Friday, July 07, 2006

Reflexive Theory

The word reflexive means to direct back on itself. Don't confuse this with reflection, which means careful consideration or self reflection, which means careful consideration of oneself.

Reflexive Theory was originally created by a Russian mathematician Vladimir Lefebvre who is now part of a US think tank dealing with terrorism. Reflexive Theory was born during the cold war in Russia as a response to game theory which was widely adapted by the West.

What brought this theory to my attention is an article by Jonathan David Farley, San Francisco Chronicle: The torturer's dilemma: the math on fire with fire which was published on the Econophysics blog. I started trying to get a bit more information on the Reflexive Theory - Wikipedia had nothing, Google came up short, in fact, the only reference I could find is a link from a Russian site to a very old publication - go to page 86 for the relevant paper. And even there, the theory is never defined but is just applied in a simplified mathematical model of border protection from terrorism. I am wondering whether the fact that there is almost no mention on the web of reflexive theory has anything to do with the founder of the theory now being employed by the United States Government. Of course this thought pattern is better pursued on a big brother paranoia blog.

Reflexive Theory tries to explain mathematically why individuals take certain actions and what the consequence of those actions are. The theory takes into consideration how individuals perceive themselves whether good or evil, and whether those perceptions are valid or not.

The interesting thing about reflexivity is that its derived from psychology. The term actually implies that "reality and identity are reflexive". One implies the other. What we perceive is how we view ourselves and what we believe is true. This is a very powerful statement. This means that our reality is based on what we know, which is derived from our perceptions, which are based on our reality. This is a bit tough to swallow, but stay with me a bit longer. The whole point is that our reality defines us and influences our actions. In order for us to get a better understanding of our actions, and the consequences, and make additional evolutionary leaps, we need to step outside of our reality and view our knowledge and actions from that medium. I wonder whether traveling across realities is simply an evolutionary step where we can let go of our reality and understand the possibility of another. Alright, this last sentence is something that belongs in a sci-fi book rather than a blog on technology.

O. K. This blog is about technology not philosophy nor psychology or even mathematical models of terrorism. I am still working on how to tie this with technology. It's do able, but a bit theoretic, so I'll leave it for future entries.