The poor sort of memory

I'm not sure that anyone here will know what I mean by the word "synchronicity". I suppose a technical definition would be "causal linking between casual events", but most people probably won't really understand that either. In layman's terms, synchronicity is the recognition or observation of a pattern linking events or behaviors that cannot by other methods be linked. It's "coincidence" taken to extreme levels. Synchronicity is, in essence, strictly a function of pattern recognition, and as such is highly dependent upon the observational and creative capabilities of the individual doing the observation. While such events have long been attributed to non-material causes (for example, to the ancient Greeks, Hermes is the embodiment of synchronicity), it is more reasonable to attribute them to the human addiction for causation.

If you've ever played the game "six degrees of Kevin Bacon", you probably have an intuitive understanding of both the appearance and probable cause of synchronicity: what can seem like a magical coincidence is actually a carefully manufactured chain. Synchronicity simply takes place at a lower level of consciousness, but the principle is still the same: we can link any two activities, events, or observations, if only we try hard enough to create such a link. This is the fundamental reason why people often require reminding that "correlation does not imply causation."

Nevertheless, one must actively remind one's self that it's an assumed and not existant phenomenon... especially when it seems to appear in overwhelming magnitude.

Some background is probably required.

I've long been interested in linguistics and semantics; as someone who doesn't think in verbal structures, I've spent a considerable amount of effort in trying to get the closest possible approximation of my thoughts into language. To that end, I've read millions of pages of books - from scientific theory to poetry - and developed a far larger linguistic foundation than most people I know, not just in words but in understanding of connotation and denotation as well as an awareness of both the limits and impositions of language. As I mentioned recently on Out Not Up, language itself has restrictions on what it can represent, often in ways of which speakers aren't aware but which can have major impacts on society. For instance, our tendancy to conflate observation with inherent property can be directly associated with our linguistic tendancy to speak of something as something else, not merely appearing to be something else; we state that so-and-so is a bad man when what we usually mean is that he appears to be a bad man from our perspective.

This ties, in a synchronistic fashion, to Robert Anton Wilson via a friend named Peter. Peter loaned me his copy of The Illuminatus! Trilogy while we were - well, I guess "dating" isn't really accurate, but that's probably descriptive enough - and I fell in love with the material almost immediately. I had my own synchronistic event during the first reading: I was, at the same time, reading a book about asian philosophy. In the philosophy book, I came across the Buddhist koan of "what is the Buddha? Three chin of flax," one afternoon; later that evening, while reading Illuminatus!, a main character brings up the phrase "What is the Buddha? Five pounds of flax."

R.A. Wilson also introduced me to the phrase "the map is not the territory", a concept I immediately latched onto as a concise description of the kinds of linguistic/semantic problem I often experienced. Of course, in researching Dr. Kodish's books (which will arrive this afternoon and probably be read by Saturday evening), I had to delve into Korzybski, whom Wilson mentions periodically but I'd never researched. It turns out that Korzybski originated the phrase "the map is not the territory" in his works on general semantics, which relates to exactly the kind of discrepancies and problems inherent in langauge and thought that I'd always experienced. Oh well, better I come late to the party than never.

The rabbit hole goes deeper, however. "The map" is also a phrase that, in my lexicon, prominantly relates to a series of talks/essays by a man named Alan Carter and called The Programmer's Stone. One of the main focuses of The Programmer's Stone is the notion of two types of learning referred to as packing and mapping. Packing refers to rote memorization and recitation of facts or data; mapping, in contrast, is forming an understanding of the relationships between facts or data. Carter's contention is that most people simply memorize most of the time and never really understand how what they're memorizing fits in with what they already know; this is why they can quite easily have contradictory ideas and yet never realize the contradiction. Programmers, however, are inherently "mappers", because the key to programming is an very deep understanding of the relationships between data points or processes. In this case, Carter is definitely using the general semantics concept of the map as something more utilitarian than representational: it's a functional abstraction of the "real" concepts or facts that can be used to gain further understanding of those concepts or facts.

Carter observed that the ability of individuals to form maps - deeper levels of understanding - seems to be inversely related to stress. As conjectured, this likely has evolutionary origins: deeper understanding often comes from reflection and daydreaming; stress, on the other hand, is generally a motivator for fast action or response to external stimuli (such as a tiger trying to hunt you down). So, the two would reasonably be exclusive: the same stimuli that would cause stress should also reduce the tendancy for quiet reflection. Biology is notoriously efficient about many things, so it makes sense that both of these factors seem to be controlled by the neurotransmitter dopamine.

I've got my own history with dopamine: it's been hypothesized and seemingly proven that "ADHD" is "caused" by abnormal dopamine levels in the brain - too low of production in some cases, or in others due to the apparent reduction in reaction to it due to a mutation in dopamine receptors. According to a doctor I used to see, I'm likely in the latter half, which means that most of the currrent ADHD drugs would be contraindicated for me. I certainly fit Carter's profile of a "mapper" as well as the novelty-seeking (but not risk-taking, which is different) behavior associated with low-dopamine individuals. I'm also one of the least stressed people most of my friends know, as any of them could tell you.

Which brings us full-circle: stress inducing mental conditions that prevent an individual from being aware of the general semantic differences between "map" and "territory", equating the two and thus preventing "deep understanding" typical of "mapper" behavior. Likewise, "mapping" capability hampered by linguist problems resolved through understanding general semantics.

The synchronistic factor comes in when one friend brings up the topic of stress-addiction on facebook yesterday, another sends me an article on dopamine levels in relation to novelty-seeking (without knowing of my interest in the subject; he just thought it was a "cool study"), my coworker having issues with understanding a concept due to semantic limitations (and who only managed to get it when I helped him see those limitations), and the seemingly random discovery of Korzybski through a follower on this blog that I simply hadn't noticed until yesterday (and who has a recommendation from R.A. Wilson himself).

Which only goes to prove my tendancy towards "mapping", since only someone ADHD could build that kind of crazy framework of semi-associated concepts (no Hermes required)... as well as proving your patience for reading through the whole nonsense.

Perhaps we ought to start a new game: six degrees of Alfred Korzybski.

3 comments:

G said...

Hi, saw your comment over at Justin's blog, student in Virginia. I'm adding you to my "short" blog list. My hubby and I are also California natives. I'll be back.

A Wandering Pom said...

Hi there, Austin

I had hoped to respond to this post rather sooner, but various things have got in the way. It has at least given me more time to stew over the various ideas. I still have a nasty feeling this is going to turn into a long way of saying "me too", but here goes anyway...

Synchronicity: yes, I do know what it means, more or less, courtesy of a slightly weird SF short story I read many years ago. I would state it something like this: the occurrence of related events at the same (or similar) time, without causal links between them. Not quite the same as your definition, or that in the Wikipedia article, but probably close enough. Your closing example seems like a very good case of it!

General semantics: I first encountered this perhaps thirty years ago via A.E. van Vogt's "Null-A" series; I could wish that I had thought then to find out more about it. It sounds (at least) like a frame of mind, or a mental toolset, enabling greater clarity of thought and communication. If you have any suggestions for worthwhile on-line material, I'd be very interested.

Mapping vs. packing: I hadn't encountered this idea before, but it resonates very strongly with me. I'm definitely a "mapper" (though you'd probably worked that out already). Some other connections here:
- The quote "There is no royal road to geometry" (one of the classical Greek mathematicians, I think), i.e. the only way to understand maths is to form your own "map" by practicing it; there's no way for a king (or anyone else) to acquire that understanding without working at it.
- Chapter 2 "Truth Mining" in Greg Egan's novel Diaspora, which describes this process of mathematical learning, and contains the line, "Understanding an idea meant entangling it so thoroughly with all the other symbols in your mind that it changed the way you thought about everything."

Novelty-seeking: yes, that's me too. It's something that's seductively easy in blog-land - all those links :-) - to the detriment (again) of my ability to post and comment. Somewhat to my surprise, it doesn't seem to conflict with my desire (need?) for stability, or perhaps predictability, in life.

Your post didn't need much patience, though: I'm a fast reader, and it was definitely interesting enough to keep my attention - not nonsense at all!

Take care

Mark

Austin said...

Mark,

I mostly like that definition of synchronicity because of the nature of the words "causal" and "casual" - so close in spelling, yet nearly opposite in meaning.

I'd probably classify general semantics as a framework - in a sense, a box into which one fits all of one's perceptions, with the difference being one is aware of the box (whereas most people aren't aware of the limits on their perceptions). I guess we could say it acts more as a lens, bringing into focus what's already there rather than granting new ability. But then, limits are my specialty.

Novelty-seeking doesn't mean risk-taking; it simply means a desire for new experiences and/or information. That's often most easily done in familiar, stable environments: psychologically related to Maslow's Hierarchy, I'd venture. I know I tend to be fairly patterned in many things, but that's often so that I've the energy and time to go explore others.

And, "me too"s are always nice :)

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