The Great Data Experiment
Glossary
summary
What's here
Tip - use a browser view to copy headings, else jumps around
definitions
Page and id
| ID code | Page title |
|---|---|
| gloss | Glosary - was 5a |
| info-accm | Us the world and each other - was 1b |
| x | - |
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ headers etc ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Example of h 1 to 6 and both in line headers this was in strong and em
Now is the time
1 - Nam id libero sit amet libero ultrices interdum dignissim nec lorem. Maecenas placerat massa sit amet augue interdum rutrum. Fusce vel lectus arcu. Quisque quis elit et lorem suscipit faucibus a ut odio. Proin ut ante consectetur dui mattis pulvinar non quis neque. Proin ultrices lectus vel orci lacinia a iaculis nibh hendrerit. Mauris sagittis aliquam odio vitae pulvinar. Suspendisse id
Now is the time
2 - Nam id libero sit amet libero ultrices interdum dignissim nec lorem. Maecenas placerat massa sit amet augue interdum rutrum. Fusce vel lectus arcu. Quisque quis elit et lorem suscipit faucibus a ut odio. Proin ut ante consectetur dui mattis pulvinar non quis neque. Proin ultrices lectus vel orci lacinia a iaculis nibh hendrerit. Mauris sagittis aliquam odio vitae pulvinar. Suspendisse id
Now is the time
3 - Nam id libero sit amet libero ultrices interdum dignissim nec lorem. Maecenas placerat massa sit amet augue interdum rutrum. Fusce vel lectus arcu. Quisque quis elit et lorem suscipit faucibus a ut odio. Proin ut ante consectetur dui mattis pulvinar non quis neque. Proin ultrices lectus vel orci lacinia a iaculis nibh hendrerit. Mauris sagittis aliquam odio vitae pulvinar. Suspendisse id
Now is the time
4 - Nam id libero sit amet libero ultrices interdum dignissim nec lorem. Maecenas placerat massa sit amet augue interdum rutrum. Fusce vel lectus arcu. Quisque quis elit et lorem suscipit faucibus a ut odio. Proin ut ante consectetur dui mattis pulvinar non quis neque. Proin ultrices lectus vel orci lacinia a iaculis nibh hendrerit. Mauris sagittis aliquam odio vitae pulvinar. Suspendisse id
Now is the time
5 - Nam id libero sit amet libero ultrices interdum dignissim nec lorem. Maecenas placerat massa sit amet augue interdum rutrum. Fusce vel lectus arcu. Quisque quis elit et lorem suscipit faucibus a ut odio. Proin ut ante consectetur dui mattis pulvinar non quis neque. Proin ultrices lectus vel orci lacinia a iaculis nibh hendrerit. Mauris sagittis aliquam odio vitae pulvinar. Suspendisse id
Now is the time
6 - Nam id libero sit amet libero ultrices interdum dignissim nec lorem. Maecenas placerat massa sit amet augue interdum rutrum. Fusce vel lectus arcu. Quisque quis elit et lorem suscipit faucibus a ut odio. Proin ut ante consectetur dui mattis pulvinar non quis neque. Proin ultrices lectus vel orci lacinia a iaculis nibh hendrerit. Mauris sagittis aliquam odio vitae pulvinar. Suspendisse id
Now is the time in line 1 - Nam id libero sit amet libero ultrices interdum dignissim nec lorem. Maecenas placerat massa sit amet augue interdum rutrum. Fusce vel lectus arcu. Quisque quis elit et lorem suscipit faucibus a ut odio. Proin ut ante consectetur dui mattis pulvinar non quis neque. Proin ultrices lectus vel orci lacinia a iaculis nibh hendrerit. Mauris sagittis aliquam odio vitae pulvinar. Suspendisse id
Now is the time in line 2 - Nam id libero sit amet libero ultrices interdum dignissim nec lorem. Maecenas placerat massa sit amet augue interdum rutrum. Fusce vel lectus arcu. Quisque quis elit et lorem suscipit faucibus a ut odio. Proin ut ante consectetur dui mattis pulvinar non quis neque. Proin ultrices lectus vel orci lacinia a iaculis nibh hendrerit. Mauris sagittis aliquam odio vitae pulvinar. Suspendisse id
Nam id libero sit amet libero ultrices interdum dignissim nec lorem. Maecenas placerat massa sit amet augue interdum rutrum. Fusce vel lectus arcu. Quisque quis elit et lorem suscipit faucibus a ut odio. Proin ut ante consectetur dui mattis pulvinar non quis neque. Proin ultrices lectus vel orci lacinia a iaculis nibh hendrerit. Mauris sagittis aliquam odio vitae pulvinar. Suspendisse id
Side bar ref
Heart as the Brain ✤.
What's here - exaples of heaer representations
- I am an h1 and class less
- I am an h2 class ih2
- 3I am an h3 or 4 class i1
- I am an h3 or 4 class i1a
- I am an h5 or 6 class i2
- 5I am an h5 class i2 with #
- 2I am an in-line 1 or 2 class i3 with #
Key words - for now
Not so much definition but more of a means of search / find. Link to page occurance only, thn use Ctr Find find key word on page, otherwise too many back refs.
https://dev.w3.org/html5/html-author/charref - front diamon done via CSS back diamond in HTML so can find with DOS as #9830
old -- use= ♦?♥black diamond suitu+2666 ISOpub\2666
\u2666 use "♥"
examples of key words and occurances
Richard Dawkins’ meme♥ is implicated here, from Cultural evolution reviewed
meme - ⮝Turing Hominin - Idea - Ideas or memes | ⮝Implications of human strangeness 1 - Meme's appeal to worldview
idea - ⮝Turing Hominin - Idea - Ideas or memes | ⮝Implications of human strangeness 1 - Meme's appeal to worldview
Cut out of Worldview - The term Worldview is used often in these pages and this is a summary of various references so as to provide a centralised definition - some information here will therefore often be repeated here and elsewhere. - WV is a key term here and used often in these pages - use Glossary < examples of key words and occurances > e.g. from Cultural evolution reviewed -Richard Dawkins’ meme ♥ is implicated here,
or term v page matrix, or list in All Whats here or in common bit called up from sticky bar or use CM search
Refs etc
refs and id of them ⋯ ᚜ ᚛
https://www.compart.com/en/unicode/U+2AA7 Unicode Character “?” (U+2AA7) Unicode Character “?” (U+2AA6)
f s eg see footnote Chat about evolution 𝙵xx -name- # pxxx
name- # Lec.xx
name # @xxxname # @xxxxx xx
now is the name # @xxxtime
xx xx # pxxx name ᚛ xx xx
once upon ᚜ name # pxxx liverd happy
now is ᚜ a book # pxxx ᚛ the time
i heard ᚜ IoT # @xxx ᚛ on the
i studied ᚜ name # Lec.xx ᚛ all night
Example characters
Social Darwinism, attitudes and an Alternative Society❊1
from Coffee cup editor
card symbols: ♠ ♥ ♦ ♣ - ♡ ♢ ♧ ♤
dingbats: ✔ ✤ ➤
arrows: ↓ ← → ⇑
👣 👢Walk this way ⛹🏿 for the medium-dark skin tone foot
Walk this way ⛹🏿 for the dark skin tone foot
AI Overview Apple slammed for racist black foot emoji The HTML for the black foot emoji is created by combining the foot emoji (??) with a skin tone modifier, like the dark skin tone modifier (??), resulting in ????.
HTML display https://www.w3schools.com/charsets/ref_utf_arrows.asp = I will display ⇑ ⇑ ⇑
https://www.w3schools.com/charsets/ref_utf_geometric.asp = I will display ► ►
https://www.w3schools.com/charsets/ref_utf_geometric.asp = I will display ▲ ▲
from snips and 2nd char via https://www.w3schools.com/cssref/css_entities.asp for example ref-bar content now BLACK UP-POINTING TRIANGLE
᚜name # pxxx᚛
᚜name # pxxx᚛
⪧name # Lec.xx ⪦
⪧name # Lec.xx ⪦
⪧ name # @xxx ⪦
⪧ name # @xxx ⪦
⮝Title
▲Title
key words
- low-informed - xxx xxx xxx xxx @ Welcome
- meme - xx and @ idea info drive socialise social environment
- intersubjective - Home
- xx
- xx
A
B
Belief Belief or https://www.google.co.uk/search?q=belief+meaning&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&gws_rd=cr&ei=mBtHVZf-JKaR7Aa-04GoBQ
noun: belief; plural noun: beliefs
1. an acceptance that something exists or is true, especially one without proof.
"his belief in extraterrestrial life"
1.1 something one accepts as true or real; a firmly held opinion.
'we're prepared to fight for our beliefs'
mass noun ‘contrary to popular belief existing safety regulations were adequate’
synonyms: opinion, view, viewpoint, point of view, attitude, stance, stand, standpoint, position, perspective, contention, conviction, judgement, thinking, way of thinking, thought, idea, theory, hypothesis, thesis, interpretation, assumption, presumption, supposition, surmise, postulation, conclusion, deduction, inference, notion, impression, sense, feeling, fancy, hunch
"she clung to the belief that Diane was innocent"
1.2 a religious conviction.
"Christian beliefs"
synonyms:ideology, principle, ideal, ethic, conviction; More
doctrine, teaching, dogma, tenet, canon, article of faith, credence, creed, credo, code of belief
"he opposed traditional religious beliefs"
2. (belief in) trust, faith, or confidence in (someone or something).
"a belief in democratic politics"
synonyms:faith, trust, reliance, confidence, credence, freedom from doubt; More
optimism, hopefulness, hope
"I have no real belief in the power of reason"
antonyms:disbelief, doubt
Origin
Middle English: alteration of Old English geleafa ; compare with believe.
Translate belief to
Use over time for: belief
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
BIOS Best? in Great Data Experiment
Occures in: Great Data Experiment
Brain Pool Catalogue of potential xxx xxx ;
xxxx
Occures in: Idea - memeBIOS - phased {bios-bit.htm, if used, is quick summary - Glossary gives full info & ref out to full discussion(s)}
BIOS stands for Basic Input/Output System and is the initial computer software required to boot the collection of electronic paraphernalia into something capable of making sense of higher level software, which after more layers finally responds to human instructions. It is also uncoinsidently the Greek for life - βιος, hence the initial instruction that puts "life" into a computor. I compare this to the genetically created start-up behaviours that initiates the support of life in all creatures with some sort of brain – such as an iguana hatchling’s snake evasion behaviors, or a cuckoo chick pushing the competition out of the nest.
However, creatures who get parental care require start-up behaviours that assume an appropriate behavioural responses from their parents. In our case for example, we are born able to distinguish 800 different phonemes and we expect someone to talk to us so we may start to deduce a language, homing in on a sub-set of phonemes relative to the language heard. Other creatures have similar abilities and expectations for being taught to become an adult, be it the hunter or hunted. So the purely start-up analogy is stretched a little now to include later parental behaviours towards offspring – a phased in Bios. But before parenting comes matting and another Bios phase with the testing behaviours that form a critical evolutionary element of inheritance and selection; as demonstrated by this fully cognisant but unlucky bowerbird, and again it’s a two-way package of behaviours, here between male performance and female expectation.
Although Bios is a critical element of evolution that operates in all creatures with a brain and with some an additional phased mode, it has less influence on us since our culture has long ago broken the link with genetic evolution. Generally human parents follow natural Bios instincts to care for their offspring, but our complex social world can make that difficult, culminating in one example of a mother’s reported comment “he don't talk to me so why should I talk to him”. And our mating rituals are anybody’s guess, although in theory men are looking for a healthy baby bearer and women a supporting father.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ so far so good, some below worth looking at ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
For more detail see ⮝Background & Mechanisms - Start-up & Defining Behaviours .
NBGA p16 - Darwin thought “inherited habits," by which he meant something very close to human culture. - is this BIOS?
The start-up and defining behaviours of all creature, for example specific details for how to behave as a bowerbird, iguana, elephant or human etc - looking like a bowerbird etc. is a different matter. These are minimal principles, not day by day instructions, in our case they include the basic mammalian behaviours of: routing for a feeding nipple, awareness of communication signals (be afraid of "alpha male fangs", or smiles), crying for attention and later sexual behaviours so that the genes get to perpetuate themselves.
But where do other basic behaviuors come from, kin seletion behaviour / instincts, social rules / behaviuors come from (prisoner delemer algorithum, idea transfer biases - built as part of function operation & neuron configuration or bios . . . .
There are two aspects of our brains, the functions that they have and how they interact, leading to final operation of which at some stage we become aware. Our brain architecture has grown from the common ancestor days to add emotions, extended reasoning and language areas. The actual composition, within the standard design limits, is unique to us all and could be said to form our character.
As in the case of computers the bios must match the hardware and our bios has evolved with our brain architecture, but as already mentioned the prime role of a bios is to enable making sense of higher level instructions. Do we (at least) also have a set of higher level instructions, in the form of instincts or natural behaviours that are biologically set via genes (slow) rather than learnt? Line between built in kin protection and add on social instincts, or are social instincts learnt, like arachnophobia? - what about - But we have more (bios) related to: reaction to our sounds and sophisticated formats that lead to language, and also a curiosity and desire to learn.
C
Coevolution often refers to the evolution of 2 species resulting in reciprocal advantage to each other e.g. ants and aphids, ants eat the sugar-rich honeydew excreted by the aphids and in return provide them with protection and hygienic services. However, here coevolution refers to the influence of culture on our evolution, sometimes called gene-culture , or as described in "Not by genes alone - How culture transformed human evolution"
Normal evolutionary mechanisms ceased to work on use some time ago. As far as possible we don't let people die just because they don't meet current environmental demands, especially the young pre-reproductive ones - no longer "only those fit for current purpose survive to re-produce". That said, there are examples of relatively recent evolution, such as the West's adaption to lactose tolerance, but still a work in progress for the Chinese. But A different type of nother example of is the long term effercts of starvation, in this case instigated by Natzi reprisal on the Dutch known as The Dutch Hunger Winter
Coevolution often refers to the evolution of 2 species in such a way that there's a reciprocal advantage to each other, e.g. ants and aphids - ants eat the sugar-rich honeydew excreted by the aphids and in return provide them with protection and hygienic services. However there's another version that relates our evolution to culture, or the coevolution of our culture with us physically.
A key feature of evolution is speciation where a different version of a species branches off, continues to exploit a new environmental niche and ultimately forms a new species. Over evolutionary time our ancestors covered several species, and at times co-existed on the planet e.g. we Homo Sapiens and Nethandatels, but unusually we became the one and only species of our kind that is Homosapienin.
Normal evolutionary mechanisms ceased to work on use some time ago. As far as possible we prevent people dying just because they don't meet current environmental demands, especially the young pre-reproductive ones - no longer: only those fit for current purpose survive to re-produce. Although there are examples of relatively recent evolution, such as adaption to lactose intolerance, still work in progress for the Chinese. Dual inheritance theory
For more dtail see xxxx
Use browser back arrow to return to original point of title of yyyyy
Collective worldview - life framework, explanation, life purpose, justice, preservation, authority & protection / care ..... .
Occures in: Socialising
Copying v Imitating - copying relies upon triggering an existing behaviour e.g. birds peck and may apply it to a milk bottle top in response to seeing another bird doing it, but imitating relies upon putting yourself in someone else’s shoes and requires a theory of mind
A simple example is given by the Sally–Anne test used in developmental psychology. The following story is suggested to a child: “Sally takes a marble and hides it in her basket. She then leaves the room and goes for a walk. While she is away, Anne takes the marble out of Sally's basket and puts it in her own box. Sally then returns to get her marble.”
The child is asked the key question, the Belief Question: "Where will Sally look for her marble? Children below 4 will usually say in Anne's box, but older children in her basket. Eye tracking of chimpanzees, bonobos, and orangutans suggests that all three anticipate the false beliefs of a subject in a King Kong suit, and pass the Sally–Anne test. However, they still lack finger dexterity i.e. play a piano with two fingers..
monkey watch chimp termite fish but only just waits for tem to exit- Is learning to tie a shoe lace just a natural application of finger twiddling - for more ,
Culture a basic definition includes part of the Oxford English Dictionary - The way of life of a people, including their attitudes, values, beliefs, arts, sciences, modes of perception, and habits of thought and activity - The way of life of a people, including their attitudes, values, beliefs, arts, sciences, modes of perception, and habits of thought and activity. Cultural features of forms of life are learned but are often too pervasive to be readily noticed from within (Oxford ref) the ideas, customs, and social behaviour and of a particular people or society; many more ite possibilities such as: dress, architectural style, social standards and traditions.
A simple summary is - knowledge about: how to make things, how things happen and to how behave.
At a basic level some animal species other than us can be said to have culture, for example a tribe of macaque monkeys on Japanese island of Koshima acquired the behavioural habit of sweet-potato washing. Likewise in our long ancestral past of millions of years we acquired and accumulated various behaviours or abilities around selecting good shelter, hunting technics, tool production, use of fire and moving on to develop formal language and writing, social organisation and laws etc.
Diferent scopes from humanity's cultureto,countries culture to group culture e.g. police force
D
E
F
G
Gene Pool A description of the genes and their variants currently available for the formation of a new organism, or in this case a new human. It's a catalogue of potential human features and characteristics, which changes with time due to the addition of new characteristics and departure of old ones. Each of us has a number of features that can have varying characteristics - two eyes, but option on colour. We are all constructed from around xx genes that determine our basic features, but there are alternative versions of many genes (allies). It's the mix of the versions that make us all different but still within the basic feature framework (1 heart, 2 legs, around 1.5 to 2 meters high).
The actual mix for any particular instance of human is determined by a combination of statistical probability and human behavior. Our attraction to mates is driven by a number of basic (BIOS) and acquired (culture) preferences, for both offspring charaterisitics and parner parenting support, but ultimately we can only chose from what's on ofer i.e. examples realised from the current pool composition. The pool composition varies over time, once the only mate option included black skin and lactose intolerance, but possibly more importantly it varies with geographic location. It's this localisation, essentially in our long past, that has contributed to our species success. In the days before global travel you could obviously only chose a mate from your own tribe, or possibly neighboring one; this maintained a pool of characteristics relevant to the local physical environment e.g. lots of sun and no domesticated cattle. As tribes expanded and fragmented they set up new pools in different locations with different physical environments e.g. less sun where lighter skin is an advantage.
Although there is some preffereance of mate expressed, much of the biological implecations of couple gene combination is way beyond our intuative comprehension and we get offspring way off our expectations due to the statisics of the pools comosition .... Sudden changes in gene allie population and selection probability.
Occures in: Idea - meme
H
I
Idea Brain information processed output. We have them all the time, sometimes good ones, vague ones or none at all; we use the word every day and associate it with thinking. Although idea and thought have very similar meanings, idea is a conclusion of on going thought. This fits with my obsession for processes and data, we think (the process) and have ideas (the data). All this thinking and resulting ideas occures within the brain, some ideas remain private (fortunatly sometimes), but they are offten expressed and realised within the physical world via our muscles. So in my terminology ideas are simply 'brain information processed outputs'. Of course one man's output is another woman's input, so we share ideas, but we also add a bit of personal thinking to them before re-expressiong them, even if it's just the choise NOT to re-express them.
For more dtail see What is an idea
Intersubjective There are many definitions based on the “intersection between people's cognitive perspectives”, but using here in the sense of: objective = the sun is shining, we all see it; subjective = I have a headache, if you say so; intersubjective = £100 is worth having and worth $137 today, but only if we all agree.
group think idea “What we are talking about is a rationalized conformity – an open, articulate philosophy which holds that group values are not only expedient but right and good as well.” – wiki. See Ideas xx tb done, not footnote, doublethink
Imitate v Copying see Copy v Imitate
J
K
L
M
Mind - Whereas the mind is the operations of the brain, the actions of the brain happening with the passage of time - from Self Reflection - {need do better, see key word at top, brain, mind and comc need to be somewhere, and here too}.
N
Not by Genes Alone - ᚜ 15᚛
| Term | Page | Mmeaning | My equivalent |
|---|---|---|---|
| Biased transmission | 66 | biased towards a variant as appears better than competing one(s) | |
| Cultural variant | 63 | information stored in people's heads, dislike meme as too specific and gene like. | Idea. |
| Forces of cultural evolution | 77 | process that causes culture to change. | |
| individual learning | |||
| Social learning | |||
| Unbiased transmission | 66 | no competition, child accepts adult info without question |
O
P
Q
R
S
Slavery - modern: xx xx
T
Thinking: xx xx
Slavery - traditional: use of humans as livestock for the benifit of owner, to provide services or as trading comodity. xx xx
U
V
W
Worldview - some info in Foot Notes dumped from Idea? Any more elsewhere? – needs a basic definition here as used in lots of places within it local context. Possible Apeal is the place or own page?
X
Y
Z
now is the to=ime for all good men to come tu the aod if the parte now is the to=ime for all good men to come tu the aod if the parte now is the to=ime for all good men to come tu the aod if the parte now is the to=ime for all good men to come tu the aod if the parte now is the to=ime for all good men to come tu the aod if the parte now is the to=ime for all good men to come tu the aod if the parte now is the to=ime for all good men to come tu the aod if the parte