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- Message-ID: <CSG-L%92121917313436@VMD.CSO.UIUC.EDU>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.csg-l
- Date: Sat, 19 Dec 1992 17:28:00 CST
- Sender: "Control Systems Group Network (CSGnet)" <CSG-L@UIUCVMD.BITNET>
- From: TJ0WAH1@NIU.BITNET
- Subject: Is this an encore?
- Lines: 100
-
- [from Wayne Hershberger 921219]
- At the risk of repeating myself, I am resubmitting the following
- post; it does not seem to have gotten distributed the first time.
-
- [from Wayne Hershberger 921214]
-
- Grandpa Powers: Congratulations.
-
- Bill Powers (921212) There are others who would argue on
- your side [Wayne]...that any separation of the organism from
- its environment is a conceptual mistake. It's all just one
- big system, so there's no point in trying to take it apart
- into components in order to understand it.
-
- This is NOT my point; rather, I am saying that when taking
- something apart that works, one wants to keep track of all the
- working parts and to not mistake a limited set of parts for a
- complete set. However, I am also suggesting that in taking
- functional wholes apart one wants to divide them into whole
- functional parts.
-
- Bill Powers (ibid) I for one have never found that
- contemplating the WHOLE THING leads to anything but
- bafflement...We could just as well say that the actions of
- the Little Man consist of altering...output, not
- perception...because when you start with the motor output
- forces and keep adding all the things directly related to
- and dependent on them, you end up back with the output
- forces after one trip around the loop. Making all the
- substitutions to eliminate intermediate terms, you end up
- with output = f(output). Or perception = f(perception), or
- error = f(error). It all depends on where you start.
- In our modeling efforts, we have found it definitely
- useful to distinguish the organism from its environment.
-
- Perhaps, but it seems to me far more useful (indeed, essential) to
- identify the two inputs to the canonical loop: the reference input
- and the disturbances (considered collectively). These two inputs
- to the loop (neither is an input to the organism) mark the
- functional joints at which the loop is best carved. There is no
- better example of this argument than your own 1978 _Psychological_
- _Review_ article where you identify p* and d, using the
- organism/environment distinction, effectively, for pedagogical
- purposes.
-
- The reference signal and disturbance provide the basis for saying
- that control systems control their inputs rather than their
- outputs. That is, at the point in the canonical loop where the
- loop is intersected by the reference signal (i.e., at the
- comparator), it is the loop's input to this intersection (the
- variable in the loop downstream of the final disturbance) not the
- loop's output from this intersection which corresponds to the
- reference value. THIS IS TRUE WHETHER OR NOT THERE ARE ANY
- EFFECTORS OR RECEPTORS (I.E., ORGANISM/ENVIRONMENT INTERFACE) IN
- THE LOOP. So, whether or not organisms can control environmental
- variables appears to be another question, altogether. It depends
- upon where the organism/environment interface is located relative
- to the last disturbance in the loop.
-
- In your HPCT you have labeled each loop's input to a comparator p
- (for perception), and hypothesized that higher order perceptions
- are "subjective EVs" realized by complex input functions--no
- problem. But the question of whether or not organisms also
- control objective EVs depends upon the location of the last
- disturbance in the loop, not merely upon the complexity of the
- input functions. There appear to be two different matters at
- issue here. What do you think?
-
- When I said that conceptual EVs (involving imagination) and
- perceptual EVs are lawfully related I was agreeing with your
- earlier post when you said:
-
- Bill Powers (921210) the behavior of the environment is
- lawfully and reliably related to the perceptual signal, as
- long as the form of the input function remains the same.
-
- I read your expression "the environment" as referring to a
- disciplined conceptual model comprising objective EVs (i.e., EVs
- of physics). I am using the expression perceptual EVs to include
- all levels of perception including conceptual levels--as you do.
- The lawfulness that concerns me is not the regularity between
- lower level and higher level perceptions, but between EVs
- described objectively (by scientific models) and EVs described
- subjectively.
-
- Because the lawfulness of these related realizations may mean
- nothing more and nothing less than the reality of the laws of
- their relation, the expression "Boss Reality" seems far to
- redolent of agency and substance to serve as an appropriate label.
- Boss Reality sounds like something with a mind of its own. It
- puzzles me why you use the expression while seeming to reject its
- connotations--why not coin a phrase?
-
- Warm regards, Wayne
-
- Wayne A. Hershberger Work: (815) 753-7097
- Professor of Psychology
- Department of Psychology Home: (815) 758-3747
- Northern Illinois University
- DeKalb IL 60115 Bitnet: tj0wah1@niu
-