Mt Rainier

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Showing posts with label categorization. Show all posts
Showing posts with label categorization. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Evolving Life and Categorization


In my last article, Wikileaks and the Problem of Categorization, I talked about evolving technology and the categorization of structures and concepts with the evolving technology. There is a push-pull at work as we evolve technologies to suit our needs but at the same time technology itself encourages us to evolve to fit in with its capabilities.

Years ago a mouse was that thing that got into the house through a crack in the window and ran away with the cheese. Now, a mouse slides along a mouse rug transferring movement in the hand to electronic signals in the computer. Sometimes it seems to act on its own, closing an open window or gobbling up some cheesy letters in a fit of pique. We categorize “mice” according to context.

Yet both mice are the product of their own evolutionary processes.

Evolutionary biology is replete with categorization. We look back to the single celled organisms, bacteria, archaea and eukaryotes, and see that life has never looked back as a multitude of diverse life forms have evolved.

Starting out with the category Domain Eukarya, born out of the marriage of a Protobacteria and Archaea, we travel to Kingdom Animalia then to Phylum Chordata, on to Class Mammalia and then to Order Cetacea. In Order Cetacea we find the marine mammals, including whales, porpoises and dolphins. Under Class Mammalia, Cetacea are closely associated with the ungulates (hoofed animals).

Whales evolved from land mammals. Whales were likely a hoofed animal such as a wolf, that evolved over time to inhabit the briny deep. Mammals in the oceans? It seems like some awkward reversal of the common term “fish out of water”, a reversal of intuitive categorization.

The evolution of the whale was impressive in forging an adaptation between the two very difficult environments, land and sea. As warm blooded, air breathing creatures, with live births, they needed to forge a transition that would allow them to survive in an ocean environment. This transition took place over a long period and the story of that transition is written in the behavior of the whales themselves, and in archaeological evidence.

This Whale Evolution Documentary from PBS is excellent in discussing the story of how the whales evolved.

With humanity facing environmental, social and economic challenges, it will interesting how we adapt to those challenges and how we integrate technology into that process. In doing so, we will open up a sea of questions, including those about categorization, and interpreting behaviors and actions arising out of how we categorize.

Marilyn Dunstan’s whale images on Alamy.com

Friday, December 31, 2010

Wikileaks and the Problem of Categorization



At the New Year 2011 we wait for the next chapter in the continuing saga that is Wikileaks. A look at news articles under “Wikileaks” displays the many concepts that Wikileaks has touched.

In my view, the most profound concept to come from the Wikileaks saga is how we define categories and how that categorization reflects changing technology. We form mental categories, assigning meaning to events based on our experiences and the internal representations of those experiences. The richness of life reflects how these categories vary between people, places, events.

Society organizes around these categories with laws and social norms. Concepts thread their way from the dawn of time to the present, providing a beacon around which to organize.

Over time, these structures have been built around differing sets of risks and rewards as technology and social norms have evolved. As we inherently consider risks and rewards in our decision making, the fact that risks (and rewards) have changed so much with advancing technology means that structures and concepts will be reexamined to reflect those changes.

The ability for small changes to leverage themselves so quickly over such a wide area provides opportunity for considerable rewards but at the same presents considerable risks. It is incumbent upon us as a society to examine both elements, risk and reward and to reflect how we categorize the many things that impact our life. These are issues society must decide as it moves forward.