The premise of this series is to work out a new way of looking at our changing world» Part of the reason we’ve had so much difficulty making sense of the complex events of the past decade is that our ways of thinking — specifically, the metaphors, analogies, and images we resort to — have [...]
Tagged as:
bias,
epistemology,
heuristics,
learning,
meta factors,
metaphors,
metaphysics,
networks,
object bias,
philosophy,
psychology,
relevance,
social media,
will to relevance
The core of my practice of theory is an appreciation of what I call “object bias” — our tendency to conceive experience composed of distinct and permanent objects.
Tagged as:
abstract objects,
abstraction,
cognitive science,
epistemology,
evolution,
heuristics,
object bias,
philosophy,
pragmatism,
specialization,
think21st
Here’s Chris Brogan’s talk on serendipity at last week’s Web 2.0 Expo, here’s my earlier one relating to generativity, and here’s one of the best examples I’ve seen of serendipity & generativity in action on Twitter: No, they’re not on the same list, nor are Jeff Jarvis and The Clever Sheep ever normally in the same [...]
Tagged as:
blogging,
edupunk,
generativity,
heuristics,
process,
publishing,
serendipity,
twitter,
web
“Heuristic” — an ugly word that everyone should know — is used differently in various contexts. It generally refers to a process of making open-ended, provisional decisions in order to get into a better position — “for now” — from which to act and decide better later: Let’s see how this works out — find [...]
Tagged as:
cultural evolution,
culture,
decisions,
heuristics,
learning,
music,
progress,
society,
technology
by OpenConceptual on 07-17-2009
in concepts
In the process of summarizing my last post, Jeff Jarvis suggested I was “searching for a metaphor for what I’ve been calling beta-think.” He’s exactly right — though I wasn’t aware of it when I started writing — so I’m going to take that up with a bit more brevity and focus. The search for [...]
Tagged as:
beta,
beta-think,
heuristics,
human nature,
language,
metaphors,
motivation,
recursion,
relevance,
thinking,
web,
will to relevance
Here’s a fascinating and invigorating idea from Jeff Bercovici, Portfolio‘s media blogger: [Imagine that] as you browse FT.com, you have a small status bar at the bottom of your screen, akin to the “life bar” in first-person shooter games that shows you how healthy or injured your character is. In this case, the status bar [...]
Tagged as:
heuristics,
media,
newspapers,
social media,
strategy,
subscriptions,
web,
web 2.0