Ray, nowhere in your answer do I see Habermas claiming "no need for laws", as you say, or law enforcement. You point to Between Facts and Norms, but that's his "discourse theory of law".^[1] Far from dismissing its "coercive aspects", as you say, he begins by claiming their necessity:^[2] "the type of norms required" are those that "bring about willingness to comply simultaneously by means of de facto constraint and legitimate validity." To bring this about in modern times, long after "the metasocial guarantees of the sacred have broken down," requires a "system of rights that lends to individual liberties the coercive force of law."

You must be confusing Habermas with someone else. He greatly values law and its enforcement. Growing up under the National Socialists (I remind you of the dangers), he witnessed the consequences of devaluing it.

Mike

[1] Jürgen Habermas. 1992. Between Facts and Norms. Translated by William Rehg, 1996. MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts. p. 7.

[2] p. 27.

Hi Mike,

Yes, I agree that Habermas greatly values law and its enforcement (while also seeing its dangers, since the National Socialists operated under their "laws" though not "legitimate" laws).

Just to clarify, this is what I wrote:

"As individuals grow through the stages their ethical foundation becomes less dependent on outside definition and more internally grounded. Habermas describes this as a "de-centering" of a maturing person's understanding of the world. At the final stage there is no need for laws, in the sense that a person at that stage of moral development would act in the best interests of a civil society with or without a set of civil and criminal statutes in place.

With sufficient members of a society at the final stage, one might achieve a state that has no need for laws, which has grown beyond lawfulness. In this state there will exist harmony, equality, ethical interaction, and plenty."

While Habermas did not say "no need for laws", the reading suggests that for the special case, where sufficient members of a society are advanced in their practice of discourse ethics, there is no need for laws.

Visiting the section of Between Facts and Norms you refer to (pages 26 and 27 duplicated below), it is clear that Habermas was not, as I am, referring to the best state humanity can achieve. He is referring to humanity "as it is", with strategic (self-interested) actors where the controlling aspects of religious authority are dissolving in a "modern economic society". His argument is that because there are strategic actors and because communicative action fails (which the dialogic web is intended to support) there is a need for laws. I completely agree with you that, in the present society and with humanity's current stages of discourse ethics, there is a need for laws, and Habermas agrees. But there is a situation that one may find by reading Habermas that points out where there is no such need.

To simplify with an example, I would ask, "Did Mother Teresa need a law to prevent her from committing murder?" The answer is "Of course not". No matter where she lived she would not have murdered. Laws are needed only because there are those who act without the "legitimate validity" that arises from the use of discourse ethics. And the dialogic web is a tool that would provide a "virtual conscience" to steer humanity's future along the path of dialogic/discourse ethics/action science broadly and deeply, both reaching billions of people and aiding them in their smallest interaction.

You seem quite stuck on the distinction between Habermas describing the world as it is and my describing the best state of society possible. They are very different, and by looking at the arguments Habermas makes about why laws are needed to see futures and circumstances where they may not be needed. In a world full of Mother Teresa's (or Dalai Lama's, or even the very kind person that probably lives down your street), there would be no need for laws against murder. What I'm working on is how to develop those attributes in humanity. And the dialogic web is the tool to do that.

Ray

Following from "Between Facts and Norms" by Habermas, Transl by William Rehg, 1996, MIT Press, pages 26 and 27.

In what follows, I start from the modern situation of a predominantly secular society in which normative orders must be maintained without metasocial guarantees. Even lifeworld certainties, which in any case are pluralized and ever more differentiated, do not provide sufficient compensation for this deficit. As a result, the burden of social integration shifts more and more onto the communicate achievements of actors for whom validity and facticity - that is, the binding force of rationally motivated beliefs and the imposed force of external sanctions - have parted company as incompatible. This is true, at least, outside the areas of habitualized actions and customary practices. If, as I assume along with Parsons and Durkheim, complexes of interaction cannot be stabilized simply on the basis of the reciprocal influence that success-oriented actors exert on one another, then in the final analysis society must be integrated through communicate action.

Such a situation intensifies the problem: how can disenchanted internally differentiated and pluralized lifeworlds be socially integrated if, at the same time, the risk of dissension is growing, particularly in the spheres of communicate action that have been cut loose from the ties of sacred authorities and released from the bonds of archaic institutions? According to this scenario, the increasing need for integration must hopelessly overtax the integrating capacity of communicative action, especially if the functionally necessary spheres of strategic interaction are growing, as is the case in modern economic societies. In the case of conflict, persons engaged in communicative action face the alternatives of either breaking off communication or shifting to strategic action - of either postponing or carrying out the unresolved conflict. One way out of this predicament, now, is for the actors themselves to come to some understanding about the normative regulation of strategic interactions. The paradoxical nature of such regulation is revealed in light of the premise that facticity and validity have split apart, for the acting subjects themselves, into two mutually exclusive dimensions. For self-interested actors, all situational features are transformed into facts as they evaluate in the light of their own preferences, whereas actors oriented toward reaching understanding rely on a jointly negotiated understanding of the situation and interpret the relevant facts in the light of intersubjectively recognized validity claims. However, if the orientations to personal success and to reaching understanding exhauste the alternatives for acting subjects, then norms suitable as socially integrating constraints on strategic interactions must meet two contradictory conditions that, form the viewpoint of the actors, cannot be simultaneously satisfied. On the one hand, such rules must present de factor restrictions that alter the relevant information in such a way that the strategic actor feels compelled to adapt her behavior in the objectively desired manner. On the other hand, they must at the same time develop a socially integrating force by imposing obligations on the addressees - which, according to my theory, is possible only on the basis of intersubjectively recognized normative validity claims.

According to the above analysis, the type of norm required would have to bring about willingness to comply simultaneously by means of de facto constraint and legitimate validity.

Dear Ray,

Thank you, very deep analytical essays and concept to a specific program of action. I have only one "but": "dialogical agent" and its necessity. I believe that the new concept of social networks should consider the real state of society , they must be self-organizing , on the new economic, social and technological principles. Otherwise, the danger of which you write, can destroy the idea of a "Dialogic Web».

It is very important that you give your deep philosophical foundation concept. The world situation is very alarming (politics, ecology, all existential risks) and therefore our responsibility to future Generations requires action. We need to hear the voice of the Earth, voice of the People to give up Hope to New Generation of Earthlings. We need a new "Big Common Cause" to save Peace, Nature and Humanity. Time has come and we start the path ... The New Era and a New Generation demanded action. We can not be utopian, we must be realistic and deeply aware of the dangers that threaten to Humanity.

Thank FQXi that brings together people for "brainstorming" on very important topics of modern Humanity and modern Science! I invite you to comment on and appreciate my ideas.

High regard,

Vladimir

    Thanks Ray,

    So the inference "no need for laws" is yours, not Habermas's as implied on p. 3.

    I've another question please. I wonder if we could gain some technical experience with the dialogic web before the necessary artificial intelligence is fully developed. It apparently needs a human-like intelligence. Might we train a few humans themselves to be competent in the role of dialogic agent, "to intervene in and guide the conversation" of the user (p. 7), and so gain some useful early experience in the technical requirements, and so forth? - Mike

    5 days later

    PS - Thanks for your answers thus far, Ray. This is just a note to say I'll be rating your essay (along with the others on my review list) some time between now and May 30. I still hope you'll be able to review mine. All the best, and bye for now, - Mike

    • [deleted]

    Hi Aaron, thanks for posting.

    I'll be looking at a more specific breakdown in my reviews, evaluating each of several criteria and then summing the results.

    1. How well was "what is the ideal (achievable) state of humanity" defined?

    2. How well was "how can we get there" defined?

    3. How well was "what are the specific steps to take" defined?

    4. My evaluation of whether 2 and 3 are achievable. Something airy-fairy or magical like "design a cure for everything" or "develop a limitless, non-polluting, risk-free, and no-cost source of energy" would get a zero on this count. I'm looking for hard-nosed, specific and achievable steps that can realistically make a real difference in helping humanity steer its future.

    6 days later

    Ray,

    Thank you for a very interesting essay. I thought I had pretty much looked at all the essays, but I somehow never got to yours. I find your idea of personal web-based "dialogic" agents helping us to better steer our lives and humanity as a whole, to be very promising. I hope your essay makes it to the finals, and I have rated it accordingly.

    Good luck!

    Marc

      Thanks Marc,

      My National Science Foundation CAREER award allowed me to make some great strides in understanding the requirements and parameters of this kind of system, and in developing and testing a prototype. I'm hoping that this will provide some contacts and collaborators to move it forward.

      Ray Luechtefeld, PhD

      Hi Vladimir,

      I thought I had responded earlier, but didn't see it here. My apologies.

      Yes, I agree on the need for self-organizing systems that reflect the real state of the society. I would add that there is a need to incorporate reflective feedback, as a system that can help society learn and change.

      I also agree on the dangers that face humanity. To me, dialogic means taking into account the many perspectives that are relevant, which includes those related to global warming, the disenfranchised, and the powerless.

      Thanks,

      Ray

      Hi Ray,

      You have a most interesting and thought provoking essay. I liked it a lot and voted accordingly. I will also try to give it some PR on my blog, because I am concerned that you may not have enough total votes to be considered a finalist. Like Marc above, I am bewildered about how I missed your essay. Even Georgina did not comment on it (I usually look for Georgina's posts as a personal guide). Have you developed an over the ether cloaking device?

      Your concept of using wiki concepts to promote meaningful dialog and understanding would be very useful. I think of it as an alternate to what we know as spam.

      Wishing you much success,

      Don Limuti

        Thanks Don,

        I'm an electrical engineer by training, but I'm not that good. :)

        Besides, I thought that Michelson-Morley disproved the existence of the aether. :)

        I appreciate the mention in a blog. I'm also looking for potential collaborators to take the prototype system I've developed (as part of a NSF CAREER award investigating approaches to team skill development) and move it to a more structured "dialogic web" platform - like has been done with the semantic web. So if you know of any potential collaborators who might add value, please send them my way.

        With much appreciation,

        Ray Luechtefeld, PhD

        I think you're right that we need to improve the way we communicate with one another, Ray. Better communication won't eliminate conflict over our different interests, but it would certainly help us navigate those conflicts. Much of my graduate work was on looking at political and social behavior through the lens of complexity theory, so I was excited to see that you use the theory in your essay. I admit I wasn't sure from your essay how specifically--after listening to their users--dialogic agents would facilitate communications. But your essay was very thought-provoking. I'll definitely rate it before the deadline. Good luck!

        Best,

        Robert

          Hi Ray,

          I found your essay fascinating. In many instances it seemed that you are calling for an enhanced 'political correctness' (which would be horrible in my estimation) but then other statements seem to indicate just the opposite.

          For example "little acts of disrespect" impede success, and "their ephemeral nature makes them hard to prove (or even to detect) without skilled observers...". I'm not sure I think it's worthwhile to try to uncover "little acts of disrespect" if it requires skilled observers to do so. There seem to be enough "big acts of disrespect" to go around.

          You clearly are aware of the problems with utopias, as you quote Karl Popper: "the attempt to make heaven on earth invariably produces hell." And you mentioned the tensions between freedom and the controls needed to "maximize long-term public good."

          I did enjoy your discussion of Kohlberg, Bakhtin, Habermas, and Argyris very much, particularly Habermas' three points. While I am all for the concept, the critics do have a point about effort and time.

          The above reflects my confusion on what exactly is being called for. On a technical point, I use 'Dragon' voice recognition software to dictate (such as this comment) and, while it is almost miraculous in its ability to understand the words I speak, I have very strong doubts about the possibility of understanding the *meaning*of my words. Is the technology you propose supposed to understand conversations, or simply look for patterns based on data mining, and the fact that so much of our speech is redundant and habitual?

          Thanks for reading my essay and commenting and thanks for your participation in this contest. I will make sure you have the necessary 10 votes needed to qualify for finals.

          Best regards,

          Edwin Eugene Klingman

            Hi Robert,

            Thanks for your comments. To respond to your implicit question, the personal dialogic agents actually "talk" using text to speech, and "listen" using speech to text, to their users. The prototype I developed used only very basic computational intelligence to interact with users, but was still able to produce some significant changes in behavior, including, for example, in one study nudging teams using the system to ask more questions of their team members than teams in a control group. The expertise lies in developing the intervention approach, which is why psychologists, organization development experts, facilitators, etc., are needed to contribute.

            Ray

            • [deleted]

            Hi Eugene,

            Thanks for your comment. "Little acts of disrespect" refers to the micro-inequities that are a result of hidden bias. However if they are recorded and viewed together, the bias is apparent. A personal dialogic agent can be set up to capture a record of these micro-inequities, and then guide users through a conversation about how they occur, and even develop indicators of how they occur that can be used to prevent them in the "moment of action".

            "Meaning" is indeed a slippery concept, since as Bakhtin pointed out, it depends on context and history as much as connotation and denotation. For example, in a dysfunctional organization to treat someone "with respect" may mean putting on a facade of friendliness while plotting to sabotage their efforts. This may be moderated by the setting in which the phrase is used as well as the personal experiences of the participants with others. The personal agents in a dialogic web would guide the user to capturing his or her meanings associated with critical events or phrases, recognizing the polysemous ("many meaning'ed") nature of interaction. (I remember discussions with many people in the early '90's for whom "business process re-engineering" meant "management wants to fire us".)

            For my prototype I used simple pattern-matching and boolean logic. This was sufficient to produce some significant improvements in group function, though it would have surely been better with some more sophisticated techniques. But, I was pleased with the results I got while just using CSci undergrads to do most of the programming. (Unfortunately, the last "real" coding I did was assembly language in the late 1980's. I just didn't have the time to keep up while I was doing other work.)

            As far as I can tell in the future, computational "understanding" of polysemic / polysemiotic language is not possible. There are, however, many resources, such as AffectNet and WordNet that can help with the detection of patterns through data mining. Taxonomic approaches, as I believe Google and Siri use, are also very helpful for the broad strokes of capturing semantics. However the dialogic web relies on pattern matching and data mining along with user-supplied meanings which supplement the data mining. Sharing this information between personal agents can be very powerful.

            I hope this clarifies things. Let me know if you have more questions.

            Thanks,

            Ray

            Hi again Eugene,

            Sorry, my last post appeared as "anonymous". I'm re-posting here...

            Hi Eugene,

            Thanks for your comment. "Little acts of disrespect" refers to the micro-inequities that are a result of hidden bias. However if they are recorded and viewed together, the bias is apparent. A personal dialogic agent can be set up to capture a record of these micro-inequities, and then guide users through a conversation about how they occur, and even develop indicators of how they occur that can be used to prevent them in the "moment of action".

            "Meaning" is indeed a slippery concept, since as Bakhtin pointed out, it depends on context and history as much as connotation and denotation. For example, in a dysfunctional organization to treat someone "with respect" may mean putting on a facade of friendliness while plotting to sabotage their efforts. This may be moderated by the setting in which the phrase is used as well as the personal experiences of the participants with others. The personal agents in a dialogic web would guide the user to capturing his or her meanings associated with critical events or phrases, recognizing the polysemous ("many meaning'ed") nature of interaction. (I remember discussions with many people in the early '90's for whom "business process re-engineering" meant "management wants to fire us".)

            For my prototype I used simple pattern-matching and boolean logic. This was sufficient to produce some significant improvements in group function, though it would have surely been better with some more sophisticated techniques. But, I was pleased with the results I got while just using CSci undergrads to do most of the programming. (Unfortunately, the last "real" coding I did was assembly language in the late 1980's. I just didn't have the time to keep up while I was doing other work.)

            As far as I can tell in the future, computational "understanding" of polysemic / polysemiotic language is not possible. There are, however, many resources, such as AffectNet and WordNet that can help with the detection of patterns through data mining. Taxonomic approaches, as I believe Google and Siri use, are also very helpful for the broad strokes of capturing semantics. However the dialogic web relies on pattern matching and data mining along with user-supplied meanings which supplement the data mining. Sharing this information between personal agents can be very powerful.

            I hope this clarifies things. Let me know if you have more questions.

            Thanks,

            Ray

            Dear Ray,

            Very inspiring, well documented, profound and well written essay! I find interesting the idea of a dialogic web, and I think someday it will become reality in one form or another. Good luck with the contest!

            Best regards,

            Cristi

            Dear Cristi,

            Thanks. I'm glad you enjoyed it. I am going to make the dialogic web a reality, I just need to find the right support to help design and build it. Way back in 1973 Mark Granovetter wrote a paper on the "strength of weak ties", illustrating how connections between minimally connected groups can lead to novel information flows. I'm hoping that this forum will lead to some connections to help with architecting and building the dialogic web. If not, I'll continue working to find some connections that can do that. Any help you can provide would be greatly appreciated.

            Best regards,

            Ray

            Ray,

            Nice essay. I note your comment about M&M and ether above. Interestingly the later Michelson Gore Pearson experiment, larger scale with better equipment (1926 I think) firmly concluded an ether frame. That result has been as well censored and subjugated as Einstein's 1954 paper which is actually consistent with it.

            We'll never really advance understanding while science remains led by myth and belief. History shows what really steers the future id scientific advancement.

            I've found Millers experiments far more interesting, supporting a hypothesis I postulated applying J D Jackson extinction distances through the atmosphere; he found decreasing birefringence at lower altitudes, and the (still non-zero) M&M result at sea level.

            I hope you get a chance to read mine (the previous ones prepare SR's interpretation consistently for the unification).

            Best wishes. I feel your views are more forward looking than cataloguing our errors, though shouldn't we really better study and learn from the feedback?

            Peter

              Ray,

              This must be a rather general vector from your doctoral thesis, steering the future with your obvious organizational skills and learning. Quite an impressive and extended development of an apparatus for collaborative steering. Most essays are heavy on what. Yours is heavy on the how, the most difficult part of this exercise. We know what needs to be done, but entrenched forces and their benificiaries -- though becoming less plentiful -- who now control, make it rather difficult to accomplish. You fill in the details quite neatly: education, internet medium, dialogic web, and a comparative endeavor that works -- Wikipedia.

              My essay is heavy on what needs to be done and the forces that need to be neutralized. My how is not so detailed -- looking beyond (the orthodox) and within the mind -- the neural universe.

              I would like to see your coment on my essay: http://www.fqxi.org/community/forum/topic/2008

              Jim