Originally posted by Darius871
Just out of curiousity, how would you propose that we "categorize" myriad social systems based on the sole variable of "complexity"? Would it be by measuring the number of social "transactions" (define that term however you wish) in a given space or per capita during a given period of time? Or something else?
Just out of curiousity, how would you propose that we "categorize" myriad social systems based on the sole variable of "complexity"? Would it be by measuring the number of social "transactions" (define that term however you wish) in a given space or per capita during a given period of time? Or something else?
Someone may propose something as simple as specialization but that is not a sign of complexity in itself. You can imagine a very complex system built of nearly identical units
Another idea might be based on group interaction, since to be a member of a group you must have more intensive direct or indirect contact with its members than with others. Once you would have a good group theory going you could easily analyze how the groups interact with each other, each level of additional “supergroups” would be a step towards greater “complexity”. But using groups for that purpose would be folly. If not anything else defining them would be a painful process even if you were generic to the extreme and settled with “types”. Also cultural bias could corrupt the data into anything you wanted & expected.
Now If you want you can reduce the situation to social transactions, but those are a bit tricky and you would end up measuring their intensity. Not useful for seeing patterns. Perhaps indirect interactions are salvageable in this regard? Indirect interactions mean a highly interconnected society but fall considerably short of just random background.
Let’s say a stone age tribesman living in an isolated tribe would only ever experience direct interactions in his “society”. Now sure another tribe might kill off all the buffalo in the region indirectly affecting them, but this is flawed thinking, we are studying the “society” here we are not studying the whole ecosystem. Now if the foreign tribes had regular contact with the caveman’s tribe, if they traded, or if perhaps the tirbe leader was subservient to other tribe, then we can talk about indirect influences inside a society. If we choose this we would have to be doubly careful in determining society “borders”. Falling into a holistic approach is a even more apparent danger. The more distant the source of the indirect interaction (the higher the supposed complexity of the society) the harder it would become to determine if it is “real” or if it is just background radiation so to speak.
Originally posted by Darius871
I'm just finding it hard to see what your ultimate point is, even if I suppose that your basic premise is correct.
I'm just finding it hard to see what your ultimate point is, even if I suppose that your basic premise is correct.



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