Science in Transition

Process and Pilgrimage paper describing forum at Birkbeck 31st May – Philip Franses

Theme. 1

Introduction. 1

Historical perspective. 1

Comparison and union. 2

Transition. 2

Pattern. 3

Two ways of knowing. 3

Language. 3

Symmetry. 4

Return. 4

 

Theme

While recently travelling to Italy, having gone through security we found ourselves high above the Alps, carried along in reverie, imagination, dreams. The relaxed laughter of passengers freed from the stress of departure was tempered by an officious Italian border-guard who meticulously examined each document allowing two long cues to build up. The stern atmosphere declared that the frivolity of free air space was being left behind… whether one had arrived at this land with any special insight from the journey, should one even have travelled through galaxies and eons, was unimportant before the stamp of acceptance by the authority of the identity of the State of Italy. So how, I wondered, does one tell a story of experience that has bearing to the land of arrival, if all that is scrutinised is one’s eligibility to enter that order?

 

A similar feeling abounds in academic circles where one is first and foremost judged on the etiquette of a particular way of knowledge. Experiment, measurement and reproducible order are the gates by which one enters into discussion of a pre-envisioned landscape. The original developers of quantum theory, scientists from all over the world, prided themselves on the consensus of their interpretation and fiercely refuted any counter suggestions.

 

Bohm’s different vision proclaims an otherness that shows itself equivalent in the language of experience. Bohm who was without a country for a while, having been evicted from the USA, learnt to appreciate the journey and its arrival rather than the static order waiting to receive it. As professor at Birkbeck he was given the freedom to explore, at the college where the forum Process and Pilgrimage is convened.

 

 

Introduction

In the last fifty years, complexity theory and information theory have combined to give an alternative foundation to formative phenomena, based on potential and coherence. Information describes a redundancy in potential that in the mathematics of complexity theory is able to resolve coherently to a whole attractor bounding different possible local trajectories.

 

It is in the suspension of causality that information resides. Where there is only one causal path universally determined, there is no room in the phenomena for additional information. It is the redundancy of potential paths at the micro-level that allows for additional properties to characterise the whole nature at the macro-level. Thus it requires questioning of an existence to uncover its essential properties, whether this is going deeper into a person’s true character or really observing a flower in its delicate composition. No information is apparent at the surface of causal-sufficiency.

 

Science has tended to see information as pools of multiple-possibility residing within an essentially causal landscape of concepts and laws. Information in our view extending this analogy might be more akin to the sea, in primary formative relation to the land of causality.

 

Quantum theory has successfully furnished a theory where the sea of potential is incorporated implicitly in the description of journey between ports. It allows us to understand potential, as a dark crossing in which no measurement is possible, as an influence upon the arrival and departure of vessels on the land, the illuminations of objects in their knowable properties. 

 

The classical interpretation contrasts with that of David Bohm and Basil Hiley, where the same equations are interpreted as a patterning of the realm of potential in what is called an informational field. Importantly instead of understanding potential from its effect on causal concepts, a dynamic formative influence is depicted. From the perspective of latent potential, it is now form that creatively arises to substantiate existence in a greater pattern according to an informational field.

 

At the moment where individual meets with the universal and causality is suspended, the apparent disorder of properties in the redundancy of micro-potential is free to be informed coherently. The properties that we call information are able to align about the individual’s own unity and to synchronise with others in similar quest.

 

Historical perspective

The confusion as to how to maintain a causal description of phenomena dominated the debate in the wake of quantum theory’s conception. Bohr-Heisenberg developed an interpretation applying uncertainty, non-locality and other quantum mysteries to a causal framework embedded in the system of known concepts.

Bohr ‘However far the phenomenon transcend the scope of classical physical explanation, the account of all evidence must be expressed in classical terms.’[i]

 

Einstein in a letter to Schroedinger: ‘Your claim that the concepts p, q [momentum, position] will have to be given up, if they can only claim such “shaky” meaning seems to me to be fully justified. The Heisenberg-Bohr tranquilizing philosophy-or religion?-is so delicately contrived that, for the time being, it provides a gentle pillow for the true believer from which he cannot very easily be aroused. So let him lie there.’ [ii]

 

The Bohr-Heisenberg interpretation described the mathematical representation of possibilities or tendencies and the transition to the actual at the point of observation.[iii]

Bohm on the other hand explored the phenomena from the complementary side of informational potential.[iv] He re-formulated the classical quantum equation through the ‘Quantum potential field’, a global prescriptive influence upon the behaviour of particles. This separates from the formula the informational aspect of how the union between causality and potential is realised. Basil Hiley has recently explained this:

We found that the potential was totally different from any classical potential that we know. It has no external source in the sense that the electric field has its source in a distribution of charges. It does not act mechanically on the system. In this sense it cannot be thought to act like an efficient cause. It is more like a formative cause that shapes the development of the process. Indeed as we explored its properties in many different physical systems it reminded me very much of the morphogenetic field generated in biological systems.

 

The information field is shaped by the environment in a way that is very similar to the way the development of a plant is shaped by its environment. Thus we can think of the information as active from within giving shape to the whole process and this shape depends on the environment in key ways. In other words the meaning in the wave is expressed through the form that develops.’[v]

 

Just as Bohr and Heisenberg succeed in entraining the possibility aspect of information into a causal (at least at statistical level) quantum law, so Bohm and Hiley suspend causality for the entrance of an informational field that steers free flowing potential.

 

In changing from a causal to an informational emphasis we have not changed the nature of the quantum formulation as exhibiting a basic union between the two types of order. Yet this union is visible from two very different perspectives, each description generative to the other.

 

It is in the juxtaposition of two equally valid approaches that the combined meaning of the information-potential: causal-stability interplay is brought to the fore.

Comparison and union

Classical quantum interpretation –Bohr-Heisenberg

Formative informational potential Bohm_Hiley

hides phenomena in an elusive world of statistical average;

celebrates form in wholeness;

causality breaks multiply into infinite possibilities only recovered by a statistical averaging;

causality breaks singularly and dramatically in the admission of a global information field that restores causality as after-influence;

aligns a global nature to permeate the weird world of local phenomena;

local relationships utilise to the maximum the symmetry and exchange of basic properties to allow the potential for a global phenomena to resonate in its midst;

alerts us to the stability of the atomic founded substance over all inducement to change;

triumphs momentarily over causality to cohere potential into new form.

Table 1: Comparison of Bohr conceptual model with Bohm’s informational perspective

 

 

Transition

The anthropologist Victor Turner explored African ceremonial rituals of coming-of-age rites[vi]. This could be a commoner making transition to head or adolescents at the turning point to manhood. In the ritual the passager would leave behind their connection, rites, identity conferred by an old order, and enter into a liminal threshold state. The commoner would be humiliated before the village, with all his standing scorned as the village exulted in his weaknesses, faults and foibles. The adolescent would be removed to a location far distant from their friends, relatives, grounds of play. From this separation, the otherness of un-attachment to any fixed order would make itself evident, as a primary state of ambiguity, irresolution and openness.

 

Otherness is freely entered and predicated by its gamble of conversion to new order. Instead of otherness being marshalled into some subspace of order, the question of how the liminality of decision is going to win out over the indecisiveness of the journey is a living engagement inherent in the process. Otherness forms a state of creative suspension where the outcome is irresolute and order is un-particulate. The conundrum how to leave the old order and find handhold in the new draws otherness into the process of resolution itself, rather than keeping otherness tidily within the boundary of order.

 

A particular facility of letting go, of being nothing in the old so that one might exchange this for an authentic whole vision of the new, characterises the process of transition, from the perspective of allowing decisive input as resolution. One enters into the realm of the in-between, sacrificing one’s belonging to the old, so that one is led to the demand of the new. One feels the pull on the nothingness of the old, with the inevitable fate of the new.       

 

Otherness dominates by describing the journey through the dissolution of old order, where the outcome of the new is purposefully suspended to manifest its resolution.

 

This is the nature of the journey we are on with Process and Pilgrimage, that we open ourselves to that state of being called with a question. Satish Kumar makes the comparison between the tourist and the pilgrim. The tourist has no question, he is visiting a scene painted by the encyclopaedic guidebook of knowledge, able to extract that which is useful for his own taking. A pilgrim knows otherness in the question of his journey, where no destination is predetermined. Otherness is listed to the tourist in a book of standard questions that allow the world to be stopped and used. While for the pilgrim, otherness is celebrated in the trust of something new.

 

As a pilgrim one is taunted by the fact one could have stayed at home in the old order; at the end of the journey one’s life is illuminated as if one walked about a far shore to return to the same ground with a different message. The question leaves open otherness to the floating destiny of new order.

 

Pattern

As Francoise Wemelsfelder the second speaker shows there is a coherence in the language of qualities when we address the living aspect of the animal. Where order on its own quantifies an animal in terms of weight, growth milestones, protein content, Francoise has developed a practical approach, depicting consensus in the observed qualities of animal behaviour. In starting with the experience of encountering the animal, a qualitative chart emerges characterising the individual behaviours.

 

Instead of imposing an order by selecting categories of departmentalised identification, the observation of the animal is through qualitative assessment whose significance is realised only in the map of connection realised by a statistical method. One finds a pattern that is answering to the question what is the health of the animals in various situations. The order rather magically and beautifully presents itself as gradations of nuances in a plot of descriptors of behaviour and mood. The question of health is not answered abruptly and singly but fluidly at many different levels.

 

The plot shows that as soon as we choose for one type of order, in this case the response of the whole animal to its environment, then the symmetry of states and relationships in nature immediately translates into coherence in the geometrical realm. The possibilities of animal states, though remaining unexplained, demonstrate in their symmetry, a coherent pattern of behaviours. Symmetry is the key to quantum theory, allowing us to recognise pattern, where the definition of the individual particle is outside exact distinct determinism.

 

Underpinning the theory, our approach is to see the basic element as described through process, rather than identity. The symmetry uncovers a relationship to the whole that exhibits as the finiteness of the animal behaviour or the course of the particle. The basic question, what is my relationship to the whole, is asked in the symmetry of relationship. These symmetries, instead of ending at a model of explanation of a static world, concentrate possibility through choices, before arriving at a unique point where new resolution can emerge!

 

Two ways of knowing

Chris Clarke describes man’s relation to the world in terms of two modes, the propositional of rational analysis and the implicational of direct experience. The implicational describes where one is implicated in the order of things, where one’s participation is implicated by the primary order with a certain responsibility, where one’s action is not passively considered but follows in the lines of existence.

 

The holism of Bohr’s view was packed into a detailed philosophical study of the role of the observer. Quantum theory tells how the suggestions of possible world orders harmonise amongst themselves, so that an observation will create one world-order in sensitivity to the possibility of the many. The observation in this way does not destroy the holism of the underlying fabric, or the integrity of the classical order that is selected.

 

Bohm in his forthright manner named wholeness actively as the implicate order, which naturally connects to the implicational model of experience. This stands between the qualities of the realms of wholeness and of order. The implicational mode of being can reveal itself in several ways;

-         as an inner motion that tries to bring about some different manifestation of the world of explicate order;

-         as a synthesizing of series of events in order to implicate a new address of their whole message;

-          as a faith in acting that some later whole sense will be made of one’s involvement. 

 

The implicate is not something remote and mathematical in its origin, but our implicational mode of being in the everyday brings the implicate into play naturally in the ordered world. The whole mystery of the implicate resolves in the notion of our common acquaintance with its qualities. The implicational is an active response to the whole in our knowledge of the particular (in contrast with observation – a passive recording of the particular with knowledge of the whole).

 

The implicational mode of being is thus both

-         a gateway by which whole value enters into the world of order in general;

-         primary in the sense we have of ourselves, the higher goals of life, the whole foundation to an orientation of self in a world of manifest orders.

 

In including the implicational aspect of being, it is no longer possible to frame existence in terms of space and time, or any partial order, so how are we to imprint the realm of wholeness with a formative logic, as we require?

 

Language

The case being put forward by Brian Goodwin and myself is our study of a certain type of order, as set out in a mathematical paper by Cancho and Sole[vii]. Their computer study, relating to a simple model of language, showed the following. Where there is total order in a system, there is no ambiguity and thus can be no informational potential to be resolved subtly by context. Where there is total disorder, ambiguity is total and informational potential is so unbounded as to be unable to convey any meaning. Between these two states, the computer model of Cancho and Sole identifies a dynamic transition ordering symbols to possible meanings. This intermediate state of creative ambiguity has enough flexibility for meaning to enter through context intelligibly while preserving the integrity of the elements basic representations. (This intermediate state is further characterised by a power law distribution.)

 

An intelligible ordering of the world, as a creative language of the intermediate type, is characterised by an informational potential which reflects the transparency of the basic ordering elements to be shaped by context. The information of a particular ordering is a measure of its transparency to be effected by meaning in a given context.

 

In biology the observation of power law distribution within the connective network of proteins or RNA expression suggests that a similar creative ordering is operative. What we are looking for in these biological cases is just how the implicate realm of wholeness is able to give rise to information-rich meaningful orders that are able to express different ‘languages’ according to different circumstance. Order itself becomes a fluid concept that is able to express different interaction with the environment to output a different collective message from its encounter. Order we suggest, as a language, overlays a medium of understanding upon the encounter with the world.

 

Symmetry

The ‘higher dimensional reality’ in which the orders of the quantum world play out was first described mathematically by Basil Hiley at a more abstract level of process, through what is known as a Clifford algebra. Basil Hiley shows how one can go from this process reality to any variant of ordered geometries, be they relativistic or quantum, in nature, detailing how particles behave in a particular order. Process can relate to an object waiting to be understood, but also to a journey of transition that is seeking to find ‘order’ at the far shore of resolution.

 

Each ‘order’ is known by the symmetry of its relationships; one moves into transition by breaking the symmetry of one’s belonging to the old order. A new possibility presents itself, as sporulation to the bacteria or manhood to the youth that is non-compassable within the symmetry pattern of existing relationships. The liminal phase is an exploration in which this fresh possibility is incorporated into a new symmetry.

 

This new transitory symmetry is not fixed into a static pattern of relationships: instead the symmetry is as an outer boundary, pointing in its roundness of form to an inner space at which ultimate resolution may occur. The symmetry of the transitory is thus an in-between space relating only to its own development, shaping the platform on which a resolution that involves participation in a new symmetry of connection, may unfold. The new of each individual is thus channelled to cohere in an inward space that borders upon the exclusion of the old order that has been left. 

 

Our aim then is to follow symmetry to focus upon a point of particular resolution to the journey of otherness. The symmetry of relationship reveals how otherness in its challenge to the world may be resolved by presenting the space of paradox between dark and light to a new point of equivalent justice.

 

The broken symmetry in channelling its difference inward and holding to shared sameness in relationship, allows for the novel otherness to find the woven tune of its acceptance.

 

In asking the question of otherness, one pushes back the frontier of potential, until a unique response of order returns from a far shore of possibility. Order is re-established as the future consensus re-envisioned through otherness.

 

 

Return

Any identity, be it particle or organism, owes its wholeness to symmetry that bounds its being separately from the environment; this symmetry has the potential to break, relinquishing this spatial separation for a journey in symmetry with a new completion. Master of its own symmetry, it thus is able to explore the symmetry in its breaking and remaking. The identity, that chooses to break, has within its command of symmetry, the destiny to return.

 

Thus symmetry has two routes, the breaking and return through the liminal phase of vulnerability in the whole; and the spatial transition from an order inclusive of one pattern of symmetry to the stability of another. The strength of the world is given both by the physical stability of a conserved symmetry of forces, as typified by the atom, but also by the opposite tendency of the creative freedom within individuality to break with the old in the dynamic of the world to provide unique return. The causal certitude contrasts with the breaking and resealing of order in new form.

 

The two ways of journeying to quality are illustrated in the scientist who travels the road of inspiration to emerge with a symmetry defining a new order and the artist who knows his materials and technique to depict the journey to the new.

 

The breaking of symmetry to arrive at new form is of the same order of wonder as the containment of the world’s energy in the symmetry of the atom or cell. All that is added is the capacity of the individual to break with the outer symmetry of time and for order to be recast though the journey of return to wholeness. Symmetry is freed to travel between the orders, where symmetry is contained as system.  

 

The possibility, created from the freedom that has relinquished all order, either remains an explosive force outside the boundaries of a static explanatory science or is integrated by allowing the beauty of its return in the timeliness of life.

 

In the most primal of single celled organisms, this transition is evident. Bacteria that have individual identities of defending personal boundaries, seeking food, ensuring personal survival, when environmental conditions threaten, seek the solution of an order better befitting the environment. Billions of bacteria will then come together in a joint quest, relinquishing their individuality, collectively entering a spore state and when water is again plentiful, recommencing their individual lives. The bacteria explore the symmetry of their options.

 

‘Sporulation is a process executed collectively and beginning only after “consultation” and assessment of the colonial stress as a whole by the individual bacteria. Simply put, starved cells emit chemical messages to convey their stress. Each of the bacteria uses the information for contextual interpretation of the state of the colony relative to its own situation.

Accordingly, each of the cells decides to send a message for or against sporulation. Once all of the colony members have sent out their decisions and read all other messages, sporulation occurs if the majority vote is in favor.’ [viii]

 

Just as language has sprung forth in recent evolutionary time by jumps of the conceptual capacity of the meaning won from the world, so life in its own slow way has explored the ordering overlay by which it relates its resources to the changing environment. Experience leads directly into frames of order capable of housing the alignment of process.

 

As the environment changed, so bacteria transformed to metabolise different constitutional molecules, using the subtlest and most ingenious adaptations of their previous organisation. A lengthy chain of classical modifications must be imagined to adapt a static molecular organisation. By reinterpreting the ordering principle (through a switch of ‘language’) only the smallest of reconfiguration of possibility is necessary.

 

Four types of bacteria achieved an improbable symbiosis of the nucleated cell, capable of founding more complex life forms. The radical conceptual adjustment that took place also involves the recasting of the meaning of being to its environment, in which the bounded cell allowed life to develop complexly inwardly.

 

The hallmarks of identity interchange with an otherness capable of delivering a new order. Just as Schrodinger’s cat seems to suspend life forever in the minute detail of its demise, we present an equivalent tale of creation where potential is remixed to startle life into new inhabitancy defying the running down of the causal order. The fluidity for transformation between death and life is born in the same free breath as the form in potential is safeguarded.  The two interpretations when released from their competing rivalry, unite biological form with physical foundation in the prescience of quality.



[i] Niels Bohr; The Philosophical Writings of Niels Bohr Vol 2 Essays 1933-1957 on atomic physics and human knowledge; Discussion with Einstein on Epistemological Problems in Atomic Physics; Ox Bow press; 1987

[ii] Arthur Fine (1996) The Shaky Game: Einstein Realism and the Quantum Theory, The University of Chicago Press Letter Einstein to Schrödinger on May 31st 1928 ( page 18.)

[iii] Werner Heisenberg (1958) Physics and Philosophy; The Copenhagen Interpretation; Penguin

[iv] David Bohm (1980) Wholeness and the Implicate Order; Hidden Variables in the Quantum Theory; Routledge and Keegan Paul

[v] Hiley, B. J. (2004). Information, quantum theory and the brain. In G. Vitiello (Ed.), Brain and Being (Vol. 58, pp. 197-214). Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company.

 

[vi] Victor Turner (1969); The Ritual process; Structure and Anti-structure; Aldine de Gruyter; New York

[vii] Ramon Cancho and Ricard Sole; Least effort and the origin of scaling in human language; PNAS 788-791; February 4 2003 vol 100 no 3.

[viii] E. Ben Jacob,  Y. Shapira, and A. Tauber (2006); Seeking the foundation of cognition in bacteria: From Schrodinger’s negative entropy to latent information; Physica A 359 495-524