5,327 research outputs found
In the chaos of today's society: The dynamics of collapse as another shift in the quantum anthropology of Heidi Ann Russell
The presented study introduces a new theoretical model of collapse for social, cultural, or political systems. Based on the current form of quantum anthropology conceptualized by Heidi Ann Russell, further development of this field is provided. The new theoretical model is called the spiral model of collapses, and is suggested to provide an analytical framework for collapses in social, cultural, and political systems. The main conclusions of this study are: 1) The individual crises in the period before a collapse of social, cultural, and political systems form the trajectory of a conical helix similar to a vortex. 2) The occurrences of crises in the period before a collapse have the shape of the trajectory on the surface of the circular cone with a convex wall narrowing up to its peak. The shape of this cone is based on the Fibonacci sequence coiled into the three-dimensional space. 3) The constant circular movement along the trajectory of crises can occur in exceptional situations in the development of social, cultural, and political systems; however, such a state is always temporary. In such cases, the trajectory of the crisis does not follow the Fibonacci sequence, but the shape of a regular helix. Remaining on the trajectory of a regular helix in the long-term is highly improbable for social, cultural, and political systems. 4) The creation of new potentialities after the final collapse of a system is explained by the conception of topological inversion, when the heretofore embodied part of the energy-information field returns to the global, wave-particle energy-information potential. 5) The global, wave-particle energy-information potential is a source of energy-information for future embodiments in the sense of the future collapses of wave functions
Human Beings in Quantum Anthropology: A Paradox of the Discontinuous Experience of Quantum Spacetime
This paper is a shortened version of an invited lecture held at the University of Copenhagen (Department of Anthropology) on 28 March 2019
The systemic mind and a conceptual framework for the psychosocial environment of business enterprises: Practical implications for systemic leadership training
This chapter introduces a research-based conceptual framework for the study of the inner psychosocial reality of business enterprises. It is called the Inner Organizational Ecosystem Approach (IOEA). This model is systemic in nature, and it defines the basic features of small and medium-size enterprises, such as elements, structures, borders, social actors, organizational climate, processes and resources. Further, it also covers the dynamics of psychosocial reality, processes, emergent qualities and the higher-order subsystems of the overall organizational ecosystem, including the global business environment, which is understood as a macro-system where all the individual organizational ecosystems co-exist. In the applied part of the chapter, cognitive changes emerging within systemic leadership training are defined. Participation in systemic training causes changes in the cognitive processing of reality, more specifically improvements in layer-based framing, relativistic contextual orientation, temporality drift and meaning generation. All of these changes are components of the systemic mind, which is a concept newly proposed and defined by the present study. The systemic mind is a living matrix that is extremely open to acquiring new skills and new patterns of thinking, analyzing and meaning generation. It is processual and it can be considered as an ongoing process of continuous absorption of new cognitive patterns. Both the Inner Organizational Ecosystem Approach and the concept of the systemic mind provide a new theoretical background for empirical investigation in the fields of systemic and systems psychology, complexity psychology, organizational psychology, economic anthropology and the social anthropology of work
Emotional creativity and real-life involvement in different types of creative leisure activities
The role of emotional creativity in practicing creative leisure activities and in the preference of college majors remains unknown. The present study aims to explore how emotional creativity measured by the Emotional Creativity Inventory (ECI; Averill, 1999) is interrelated with the real-life involvement in different types of specific creative leisure activities and with four categories of college majors. Data were collected from 251 university students, university graduates and young adults (156 women and 95 men). Art students and graduates scored significantly higher on the ECI than other majors. Humanities scored significantly higher than technical/economic majors. Five creative leisure activities were significantly correlated with the ECI, specifically, writing, painting, composing music, performing drama, and do-it-yourself home improvement. Keywords: Creativity, Emotional Creativity, Emotions, Creativeness, Affect, Feelings, Leisure Activities, Creative Ability, Artistic Creativity, Creative Thinking, Creativeness, Aging, Cognitive Deficits, Performance. MeSH Headings: Emotions, Creativity, Leisure, Leisure Activities, Hobbies, Recreation, Affect Affective Symptoms, Creativenes
Unwinding the Amplituhedron in Binary
We present new, fundamentally combinatorial and topological characterizations
of the amplituhedron. Upon projecting external data through the amplituhedron,
the resulting configuration of points has a specified (and maximal) generalized
'winding number'. Equivalently, the amplituhedron can be fully described in
binary: canonical projections of the geometry down to one dimension have a
specified (and maximal) number of 'sign flips' of the projected data. The
locality and unitarity of scattering amplitudes are easily derived as
elementary consequences of this binary code. Minimal winding defines a natural
'dual' of the amplituhedron. This picture gives us an avatar of the
amplituhedron purely in the configuration space of points in vector space
(momentum-twistor space in the physics), a new interpretation of the canonical
amplituhedron form, and a direct bosonic understanding of the scattering
super-amplitude in planar N = 4 SYM as a differential form on the space of
physical kinematical data.Comment: 42 pages, 13 figure
Amplitudes at Infinity
We investigate the asymptotically large loop-momentum behavior of multi-loop
amplitudes in maximally supersymmetric quantum field theories in four
dimensions. We check residue-theorem identities among color-dressed leading
singularities in supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory to
demonstrate the absence of poles at infinity of all MHV amplitudes through
three loops. Considering the same test for supergravity leads
us to discover that this theory does support non-vanishing residues at infinity
starting at two loops, and the degree of these poles grow arbitrarily with
multiplicity. This causes a tension between simultaneously manifesting
ultraviolet finiteness---which would be automatic in a representation obtained
by color-kinematic duality---and gauge invariance---which would follow from
unitarity-based methods.Comment: 4+1+1 pages; 15 figures; details provided in ancillary Mathematica
file
Elimination of Bias in Introspection: Methodological Advances, Refinements, and Recommendations
Building on past constructive criticism, the present study provides further methodological development focused on the elimination of bias that may occur during first-person observation. First, various sources of errors that may accompany introspection are distinguished based on previous critical literature. Four main errors are classified, namely attentional, attributional, conceptual, and expressional error. Furthermore, methodological recommendations for the possible elimination of these errors have been determined based on the analysis and focused excerpting of introspective scientific literature. The following groups of methodological recommendations were determined: 1) a better focusing of the subject’s attention to their mental processes, 2) providing suitable stimuli, and 3) the sharing of introspective experience between subjects. Furthermore, the potential of adjustments in introspective research designs for eliminating attentional, attributional, conceptual, and expressional error is discussed
The Amplituhedron
Perturbative scattering amplitudes in gauge theories have remarkable
simplicity and hidden infinite dimensional symmetries that are completely
obscured in the conventional formulation of field theory using Feynman
diagrams. This suggests the existence of a new understanding for scattering
amplitudes where locality and unitarity do not play a central role but are
derived consequences from a different starting point. In this note we provide
such an understanding for N=4 SYM scattering amplitudes in the planar limit,
which we identify as ``the volume" of a new mathematical object--the
Amplituhedron--generalizing the positive Grassmannian. Locality and unitarity
emerge hand-in-hand from positive geometry.Comment: 36 pages, 14 figure
Free associations mirroring self- and world-related concepts: Implications for personal construct theory, psycholinguistics and philosophical psychology
People construe reality by using words as basic units of meaningful categorization. The present theory-driven study applied the method of a free association task to explore how people express the concepts of the world and the self in words. The respondents were asked to recall any five words relating with the word world. Afterwards they were asked to recall any five words relating with the word self. The method of free association provided the respondents with absolute freedom to choose any words they wanted. Such free recall task is suggested as being a relatively direct approach to the respondents’ self- and world-related conceptual categories, without enormous rational processing. The results provide us, first, with associative ranges for constructs of the world and the self, where some associative dimensions are defined by semantic polarities in the meanings of peripheral categories (e.g., Nature vs. Culture). Second, our analysis showed that some groups of verbal categories that were associated with the words world and self are central, while others are peripheral with respect to the central position. Third, the analysis of category networks revealed that some categories play the role of a transmitter, mediating the pathway between other categories in the network
- …
