virtue of.

    Because to recognise a pattern is to simplify, and it is the thing that science and philosophy and literature and music all lean towards; the making sense of complexity and its subsumption into a pattern.

    It is the very substance of the faculty of understanding, and the whole basis of prediction. It is surely what big brains are evolved to do.

    {If you haven't read the William Gibson novel, it's recommended, and there is a BBC radio adaptation. that is also good if you can get it.}
  • bongo fury
    1.6k
    Because to recognise a pattern is to simplify,unenlightened

    If recognise means impose, then yes, preferably.

    Does it? ...Which is to ask: nominalist or platonist?

    Forgive me if I impose, haha.
  • Srap Tasmaner
    4.6k
    Because to recognise a pattern is to simplify, and it is the thing that science and philosophy and literature and music all lean towards; the making sense of complexity and its subsumption into a pattern.

    It is the very substance of the faculty of understanding, and the whole basis of prediction. It is surely what big brains are evolved to do.
    unenlightened

    Two other ways of putting this come to mind, each of which has a sort of icky loop in it:

    (1) Patterns aren't found in real things, but in abstractions, the real things considered only in certain of their various aspects. Which aspects? Well, um, the aspects that are relevant for ... the pattern.

    (2) A pattern is something that repeats, something that goes on, something we can extrapolate the rest of given the first bit. We can predict because there's a pattern. How do we know there's a pattern? Well, um, because we can ... predict.

    But those loops are only icky if you were hoping for a static, crystalline, logically structured universe. If you're cool with something more dynamic, more interactive, something with feedback loops, something evolution could get ahold of, then not icky at all but just what we were looking for. Or expected. Whichever.
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    Which naturally enough leads to - or should lead to - the question as to what a pattern is. And the "is" plays its usual tricks, obscuring the first question, is there such a thing?

    One approach: the idea of pattern would seem to require more than one. In as much as two things are never the same thing, excepting perhaps as ideas, in abstraction of everything that makes a thing a thing, it would seem there can be no such thing as a pattern, except as an idea.

    But a hallmark of pattern is predictability. If in a pattern "A" happens, then "A" will happen again, or so is presupposed in a pattern. But "A" never happens again, only something that judgment for its own reasons says resembles "A." Pattern then a matter of resemblances and similarities, according to a standard.
    Because to recognise a pattern is to simplify, and it is the thing that science and philosophy and literature and music all lean towards; the making sense of complexity and its subsumption into a pattern.unenlightened
    And this would seem to have it, but with some care in reading. The genus making - creating - the species recognising, and a part of recognising is use of memory. Pattern, then, a capacity to associate perception with memory and recognize similarities.

    This leaves a problem, however. What exactly is a similarity? Similarity can only be the imposition of a resemblance. An absurd example to illustrate: a rowboat is similar to a battleship in that they're both boats. The "in that," whether explicit or implicit, being ground and constraint of the similarity.

    In passing, it seems an underappreciated miracle that two or more separate beings can agree on patterns. Not because the pattern is there, but because as a made, created, idea, it can still be collectively appreciated.

    I have a vague memory of Wittgenstein's mentioning templates. All perception being a matter of the template laid over reality by the observer. And so forth. ,

    Edit: what @Srap Tasmaner said, his better and more simply.
  • Srap Tasmaner
    4.6k
    I have a vague memory of Wittgenstein's mentioning templates. All perception being a matter of the template laid over reality by the observer.tim wood

    I hope he didn't say that because I've been feeling somewhat kindly toward LW lately and I have a strong allergic reaction to that idea.

    I think it's the suggestion -- in the versions I've seen of it around here over the years, mostly third-hand Kant, I guess -- that the template is arbitrary, that either we cooked it up without reference to reality or it just fell from the sky somehow. And thus the only word for what we do to reality with it is "impose". We "impose" on reality our belief in space, in time, in the permanence of objects, and so on. And we could just as well have "imposed" some other conceptual scheme "on" reality, even an incommensurable one, as they say.

    I think that's all horseshit. We don't impose anything. Reality isn't out there and our conceptual scheme over here in a drawer full of conceptual schemes. We are part of reality, organisms embedded in an environment, and a conceptual scheme is what evolves through continued interaction of the two and untold layers of feedback.
  • unenlightened
    8.7k
    If I sort some pebbles by size, and put big ones here and little ones there I am imposing a pattern. However, the pebbles on Chesil Beach have had a pattern imposed on them by waves and tides.
    Pebbles are not abstractions, are they?.

    the question as to what a pattern istim wood

    A pattern is an ordered structure. stuff has structure and the structure is real as is stuff.

    The patterns of petals on flowers tend to conform to the Fibonacci series. This is the mathematics of gene expression, not of human brains. In the limit. Pattern in information equates to compressibility.

    Pattern, then, a capacity to associate perception with memory and recognize similarities.tim wood
    No. "Recognition" is the term that denotes the mental aspect. You are muddying the waters. You define pattern as the ability to recognise similarities and that implies that pattern recognition is the capacity to recognise the capacity to to recognise similarities. Ugh!

    I think that's all horseshit.Srap Tasmaner

    And so do I.
  • 180 Proof
    13.9k
    Interesting but I'm inclined to disagree. I think instead "the essence of philosophy" is pattern-less (pattern-loss) recognition within "pattern recognition", that is, meta-cognitively making explicit (i.e. less transparent to ourselves) the many 'holes fissures lacunae discontinuities gaps elisions ...' which our instinctive / habitual simplifications (i.e. generalizations) usually occlude, or course-grain out of our conceptual and theoretical discourses. "The essence" is to find the noise within the signal in the noise – never completely knowing what we think we know (Laozi, Democritus, Socrates, Pyrrho, Sextus Empiricus ...) After all, it's that crack in 'everything' that lets in (some) lumen rationale, no?
  • unenlightened
    8.7k
    Alas yes, practice does not conform to my theory, but that is exactly where I wanted to get to. One recognises a pattern, and another pattern, and one would like to find the overarching pattern of patterns, but they conflict, and philosophy is born of the conflict
    the noise within the signal in the noise180 Proof
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    I think that's all horseshit.
    — Srap Tasmaner
    And so do I.
    unenlightened
    Horses**t, eh? I refute you both jointly and severally thus: fuck you both.

    What the argument lacks in substance it reclaims in brevity. But maybe you wish to "up your game." If I understand, your claims of horses**t are intended, though in a clumsy and ignorant way, to indicate either you do not understand something, or you disagree with it. But in addition to its insubstantial aspect you have overlooked the double-edged quality of your critique as you express it: either it is, or you are.

    If, again, I understand you both, it is that you each "see" pattern, that pattern is out there. Assuming this is so, then (a) pattern is a something. That is, a thing or being of some kind and as such with attendant predicates. Ok, then: what is (a) pattern? What is it (usually) made of? Where is it? If I am looking at and seeing pebbles on a beach, if they're in some pattern, where and what is it? Be good enough to answer.
  • unenlightened
    8.7k
    What is it (usually) made of?tim wood

    Yawn. The presumption behind this question is that substance is the only real. But take an example "some ducks in a row". And you doubt that this row is real and ask me what are rows usually made of. So I reply, "usually they are made of fence posts, but in this case, it is made of ducks." Does that answer your question?

    Edit. What are footprints made of? they are made by feet in the pattern of a foot, and they are made of mud, sand, clay sometimes fossilised and hardened over millions of years. And they are as real as anything.
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    Yawn. The presumption behind this question is that substance is the only real. But take an example "some ducks in a row". And you doubt that this row and ask me what are rows usually made of. So I reply, usually they are made of fence posts, but in this case, it is made of ducks. Does that answer your question?unenlightened

    No. There ain't no row beyond what you provide. And before proceeding, I acknowledge that as a practical matter, rows make sense; a lot of things make sense. But but does not mean they exist out there. You're the one claiming pattern is not a matter of the mind perceiving it but is instead out there. All I do is ask you to make your case.
  • unenlightened
    8.7k
    as a practical matter, rows make sense; a lot of things make sense. But but does not mean they exist out theretim wood

    So what does it mean? But alas, I am banging my fingers on these keys in what I think is a meaningful pattern and you discern nothing of it, but impose your own meaning. Ain't no use to talk to you.
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    So what does it mean?unenlightened
    It means you provide it. It isn't out there. Ducks in a row. Have you ever seen or watched ducks in a row? Whatever you understand by "row" ducks will give you cause to reassess and expand that understanding - or there were never were ducks in a row.
  • Srap Tasmaner
    4.6k


    Epsitemically, there's no final settling down to either "this is patterned" or "this isn't". You've no way to know that a pattern you perceive will continue as it has up until now. (Hume says hi.) But when a pattern you've been following breaks, how could you possibly know whether the break is "genuinely" stochastic or itself part of a larger pattern? For that matter, there could be pattern anywhere you don't perceive it, or anywhere you do but not the one you think. In short, you cannot know whether you can predict anything, meaning both: can't know that you can, can't know that you can't. So we predict, defeasibly.

    Aprokrisis would have a whole metaphysical lecture about this, but I'm not inclined to fill in for him.

    I'll only say that it's hardly a surprise that there is this sort of oscillation. It is what you'd expect in an experimental system driven by feedback, evolving and incorporating and growing. Of course we keep finding patterns and of course they keep breaking and of course we keep finding new patterns.

    Is it ironic if I've already started repeating myself?
  • Wayfarer
    20.6k
    Ratios are not necessarily patterns, are they? Like when the Pythagoreans discovered that dividing a string by specific proportions, it produced different notes that could be harmonised. Sure there’s a pattern in a sense, but it’s not a pattern that’s visible to the naked eye, like a hexagonal pattern in beehives or granite outcrops. I think patterns are a sub-set of order, but they can’t be used as a substitute for reason, which I think is what you’re trying to do here. (There was a poster went by the name of A Seagull, sometimes posted here, who had a website and self-published book on this idea.)
  • Wayfarer
    20.6k
    Which naturally enough leads to - or should lead to - the question as to what a pattern is.tim wood

    Isn’t the fundamental characteristic of a pattern that it is a repeating sequence? I mean, I can write any number of series of characters, alpha or numeric, that suggest a pattern such that you would have no trouble guessing the next set or next member of a set by recognising the pattern. But there’s no discernible pattern in the sequence of prime numbers or (I think) the genetic code, which (I think) is endlessly variable. Kind of agreeing with @180 Proof on this one.

    Actually from Chinese culture, an example comes to mind, which is the principle of ‘li’, derived from ‘the grain in wood’. It suggests a quality of naturalness or spontaneity which is esteemed in Chinese art. But it’s not a repeating pattern - unlike for example the patterned motifs you find in Greek pottery or Islamic architecture. So it’s not really a pattern, but still a principle, if that distinction can be made.
  • Tom Storm
    8.3k
    I think it was William Morris who made the point that no pattern should exist without a meaning. It seems to me that patterns have significance if they are also suggestive of a narrative. Couldn't it also be said that defective pattern identification is one of the reasons people embrace conspiracy theories?
  • Wayfarer
    20.6k
    I would have thought faulty reasoning was a better explanation.

    And there are patterns in for example crystal formation that have no specific meaning - other than something you or I might attribute to them. The emergence of meaning is co-extensive with the emergence of organisms (vegetative semiosis, one of the things I learned about from Apokrisis.) But again, is DNA strictly speaking a pattern? Now there’s a big question, but I’m thinking it’s not, because again it’s irregular. If it were a simple pattern, then you’d be stuck with something like a crystal. It’s the irregularities that make change possible. (Is this anything to do with symmetry breaking? :chin: )
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    Isn’t the fundamental characteristic of a pattern that it is a repeating sequence?Wayfarer

    The question is the source of the pattern as pattern. For example, consider what "repeating" exactly means. Out there, nothing repeats. Above, @unenlightened mention a fossilized footprint. What, out there, is a "fossilized footprint"? In no case do I deny the practical uses of these ideas of pattern. But I do aver they're ideas, perceptions, as convenient fictions. To anyone who denies that fictive aspect, let him make them real.
  • Srap Tasmaner
    4.6k
    from Chinese culture, an example comes to mind, which is the principle of ‘li’, derived from ‘the grain in wood’. It suggests a quality of naturalness or spontaneity which is esteemed in Chinese art. But it’s not a repeating pattern - unlike for example the patterned motifs you find in Greek pottery or Islamic architecture. So it’s not really a pattern, but still a principle, if that distinction can be made.Wayfarer

    That's really lovely, and very on point because that "spontaneity" you mention, that's chance under another name. And yet woodgrain is an excellent example of some kind of pattern, just a pattern that incorporates chance within certain constraints (or now and then overflows those constraints in ways which are in turn somewhat predictable), which feels very, very close to the sort of thing I was attempting to describe. Lovely idea.
  • Joshs
    5.2k
    Out there, nothing repeats.tim wood

    What does the ‘out there’ do? Are you following the Kantian line which argues that pattern, logic, time and space are all mental processes? Is your argument metaphysical or empirical?!
  • TheMadFool
    13.8k
    I'm currently involved in ethics if posting 2 small paragraphs on a thread on ethics can be treated as involvement. To cut to the chase, ethical systems/moral theories are attempts to construct a set of beliefs that repeats (pattern) in all moral issues. So, we begin with a list of good and bad actions (thoughts/speech/actions) and what we hope to do is extract those beliefs that are common to all items in that list - these items, beliefs, then constitute a moral theory like utilitarianism or deontological ethics. So, yeah, from where I'm standing at, philosophy is about patterns.
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    Not even Kantian. Consider. You say, on seeing some trees, "Look, they're in a row!" As a practical matter everyone has some understanding of that. I understand that. But what is the fact of the matter, the reality, if you will? What is a row? Answer: nothing in itself, but that you make it so. Your perception of a row is really just your idea of something, in the present case a row. And as I've asked a few times already in this thread, without substantive reply, if you think the row is something real in itself, then demonstrate that. What is it, where is it, what's it made of?

    Language is eminently practical, but not always true, correct, or even accurate. And when untrue, incorrect, or plain wrong, and that not recognized, it can be a trap, and even one that is not recognized as such.
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    So, yeah, from where I'm standing at, philosophy is about patterns.TheMadFool
    And I do not think you will find disagreement. But answer this: what is a pattern? That is, pattern as pattern is a something or a nothing. If something, then what are some of its qualities/accidents, or even its substance. But it can certainly be an idea and without substance or accidents. Which, do you say?
  • TheMadFool
    13.8k
    And I do not think you will find disagreement. But answer this: what is a pattern? That is, pattern as pattern is a something or a nothing. If something, then what are some of its qualities/accidents, or even its substance. But it can certainly be an idea and without substance or accidents. Which, do you say?tim wood

    Patterns are what's common to things i.e. those qualities/quantities that repeat in them. In philosophy a pattern goes by another name, essence. One may be given a set of items and if one finds a certain quality/quantity repeats, is common to all the items, we have basically discerned a pattern/essence in/to these items.

    Interesting but I'm inclined to disagree. I think instead "the essence of philosophy" is pattern-less (pattern-loss) recognition within "pattern recognition", that is, meta-cognitively making explicit (i.e. less transparent to ourselves) the many 'holes fissures lacunae discontinuities gaps elisions ...' which our instinctive / habitual simplifications (i.e. generalizations) usually occlude, or course-grain out of our conceptual and theoretical discourses. "The essence" is to find the noise within the signal in the noise – never completely knowing what we think we know (Laozi, Democritus, Socrates, Pyrrho, Sextus Empiricus ...) After all, it's that crack in 'everything' that lets in (some) lumen rationale, no?180 Proof

    It's a tendency in philosophy to look for the generalization that covers all the cases and we always lose but we can't resist trying. — Hillary Putnam
  • Joshs
    5.2k
    What is a row? Answer: nothing in itself, but that you make it so.tim wood

    What I’m wondering, specifically, is how you are defining what takes place at the ‘mental’ end of the subject-world encounter and how you would talk about what takes place outside of the mental. You mentioned row and pattern. What exactly is it about these entities that make makes them mental , and what does that imply about what constitutes the substance or content of the non-mental? For instance , is what a row and a pattern have in common the fact they they are abstract relational concepts? Are all causal relations also purely mental? What about temporal sequences? Is time a mental construct not existing in the world , as many physicists believe?
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    that repeat in themTheMadFool
    Repeat? Repeat? Nothing in the world repeats. Repetition is a seeming. Or do you have an example of something in the world that repeats?
  • Manuel
    3.9k


    If you're up to a quite challenging, but extremely fun philosophical book, I suggest you try Novel Explosives by Jim Gauer. If you want a lighter read, Ubik by Philip K. Dick is quite fun and leaves you feeling quite disoriented.

    What you say is true. We see this "blooming buzzing confusion" in William James' term, as evidenced by an utter bombardment of sense data what with trees, apples, rivers, grass, birds and everything else that happens to be in your field of vision at the moment.

    I think this leads to a natural intuition: all this diversity had to come from somewhere and furthermore, they must be related somehow, otherwise how could different things even exist? From this we abstract away things that we think make sense to parse out: the sky is blue like this river, the leaves are green like the grass, the butterfly flies, like a bird.

    From these properties, we attempt to establish regularities or patterns that hopefully say something about the world. But, as has been the case in human history, our initial approach to things via intuition frequently misleads us, but serves as a heuristic to further refinement.
  • TheMadFool
    13.8k
    Repeat? Repeat? Nothing in the world repeats. Repetition is a seeming. Or do you have an example of something in the world that repeats?tim wood

    I get up in the morning. Breakfast. Go to work. Lunch. Get home. Dinner. Sleep. Lather, rinse, repeat (Shampoo algorithm).
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    You mentioned row and pattern. What exactly is it about these entities that make makes them mental ,Joshs
    That they're nothing else. They're ideas. Again, if anyone differs, thinking them real, make them real!

    For instance , is what a row and a pattern have in common the fact they they are abstract relational concepts?Joshs
    Seems so. And again, the utility of patterns as a practical matter is not challenged, but as with many things, the idea is projected onto and then supposed to originate in the thing or things. And this is supported by definition, (a) pattern is defined as. But that merely makes of the word a term of art, obscuring almost completely just what a pattern actually is
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    I get up in the morning. Breakfast. Go to work. Lunch. Get home. Dinner. Sleep. Lather, rinse, repeat (Shampoo algorithm).TheMadFool

    And yet you repeated none of those things, except in an abstract sense. And get a girlfriend - unless a gentlemanly decency had you omit that detail.
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