Numbers as a cognitive and social technology: on the nature of conventional number sequences used in economic systems

2010 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 167-190 ◽  
Author(s):  
DAVID A. HARPER

Abstract:This paper examines the fundamental nature of numbers as they are used in economic systems. In the framework proposed, number sequences are technological objects (‘tools’) that are constituted by both form and function. To do their job, number sequences have to have the necessary internal structure – all elements (e.g. symbols) of the sequence must be distinct from one another, and the sequence must be a progression. In addition, numerical toolkits have to have the right external structure – they must be situated in a social network of economic agents that confers on them quantitative functions (e.g. identifying set sizes). Number sequences are the product of multilevel evolutionary processes, including psychological selection that screens sequences for their learnability by human users. Number tools are a kind of capital; they are material systems that are as real as other everyday objects. Just as changing physical tools alters the structure of productive activity, so too changing number sequences alters cognitive, behavioral, and social routines.

Excluding the isomyarian family Dimyidae, the Pectinacea comprise the families Propeamussidae, Pectinidae, Spondylidae and Plicatulidae. Present investigations are primarily concerned with species of the last two, both of which are cemented by the right valve, with secondary teeth and sockets which form ball and socket joints between the valves. Neither has previously been examined in life or the hinge and ligament critically studied. Comparing throughout with conditions in the Pectinidae, the ctenidia in Plicatula are simpler (like those of Propeamussium ) but both here and in Spondylus the ciliary pattern (type B (1a)) is more primitive. Spondylus resembles the Pectinidae in that it has elaborate arborescent lips and pallial eyes; Plicatula (and Propeamussium ) has neither, and the inner mantle folds (velum) are reduced (though enlarged in Propeamussium ). The foot is lost in Plicatula and in Spondylus has solely to do with cleansing; the Pectinidae display a range of pedal form and function - from locomotion to byssal attachment and to cleansing. The ratio of ‘quick’ to ‘catch’ muscle in the adductor is associated with habit, being greatest where need for rapid adduction is greatest, primarily in connexion with cleansing, a matter of particular urgency in horizontally disposed bivalves. Pallial eyes - as well developed in permanently attached as in swimming species - are most probably concerned with immediate response to predatory attack on pallial tissues widely exposed when the valves gape. The ligament in both Spondylus and Plicatula is surprisingly different from that in the Pectinidae (and Propeamussidae). The long anterior and posterior outer ligament layers found in the two last which unite the valves at either end of the condensed rounded inner ligament layer are replaced in Spondylus by fused periostracum . The outer ligament layers have migrated inwards and, after dividing on either side of the unchanged inner ligament layer, unite (topographically) above and below it, forming morphologically left and right areas composed equally of anterior and posterior outer ligament layers. The inward extensions of the fused periostracal grooves which form the secondary extensions to the primary ligament may well be associated with the change in nature of the hinge plate (and thus of teeth and sockets) to crossed-lamellar aragonite instead of the foliated calcite present in the Pectinidae. The combined inner and outer ligament layers produce the more powerful ligament demanded by the more massive valves; the secondary periostracal extensions serve only to unite the valves which are maintained in alinement by way of the secondary teeth and sockets. The conspicuous bilateral asymmetry in the hinge and ligament is a result of cementation; similar conditions exist in the cemented pectinid, Hinnites . In Plicatula differences are much greater. Inward growth of the mantle margins results in union above the now submarginal ligament. This is extremely compressed in the transverse plane becoming hoop-like with the right limb the longer. Basally it fractures, although the two halves remain in contact and function is unaffected. As in Spondylus, the halves of the anterior and posterior ligament layers unite on the two sides of the inner ligament layer. Owing to dorsal overgrowth by the hinge plate, the epithelia secreting the outer ligament layers form the two sides and roof of a chamber the base of which is the mantle isthmus (forming the inner ligament layer). Contact with the valves is exclusively by way of the outer ligament layers. The periostracum fuses in the mid-line dorsally and does not contribute to the ligament from which it is separated. Owing to the division of the inner ligament layer into right and left halves, union of the valves is effectively by way of the secondary teeth, here more dorsally extended than in Spondylus but, as there, composed of crossed-lamellar aragonite. Evolution of these four families starts in Palaeozoic stocks with modifications of organs in the mantle cavity - ctenidia, lips, pallial eyes, etc. - proceeding along lines distinct from those involving modifications in the ligament. The former particularly concern the primitive Propeamussidae, largely confined to deep water, and the universally distributed Pectinidae, the latter the Spondylidae and the Plicatulidae. Modifications of the foot have to do with final habit which is invariable freedom in the Propeamussidae, byssal attachment, freedom or cementation in the Pectinidae, and invariable cementation in the Spondylidae and Plicatulidae, the process occurring earlier in the latter and involving loss of the foot. Separation of the Spondylidae from the Pectinidae is more fully established with the present demonstration of the totally different ligamental structure; the difference is so profound in the Plicatulidae as to raise the question of elevating this to superfamily status.


Author(s):  
Rafael Ángel-Bravo

There is a whole wide diversity regarding how people adapt to the natural environment conditions and how they value or relate to their everyday objects and products; outside aesthetics or functionality, users appreciate utilitarian artifacts according to assorted perspectives and factors, including traditional, emotional, and cultural approaches. This paper is envisioned to propose a reflection regarding the value and significance of utilitarian handcrafted objects as a fundamental element of popular culture, associated with tradition, heritage, and folkloric preservation. Based on direct experience, photographic record, and assorted theoretical approaches, it was viable to generate a conceptual review and reflection considering the consumers’ appreciation of traditional handcrafted artifacts, understanding these implements’ value and significance beyond their form and function, as the cultural significance of handcrafted utilitarian, decorative and traditional products, as a crucial component of tangible and intangible heritages and identities in the American context.


2006 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. E383-E383 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eric Peterson ◽  
S. Michael Owens ◽  
Ralph L. Henry

2020 ◽  
pp. 107-122
Author(s):  
Taher Abdel-Ghani

Cinema has taken up the role of a social agent that introduced a variety of images and events to the public during critical times. This paper proposes the idea of using films as a tool to reclaim public space where a sense of belonging and dialogue restore to a meaningful place. During the January 2011 protests in Egypt, Tahrir Cinema, an independent revolutionary project composed of filmmakers and other artists, offered a space in Downtown Cairo and screened archival footage of the ongoing events to the protestors igniting civic debate and discussions. The traditional public space has undergone what Karl Kropf refers to as the phylogenetic change, i.e. form and function that is agreed upon by society and represents a common conception of certain spatial elements. Hence, the framework that this research will follow is a two-layer discourse, the existence of cinema in public spaces, and the existence of public spaces in cinema. Eventually, the paper seeks to enhance the social relationship between society, spaces, and cinematic narration – a vital tool to raise awareness about the right to the city.


Author(s):  
Rangga Kurniawan Budianti ◽  
Rony Prabowo

In the industrial environment, there are more and more rooms that are rented out for workers and families, and the cupboard is one of the products that is often needed is a cupboard. Storage aids should be designed for safe, comfortable, ergonomic, and aesthetic use. Multi-functional wardrobes are an important aspect of storage and space-saving work. Multi-functional wardrobe designs have developed, both in terms of form and function. However, along with the development of the times, there are demands for additional functions from existing multi-functional cabinets. Based on this background, this study aims to design and manufacture multi-functional wardrobe products according to consumers' requirements. For this research's success, the Kano method and the Quality Function Deployment (QFD) are used. The results obtained show 18 attributes (customer requirements) and 18 attributes (technical response) technical parameters implemented in a multi-functional wardrobe product design. The addition of functions to this multi-functional wardrobe product is a wardrobe with 2 (two) functions and 1 (accessories) additional in one product, which can be used as a cupboard, table, and table along with a chair. In operation, it is effortless because it has a knock-down system (can be folded). When used as a table, there are chairs on the right and left sides of the cabinet door that can be removed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 68 (3) ◽  
pp. 410-424
Author(s):  
Julia-Constance Dissel

AbstractThis essay deals with the terms “form” and “function” as well as their relationship insofar as they are still used in philosophical and design-theory discourse to determine the aesthetic dimension of designed artefacts, especially of everyday objects, and often also to distinguish them from objects of art. I discuss whether our common understanding of these terms and their relationship is an appropriate instrument for such determinations. What is up for discussion here are not only conceptions of functional beauty with regard to design methodology and the philosophical discourse on aesthetics, in which form and function become thematic, but also basic concepts of philosophical aesthetics itself. It is shown that the philosophical understanding of design aesthetics and the concepts of form and function are determined by profound preliminary decisions that restrict our access to the aesthetic dimension of designed artefacts, and a conceptualisation of an initial change in thinking is proposed.


Author(s):  
Patricia G. Arscott ◽  
Gil Lee ◽  
Victor A. Bloomfield ◽  
D. Fennell Evans

STM is one of the most promising techniques available for visualizing the fine details of biomolecular structure. It has been used to map the surface topography of inorganic materials in atomic dimensions, and thus has the resolving power not only to determine the conformation of small molecules but to distinguish site-specific features within a molecule. That level of detail is of critical importance in understanding the relationship between form and function in biological systems. The size, shape, and accessibility of molecular structures can be determined much more accurately by STM than by electron microscopy since no staining, shadowing or labeling with heavy metals is required, and there is no exposure to damaging radiation by electrons. Crystallography and most other physical techniques do not give information about individual molecules.We have obtained striking images of DNA and RNA, using calf thymus DNA and two synthetic polynucleotides, poly(dG-me5dC)·poly(dG-me5dC) and poly(rA)·poly(rU).


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