[
Lists Home |
Date Index |
Thread Index
]
- To: "Richard Salz" <rsalz@us.ibm.com>
- Subject: RE: Re: [xml-dev] The Rule of Least Power - does it miss the point?
- From: "Bullard, Claude L \(Len\)" <len.bullard@intergraph.com>
- Date: Thu, 9 Mar 2006 09:01:02 -0600
- Cc: "XML Developers List" <xml-dev@lists.xml.org>
- Thread-index: AcZDhqw+RH5Jh08WSiO2lxv1eLgsrwAAn8kw
- Thread-topic: Re: [xml-dev] The Rule of Least Power - does it miss the point?
They take the names in the author slots seriously.
Think of it as the high side of the long tail and
look up "vanara".
As I said, after a month of digging through papers
on pragmatics and business intelligence, this is the
subjective approach: reality is what you say it is
if enough people agree. Subjective systems provide
for multiple points of view over the same information.
Objective systems provide for information plus operations
so really, one point of view. As you know, a
subjective system is Heisenbergian: information is
in superposition until measured and measurement is
a means of objectification. So what you see is data
moved in superposition (in a range from delimited
to XML, for example), received, then objectified.
Information is transported subjective;y (least
power, least authority) and objectified for
local processing. As a writer on Grice's Maxims
titled his article: "Do The Right Thing".
Gotta go to a meeting now and try with all my
might to remain objective. ;-)
len
From: Richard Salz [mailto:rsalz@us.ibm.com]
I find it hard to believe that folks take this serious. Perhaps they can
also resolve the which editor is best, now that we've been told how to
choose a programing language. Perhaps we'll see a PhD thesis on this
soon.
The rule, principal, commandment, whatever, is really very simple: choose
the right one.
|