So I'm reading
along with this apparent news article, written by
a journalist right...
New magnetic material discovered
A highly sensitive magnetic material that could
transform computer hard drives and energy storage
devices has been discovered.
Read more:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-26435809
And then I hit this quote:
"Now what about leapfrogging the users
capability?"
and I heard something in me say..."right-on"...and
looked to see who it was from...and my guess was
that our own Tiny Tim inserted that
rhetoric...which led me to affirm how memetic
structures hybridize...
In other words, the insertion by Tim (giving
credit)...
Of that meme rendered out of his experience
perhaps @F...
Introduced a hybridization of the meme as an
analogy, or meta "for"...
In hierarchical complexity--as I understand
it--there are about 7 transition steps (at least
5) from 1 "discrete" stage to the next.
Tim's insertion (so I think) demonstrates how
memetic structures "may" become more complex.
Helpful Hint: In my rendition of
these steps in a stage, through lots of coaching
and the associated listening to memetic structures
reveal themselves, I've discovered that one can
begin to track movements through or into a stage
by watching for hybridizations, such as this
example.
Action Step: Notice where someone
transitions, uses metaphors or analogies, mashes
up different pieces to try to form a new memetic
structure and understand how this hybrid form
appears to reveal underlying hierarchical
reasoning.
Comments:
I wanted to also place a "marker" (as described by
the action step above) to illustrate an extension
of where the Jaques work on complexity of
information processing needs to go in the future
if it's to remain a viable method of understand
working complexity above level IV (or so I
believe).
To "read into" a memetic display--measurements of
hierarchical complexity to wit Jaques
purports...albeit obliquely (important)...one has
to see and hear not only what people say or write,
but what they mean--in other words the task they
are performing, and it's hierarchical complexity.
More on this in LBMS: Level Dynamics
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