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DaveW wrote:<br>
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<div style="font-family:Arial;">I do not know and have not read
Feferman, so this may be totally off base, but ...<br>
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<div style="font-family:Arial;"><br>
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<div style="font-family:Arial;">glen stated:<br>
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<div style="font-family:Arial;"><i>Worded one way: Schema are the
stable patterns that emerge from the particulars. And the
variation of the particulars is circumscribed (bounded,
defined) by the schema.<br>
</i><br>
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<div style="font-family:Arial;">This is a description of
"culture." Restated—hopefully without distorting the meaning:<br>
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<div style="font-family:Arial;"><br>
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<div style="font-family:Arial;"><b>Culture is the stable patterns
of behavior that emerge from individual human actions which
vary (are idiosyncratic) within bounds defined by the culture.</b><br>
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<div style="font-family:Arial;"><br>
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<div style="font-family:Arial;">The second glen statement:<br>
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<div style="font-family:Arial;"><br>
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<div style="font-family:Arial;"><i>Worded another way: Our
perspective on the world emerges from the world. And our
perspective on the world shapes how and what we see of the
world.</i><br>
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<div style="font-family:Arial;"><br>
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<div style="font-family:Arial;">alludes to the cognitive feedback
loop (at least part of it) that I developed in my doctoral
dissertation on cognitive anthrpology.<br>
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This is nicely relevant (and I think supportive of) to my own
ideations about the individual/collective "duality", again (just to
harp) in the spirit of Yuval Harari's "Intersubjective Reality"
conceit. It also aligns well with my own understanding of
co-evolving species (ecosystems) and the more general buddhist
"dependent co-arising"... <br>
<p>More n Glen's observations about Schema (and the
Abstract-Concrete axis) under separate cover...<br>
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