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Context Changes Everything: How Constraints Create Coherence [Minkštas viršelis]

3.81/5 (44 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 280 pages, aukštis x plotis: 229x152 mm, 2 black and white illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Jun-2023
  • Leidėjas: MIT Press
  • ISBN-10: 0262545667
  • ISBN-13: 9780262545662
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 280 pages, aukštis x plotis: 229x152 mm, 2 black and white illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Jun-2023
  • Leidėjas: MIT Press
  • ISBN-10: 0262545667
  • ISBN-13: 9780262545662
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
From the influential author of Dynamics in Action, how the concepts of constraints provide a way to rethink relationships, opening the way to intentional, meaningful causation.

Grounding her work in the problem of causation, Alicia Juarrero challenges previously held beliefs that only forceful impacts are causes. Constraints, she claims, bring about effects as well, and they enable the emergence of coherence. In Context Changes Everything, Juarrero shows that coherence is induced by enabling constraints, not forceful causes, and that the resulting coherence is then maintained by constitutive constraints. Constitutive constraints, in turn, become governing constraints that regulate and modulate the way coherent entities behave. Using the tools of complexity science, she offers a rigorously scientific understanding of identity, hierarchy, and top-down causation, and in so doing, presents a new way of thinking about the natural world. 

Juarrero argues that personal identity, which has been thought to be conferred through internal traits (essential natures), is grounded in dynamic interdependencies that keep coherent structures whole. This challenges our ideas of identity, as well as the notion that stability means inflexible rigidity. On the contrary, stable entities are brittle and cannot persist. Complexity science, says Juarrero, can shape how we meet the world, how what emerges from our interactions finds coherence, and how humans can shape identities that are robust and resilient. This framework has significant implications for sociology, economics, political theory, business, and knowledge management, as well as psychology, religion, and theology. It points to a more expansive and synthetic philosophy about who we are and about the coherence of living and nonliving things alike.
I
1 What Went Wrong? The Backstory
3(18)
Types, Kinds, and Essences
5(1)
Primary and Secondary (Accidental) Properties
6(4)
Interactions and Relations
10(3)
Efficient Causality
13(2)
Mereology
15(1)
Physical Causal Closure and Overdetermination
16(5)
2 The Path Forward
21(14)
II
3 Constraints: An Introduction
35(14)
What Are Constraints?
40(1)
Spatial and Temporal Constraints
41(8)
4 Context-Independent Constraints
49(10)
Containers of Gas and Landscape Design
50(4)
Vague and Ambiguous Constraints
54(2)
Limited Message Variety
56(3)
5 Why Context Matters---An Interlude
59(8)
Science 2.0 and Medicine 2.0 Are All about Context Dependence
59(3)
The Indirect Effects of Context
62(5)
6 Context-Dependent Constraints
67(20)
Enabling and Constitutive/Governing Constraints
71(2)
Temporal Constraints
73(2)
Cardinality and Indexicality, Ordinality and Placement
75(4)
Top-Down (Governing) Context-Dependent Constraints
79(5)
Coordination Dynamics Satisfy Second Law
84(3)
7 Catalysts, Loops, and Closure
87(16)
Catalysts and Feedback Loops
87(3)
Closure of Processes (Catalytic Closure)
90(1)
Autocatalytic Closure
90(3)
Constraint Closure
93(3)
Statistical and Semantic Closure
96(3)
Semantic Attractors
99(4)
8 An Abundance of Constraints
103(26)
Repetition
104(1)
Replication
105(2)
Reproduction
107(2)
Unity of Type in Species, Demes, and Memes
109(2)
Density, Isolation, and Buffers
111(1)
Isolation
112(3)
Buffers and Other Shields
115(2)
Motility and Migration---The Relaxation of Constraints
117(3)
Templates, Frameworks, Scaffolds, and Affordances
120(2)
Scaffolding
122(2)
Types of Scaffolds
124(5)
9 Persistence---Delaying the Second Law
129(14)
Persistence and Thermodynamics
130(5)
The Principle of Persistence
135(4)
Selection by Persistence
139(4)
10 Sedimentation and Entrenchment
143(12)
Sedimentation, Memory, Records, and Registers
143(2)
Entrenchment
145(3)
Varieties of Entrenchment
148(3)
Generative Entrenchment
151(2)
Generative Entrenchment of Validated Constraints
153(2)
11 Many-to-One Transitions, Effective and Analog Control
155(22)
Tagging Emergent Properties
163(4)
Analog Control
167(2)
Analog Control and Energy Management
169(5)
Multiply Realizable Domains Are Analog Spaces
174(3)
12 Of Holons, Holarchy, Heterarchy, and Hierarchy
177(20)
Koestler's Holons and Holarchies
177(6)
Levels of Organization
183(3)
Mereology Revisited
186(6)
Extensional and Intensional Definitions
192(2)
Control Hierarchy
194(3)
III
13 The Backstory, Today
197(14)
Functionalism
200(1)
Chinese Room Objection
201(1)
Principle of Supervenience
202(2)
Multiple Realizability
204(1)
The 4E Approach Today
205(6)
14 Multiple Realization and Supervenience: A Philosophical Case Study about Constraints
211(12)
Shapiro and Gillett on Multiple Realizability
211(5)
Lange---Because without Cause
216(1)
Principles and Laws
216(7)
15 Empirical Research on Delayed Response: Neuroscience Case Studies about Constraints
223(10)
Mark Churchland's Team
224(1)
Preparatory and Perimotor Neural Activity
225(2)
A Further Study
227(6)
16 Concluding Remarks
233(6)
Notes 239(8)
References 247(16)
Index 263