Psycho-sociology of software development: an out of box view.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Why We Are Supposed to Learn the Things We Learn in School.
Advertisements

How Much Information Is In A Quantum State? Scott Aaronson MIT |
Starter From what you learnt last lesson, summarise the Allegory of the Cave in 5 bullet points.
Knowledge & Truth Book V
Language Chapter 3 Content.
THEORIES ON ART &BEAUTY
Kant Philosophy Through the Centuries BRENT SILBY Unlimited (UPT)
General Concepts for Development of Thermal Instruments P M V Subbarao Professor Mechanical Engineering Department Scientific Methods for Construction.
Chapter 6 Problem Solving and Algorithm Design. 6-2 Chapter Goals Determine whether a problem is suitable for a computer solution Describe the computer.
The Basic Questions What is the fundamental nature of the world? How do we fit into It?
The most incomprehensible thing about the world is that it is comprehensible.
How do we know what we think we know is true? Einstein, revolutionised Physics with his thought experiments Galileo, father of experimental physics. Physicists.
Fall 2008Programming Development Techniques 1 Topic 2 Scheme and Procedures and Processes September 2008.
Proof Points Key ideas when proving mathematical ideas.
Prepared By Jacques E. ZOO Bohm’s Philosophy of Nature David Bohm, Causality and Chance in Modern Physics (New York, 1957). From Feyerabend, P. K.
© Copyright 1992–2004 by Deitel & Associates, Inc. and Pearson Education Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 5 - Functions Outline 5.1Introduction 5.2Program.
Ways of Knowing Augsburg College NUR 306 Week One.
Quantum Technology Essential Question:
What if animals were fractals? University of Utah ACCESS 2009.
The Problem of Knowledge. What new information would cause you to be less certain? So when we say “I’m certain that…” what are we saying? 3 things you.
Chapter Two The Philosophical Approach: Enduring Questions.
Computability Thank you for staying close to me!! Learning and thinking More algorithms... computability.
AJITESH VERMA 1.  Dictionary meaning of chaos- state of confusion lack of any order or control.  Chaos theory is a branch of mathematics which studies.
FRACTALS OF THE WORLD By Leslie Ryan. Common Terms Iteration- To repeat a pattern multiple times, usually with a series of steps. Reflection- An image.
Main Branches of Linguistics
1 Evolution and Morality. 2Outline Introduction Problem 1: How could morality be the result of evolution? Conclusion Problem 2: Morality debunked?
Theory,law,fact.
CSCE 315: Programming Studio Artificial Intelligence.
Dr. Ken Hoganson, © August 2014 Programming in R STAT8030 Programming in R COURSE NOTES 1: Hoganson Programming Languages.
THE COMPLEXITY OF SCIENCE AND THE SCIENCE OF COMPLEXITY: HOW TO SURVIVE IN A SELF-REFERENTIAL WORLD DON MIKULECKY PROFESSOR OF PHYSIOLOGY VIRGINIA COMMONWEALTH.
Entropy and the Second Law Lecture 2. Getting to know Entropy Imagine a box containing two different gases (for example, He and Ne) on either side of.
By: Yong Yu Wen (33) 303. What is it? is the subject of the relation of heat to forces acting between contiguous parts of bodies, and the relation of.
© Copyright 1992–2004 by Deitel & Associates, Inc. and Pearson Education Inc. All Rights Reserved. C How To Program - 4th edition Deitels Class 05 University.
Philosophy 1050: Introduction to Philosophy Week 10: Descartes and the Subject: The way of Ideas.
Chapter seven The second Law of thermodynamics The direction of thermal phenomena IF a system for some reason or other is not in a state of equilibrium.
Philosophy 4610 Philosophy of Mind Week 4: Objections to Behaviorism The Identity Theory.
Physics 1910W Freshman Seminar Fall 2015 What is Time? 12:20-1:30 pm, Physics and Nanotechnology(PAN) 120 Instructor: J W Halley 181 Shepherd Laboratory.
The Philosophy of Henri Bergson. Background Newtonian mechanics could not explain the microscopic world of the atom and the very nature of reality itself.
WHAT IS THE NATURE OF SCIENCE?. SCIENTIFIC WORLD VIEW 1.The Universe Is Understandable. 2.The Universe Is a Vast Single System In Which the Basic Rules.
Interkulturelles Zentrum INTERCULTURAL DIALOG as a political process FRANJO STEINER.
EECS 690 April 29. Affective Computing and “stupid” machines Computer scientists and roboticists are beginning to conclude that the largest factor in.
Descartes' Evil Demon Hypothesis:
Why Evolution Doesn’t Work. And Why Creation Does Work.
Optical Illusions What the Mind Sees.
Descates Meditations II A starting point for reconstructing the world.
Nature of Science Observation v. Inferences Hypothesis, Theories, & Laws Variables & Controls.
Lecture 2 – History of Cognition 1 Three topics: 1.Pre-history of study of cognition 2. Early history 3. Recent history.
Plato’s Theory of Forms. The idea of the Forms is illustrated in the Allegory of the Cave. Plato believed true reality existed beyond normal perceptions.
Landau and Lifshitz, Classical Field Theory. Chapter One, The Principle of Relativity. In a separate document I have explained that section one of L&L’s.
CS851 – Biological Computing February 6, 2003 Nathanael Paul Randomness in Cellular Automata.
Ch. 1: Introduction: Physics and Measurement. Estimating.
Lecture №1 Role of science in modern society. Role of science in modern society.
Bending BEAMS... RODS... STRESS...SHELLS. LONG AGO, THE FOUR ELEMENTS LIVED TOGETHER IN HARMONY. THEN EVERYTHING CHANGED WHEN THE STRESS BECAME APPLIED.
Chapter 1: Introduction. Physics The most basic of all sciences! Physics: The “Parent” of all sciences! Physics: The study of the behavior and the structure.
An Outline of Descartes's Meditations on First Philosophy
A Primer on Chaos and Fractals Bruce Kessler Western Kentucky University as a prelude to Arcadia at Lipscomb University.
Spring ÇGIE lecture 41 lecture 4: complexity simple systems, complex systems –parallel developments that are joining together: systems literature.
Things are not what they appear to be, nor they are otherwise. Chaos- Rowan Mohamed & Mazen Mohamed.
WHAT IS THE NATURE OF SCIENCE?
Objectives The objectives of this lecture is to:
KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT”
Analysis of Structures
Physics 1910W Freshman Seminar Fall 2017 What is Time?
Describing Mental States
Bellwork In two large groups, analyze the post-it notes for ABSTRACT or CONCRETE concepts Does the example fit the description of ABSTRACT or CONCRETE?
Mr. Morris Physical Science
The Ontological Argument Aim: To explore the attributes of God.
Analysis of Structures
Native American Literature
Hypothesis, Theories, & Laws Variables & Controls
Presentation transcript:

Psycho-sociology of software development: an out of box view

The brain as the thinking machine We can imagine our brain as a “thinking machine” to organize ideas, sensations, perceptions, affects and to put order into them.

If we consider the definition of entropy as a “measure of disorder” it could seem that we are indeed machines specialized at operating in opposition to "natural laws“…

…entropy tends to increase and it is maximum at equilibrium: because of an intriguing form of disobedience, not strictly human, against of “natural laws”…

… life (apparently acting in the opposite direction) is the phenomenon of passage from simple atoms to complex animals.

The concept of Kolmogorov-Sinai (K-S) entropy, which increases with the information content, provides a model to conciliate the human… and generally life’s… tendency to order with the inevitable increase of entropy.

…so… Perhaps it is also not entirely casual that we are forced to use two different definitions for Entropy.

…so… On one side the Thermodynamic Entropy, maximal at the equilibrium, for non dissipative systems On the other, the K-S Entropy is maximal when you have a maximum of information

The concept of chaos that Newton would have certainly disdainfully excluded from his description of nature and from his absolute model, comes back to us effectively thanks to the recursive method he invented to find the zeros of a function.

We can approach the value of the variable where the function is zero in successive iterations, if the function shows a sufficient regularity.

At the very heart of the formal beauty of classical physics and Newtonian mechanics hides the mathematical treachery of the recursive method, the fractals and finally the (deterministic) chaos.

We could say that the more life becomes self-conscious and capable to defend itself, the more it is able to approach self-knowledge.

In this sense it is possible that the development of our model of the physical world has followed the “internal models” of those who contributed to it, often unknown to themselves…

…so it is perhaps not a mere chance that one of the father of classical physics, Newton, was at the origin of the recursive method, which in our century has opened the way to the modelisation of chaotic phenomena.

Thoughts are physical objects?

It is as if via the effort of translation of reality into the physical model, physicists and mathematicians ambiguously spoke of their inner world, including their dreams and their fears.

We could even suppose that the stricter is the logical frame… the more the theory that develops within its boundaries openly shows …the underlying affective roots that have generated it

… as a dance of fish under an ice layer.

The mathematical and/or physical and/or physico-mathematical models describing physical objects could be considered as production of our mind and it is lucky because our mind is in fact a physical object.

It is interesting to note that so-called physico-mathematical models born in our mind, fit so nicely with the huge universe.

As it is subject to the irreversibility of time, life has deployed a strategy of cyclical repetition. Time passes trough seasons, days and nights. Everything repeats in a continuous return that fosters our illusion to come back to past.

On the other hand life, via the human mind, has invented, at least in first approximation, an “absolute and certain” knowledge, independent from the passing of time.

To put the knowledge somewhere, to find it and use it, the humanity try to leave a trace of their knowledge (or simply their existence) in construction

writing …

drawing…

The human knowledge seems to pass from voice...To stone…

…To papirus…

…To paper books…

…in some way from «fragility » to « eternity »… (?)

But …this is not true… because oral tradition shows the force and the capacity to pass, lively in time, more then static treasures of knowledge

FROM THE LIBRARY TO VOICE, THERE IS NOW SOMETHING INTERMEDIARY

PRESENTING THE FRAGILITY OF THE CHANGING SUPPORT, LESS THEN VOICE

AND THE REPRODUCTABILITY OF PRINTED MATTER, MORE THAN BOOKS…

WELCOME TO THE BRNS International Workshop on Large Scale Computing

Thank you for your attention!