pnas | An outstanding open problem is whether collective social phenomena
occurring over short timescales can systematically reduce
cultural heterogeneity in the long run,
and whether offline and online human interactions contribute differently
to the process.
Theoretical models suggest that short-term
collective behavior and long-term cultural diversity are mutually
excluding, since
they require very different levels of
social influence. The latter jointly depends on two factors: the
topology of the underlying
social network and the overlap between
individuals in multidimensional cultural space. However, while the
empirical properties
of social networks are intensively
studied, little is known about the large-scale organization of real
societies in cultural
space, so that random input specifications
are necessarily used in models. Here we use a large dataset to perform a
high-dimensional
analysis of the scientific beliefs of
thousands of Europeans. We find that interopinion correlations determine
a nontrivial
ultrametric hierarchy of individuals in
cultural space. When empirical data are used as inputs in models,
ultrametricity has
strong and counterintuitive effects. On
short timescales, it facilitates a symmetry-breaking phase transition
triggering coordinated
social behavior. On long timescales, it
suppresses cultural convergence by restricting it within disjoint
groups. Moreover,
ultrametricity implies that these results
are surprisingly robust to modifications of the dynamical rules
considered. Thus
the empirical distribution of individuals
in cultural space appears to systematically optimize the coexistence of
short-term
collective behavior and long-term cultural
diversity, which can be realized simultaneously for the same moderate
level of
mutual influence in a diverse range of
online and offline settings.
11 comments:
creepy at 2:30 when Bishop Eddie went to grunting about "where his young people at, where his sporty, shorty?" etc....,
anyway - I don't think that's where Ken gets his talking points from. Our online acquaintance goes all the way back to blackprof.org and like Bro. ConFeed, Ken has been an active proponent and voice of conservative outreach to black moderates. Unfortunately for his mission, I'm very hard pressed to recall a single issue that Ken's been on the right side of. See, his conservatism is a product of this specific mode of human livestock management, when applied to evangelical protestant christian social collectives:It’s my main thesis in this series that conservatism is not
fundamentally about ideology, but about the preservation of elite power,
maintained as a form of identity politics. Elites then claim “natural”
leadership, in the name of protecting, defending and exemplifying the
group identity against evil, enemy “others.” Ideology matters to the
conservative project solely as a means for justification, including
identity formation. It supports the forms of policies, practices and
institutions that preserve group identity and power—and, thereby, elite
rule. Consistency matters to this ideology only insofar as it proves
necessary. Therefore, “the abandonment of conservative principles” is
to be expected when those principles no longer serve those in power.http://patternsthatconnect.blogspot.com/2006/03/how-racism-changes-formconservatism-as.html imoho - Ken is a tireless but mostly unwitting apologist for that set of elites who have worked assiduously to build a mass bulwark within protestant evangelical denominations here in the midwest. Whatever folks like the Kochs do and want done, he will promote and defend.
Do I interpret this correctly to mean that elites control both the short-term and long-term patterns of behavior within a culture - that the hierarchical distribution of elites, like the the distribution of seasoning in a recipe, determine the "flavor" of the culture?
Actually, I rather enjoyed our church's last sermon series we are on for lent. It's on Spiritual maturity. I suspect if you ever want to stop for a spiritual distraction in celebration of easter you would find these lessons pretty far away from the guy you posted here.
http://www.betheltwincities.org/media.php?pageID=26
Interesting. It appears you'd make a far better roman catholic Ken. What with the lamb of christ ethical praxis being taught as the embodiment of spiritual praxis and the soldier of kissinger/cheney politics you've given voice to - lo these many years. How you reconcile these overtly irreconcilable postures, except in uncritical service to those in power, is now and has always been a most amazing feat to me.
Give me the ear-taking soldier of jesus at all times and in all ways - no exceptions.
Just having fun at Ken's expense. And I rarely miss an opportunity to take shots at a tv preacher.
It's crazy that he believes the people at the bottom should just accept being there because they don't know better. It was clever for certain parties to use the church to take over politically. You have a captive audience that's ready to believe anything the man in the pulpit tells them. And you have well funded organizations that operate with little oversight. People find churches non threatening. Conservatism has an appeal to people that value their religion. Their alliance with the churches gives them a head start in any competition with non conservatives.
I think it's more like the cladistics of a cultural tool kit shows up as an ultrametric because only some few are ever working on any one thing, but then you get rubber hitting the road with popular use.
I'm not sure what you mean by I would make a far better Roman Catholic, but I think it was a compliment. As for your ideas on how I can have my point of view and striving to know and be like Christ, I am not really sure what political point of view you would want to challenge in a scriptural "what is God's will" format, you have never really discussed or given authority to the Bible or the God in the Bible to actually flesh out a political point of view Biblically.
We of course all have inconsistencies we don't measure up to according to the Bible, but from your comments it appears you find mine much more obvious. Perhaps you would be right, I wonder if either of us is opposite enough of bull headed to admit if the other one is right according to the Bible if we were to engage in such a discussion of discussing political points of view Biblically. I hope I would be.
"Give me the ear-taking soldier of jesus at all times and in all ways - no exceptions."
Of course we know that's not the will of God. It wasn't then at least.
I'm interested in the fact I had to be stoned to understand this article. It was all gibberish when I read it straight earlier in the day.
It's really very simple - let BD translate for you: All human behavior is basically driven by individually hard-wired genetic tendencies...
lol, when you busted that cladistic ultrametric toolkit isht, I was like, dayyum that's some goodass weed....,
http://youtu.be/H0OaeMYTbs4
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