Thanks, Jason.

 

Dimension refers to the complex adaptive behavioral landscape that functional changes occur. The ToK makes the novel ontological/ontic reality claim that there are four qualitatively separable dimensions, with Life, Mind, and Culture complex adaptive planes of behavioral complexity emerging as a function of novel information processing and communication systems.

 

Level refers to object-field figure ground relationship defined by the epistemological frame of the knower. Chemists are interested in the atom-to-molecule object-field relation.

 

Best,
G

 

From: tree of knowledge system discussion <[log in to unmask]> On Behalf Of nysa71
Sent: Thursday, February 20, 2020 8:02 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Levels versus Dimensions on the Periodic Table?

 

 

Gregg,

Well, you've always referred to Matter, Life, Mind, and Culture as "dimensions of complexity", so you should maintain that consistency in your PTB.

It would be helpful if you could specifically define both "dimension" and "level" in the context of the ToK.

~ Jason

On Thursday, February 20, 2020, 07:31:55 AM EST, Henriques, Gregg - henriqgx <[log in to unmask]> wrote:

 

 

Dear TOK List,

 

  I would welcome feedback on a question of terminology I am wondering about. It has to do with the Periodic Table of Behavior and what to call the rows and columns. The diagram is attached, and here is the slide show on it. Here is what I would like some feedback on, if anyone is so inclined. My question is this:

 

  Should the “levels” refer to the rows of part, object, group in the system/field context and “dimensions” refer to the columns of Matter, Life, Mind and Culture? Or, should they be reversed, and have the “dimension” be part, object, group rows and levels refer to the columns of Matter, Life, Mind, and Culture?

 

  If you look at my history in writing, I used to use the terms fairly interchangeably, until the PTB popped, and I then differentiated them. I can offer the rationale for why I divided dimension and level the way I did, but it also is the case that it could have gone either way.

 

  Also, please be aware that in the ToK Big History paper, the TOK Exec Committee did, we introduced a new term for Matter, Life, Mind and Culture called the “planes of existence,” which is synonymous with the four qualitatively different dimensions of behavioral complexity. I am using planes of existence quite a bit in my current book. In addition, Joe M and I used this terminology in our paper on the PTB. However, I don’t think anyone read it, so I am not too committed to it 😊.

 

  Anyway, I am in the midst of writing about the Periodic Table of Behavior in the upcoming Unified Framework book, and would love to hear thoughts if anyone has any opinions one way or the other. I am sure it is something that many of you have spent lots of time thinking about 😊


Best,
Gregg

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