So much of what we experience is nuanced. What was conscious thought, becomes tacit knowledge and unconscious. Is that consciousness nullified as Ross writes on page 76? I wrote a note 'reflection as hesitation'; also prompted to think about intution (p.83) and our word uses in 'retardation' (which here is no problem at all - in physics and complex sciences/systems. Again the 'principle of least action' arises (p.82). With more physics and cosmology to follow, it helps a little that '
manifold' has landed begging to be understood across the contexts. Bill Ross notes how Delueze and Michel Serres used the game metaphor [Game analogy #1]. Again, lifting this to a scribble 'Health-Illness is quite a game'! This will be the subject of a post soon. In England at least the law and manifold on health (being productive) and illness has been utterly disrupted. The game-table has been kicked over, by those in society who still able? New spaces, and canvases are needed. Kantian thought and interpretations are added to Leibniz. A heady mix but clearly essential as Bill Ross's critique is developed.
The book was a must-read, as in the contents: Complexity (with a presentation next month), cosmology, Serres, and Claude Shannon. In Game Analogy #2, "Communication is understood here to encompass much more than meaningful exchange; all phenomena 'communicate'". p.85. I couldn't agree more with with these 'games', this thought being 'situated within the purchase of information theory' (p.86). Bizarrely (or not), in the same year two papers:
Here
there's a pointer to the cosmology to follow - Ross is true to the
title. I have let most of the Astronomy Yearbooks go, but retain a
few. Not just for key birth-years, but articles that are well written and researched historical
snapshots. Here, Bill Ross discusses the game of Cepheid variables and
their significance in mapping the universe. Truly, fascinating. Weaver's
three levels of salient action are listed. Threads are tied too, with
conclusions offered. These rules are reappraised, physics ever present.
In light of one of the above papers I should revisit Serres, and
Leibniz; the search for 'overarching explanatory power' (p.91) is
ongoing. This game draws on Serres invitation to imagine a diagram, a
network of nodes, channels, and propositions. This tabular formulation
and its
relations for me, spans the history of economics (
Quesnay's tableau),
the current state of economics (human values), and next (mathematical?)
steps for Hodges' model. So many questions here: surely node can't be
an axis? I felt like Hansel, picking up sweets, Cartesian lines, scalene
forms, thresholds, coming across hoops to jump through through to
terminal equilibri. As you walk the sound of the
thalweg, downstream... where Bergson features once again.
Reading
Ross, over several months coincided with several key themes gaining in
personal coherence. Bayesian ideas as might be applied to Hodges' model,
even if in a
naïve way (c/o feedback on draft notes). The remainder of chapter 3 includes time (thought), percept (space), to close with
Deleuze's Ideal Game. I looked up Cortázarian Hopscotch
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hopscotch_(Cort%C3%A1zar_novel), as the preface is titled. Ross reflects on the Ideal Game (does it exist, for Deleuze, only in
thought?), and the distinction between 'domestic' chance (Baysian) and
radical contingency belonging to the
clinamen. In response to 'physical action and and the thought being on the same continuum', don't ask (please!), but I scribbled: 'corridor care' - a dangerous game, far from
ideal. Plus,
bird's using quantum entanglement to navigate. 'Kant's chaotic manifold', I will also investigate for next month(?).
Chapter 4 'Order as Complexity' proved most relevant. Every page is touched by graphite.
Deleuze has a 'blind spot' (p.111), something that Hodges' model seeks to ameloirate. But then of course at the model's center (nexus - as noted) that decussation of the axes invites a darkness of its own. If Hodges' model assists forethought and foresight While inviting complexity, this interdisciplinary palette can also facilitate trandiscipinary sense-making. 'Magnitudes of intensity' reminded me of logarithmic thresholds within our perceptual apparatus. This is like reading Serres. A flow of punctum, simultaneity, delay (again) but its contribution to causal series, and Aionic time. I was taken (frequently) to plane, person, personhood, chronicity, scales, local to global to glocal.
There is a 'corner' amid those thousand plateaus. n.b. to self - 'triangulation always needs one other'. I cannot resolve the frameworks as yet, scientific - otherwise or otherwhere; but you can take flight from here. Physics takes it place as 'complexity begets complexity'. Bill Ross utilises well-recognized sources, Penrose, Kauffman, Kolmogorov and
Bohm.
As with the frameworks internal and external complexity must be untangled 1-4 (p.124?). I can laugh now, did I really try to marry up Order - Disorder :: Simple - Complex (complicated?) to the domains of Hodges' model? So often reading philosophy, you feel an imposter playing games with words, as in: 'different similarities' and 'similar differences' (p.125). But of course, this is serious scholarship. Especially, when it involves lines, a rough circle, segments and dimensions: disorder becomes different degrees of order. Page 126 delivers Deleuze in spades, Ross pulls his thoughts together. It is fitting for me that Ross closes chapter 4 with a nod to transdisciplinarity.
Chapter 5 deals with symmetry and disymmetry; indifference and difference; limits and non-locality. There is an argument to follow (p.133). With 'group theory' mentioned on p.131, I've a lot of things to 'look up' [topology too]. Despite appearances I recognise the lack of symmetry in Hodges' model. This is what the situation does (practice) and means (theory): 'There is no reason under the sun which can rely on perfect symmetry' (p.135). Where do/can we locate 'spooky action at a distance' in Hodges' model (p.140)?
The Higgs role! Who knew? 'the speed of light. It represents a retardation.' Thanks Bill Ross, fascinating pp. 135-174. Plus, axes too. Note to self: when we die do we 'simply' set sail on the Dirac Sea? Attending the Bill Ross Memorial Workshop – BSP Special Event 2025 last September:
https://hodges-model.blogspot.com/2025/09/bill-ross-memorial-workshop.html the esteem .. and love .. that Bill Ross engendered in the people that knew him. The preface refers to chats in university cafes. How I wish. I wonder what Bill would have made of Hodges' model and the ongoing project here? Vitally, I get a distinct sense that he would have found time to listen ...
'Bill Ross (1964 – 2022) had interests ranging widely across contemporary philosophy and culture, with a particular interest in the relations between science and philosophy. As managing editor, he was the driving force behind Clinamen Press, which in the early 2000s published new works by contemporary philosophers, and English translation of important works by continental philosophers such as Henri Bergson, Gaston Bachelard and Michel Serres. He completed his PhD in philosophy at Staffordshire University, where he taught on the MA in the Philosophy of Nature, Information, and Technology. Bill had a lifelong passion for the connections between science and philosophy, on which he had published several important articles. Bill was working on a monograph on the philosophy and science of Deleuzian cosmology, which was has been posthumously published by Edinburgh University Press. This event is to celebrate Bill’s book and his life, and to allow his friends, his colleagues, and anyone interested in his work or the topics and issues addressed by his work to continue the conversation that Bill’s work inspires.'
https://www.thebsp.org.uk/bill-ross-memorial-workshop-deleuzian-cosmologies/
Many thanks again to Edinburgh University Press for my copy - a keeper! Bill Ross RIP.
Bill Ross (2024) Order and the Virtual: The Philosophy and Science of Deleuzian Cosmology. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
https://edinburghuniversitypress.com/book-order-and-the-virtual.html