[Ci4cg-announce] A framework for working with and towards civic intelligence [1st installment]

Dmitry Sokolov dmitry.v.sokolov at gmail.com
Mon Aug 1 21:58:41 PDT 2016


Doug,

would you related intelligence to decision making?
I am not sure whether acting without thinking / reflection / decision 
making can be thought intelligent.

Regarding storage media "in human memories, libraries, online, or in 
tools, systems, or artifacts.", would you suggest comparative analysis 
of those techniques (and possibly "collective memory" platforms?) by 
accuracy / fidelity / access time as a function of time? I am interested 
in real-time decision making where timely access to particular knowledge 
is critical.

Thank you,
Dimitri

On 02/08/16 13:49, Doug Schuler wrote:
> Todd — and everybody else (hopefully of interest)
>
> This is a follow-on to the conversation that Todd's note launched. 
> This note is more like the first version of a summary of the findings 
> and assertions so far in relation to my exploration of civic 
> intelligence. As you know I'm trying to develop civic intelligence as 
> a focus for research, activism, education, policy-making, ... , etc. 
> You also of course know that it's not a term that's in common use and 
> I'd like to change that. I would love your comments on any and all 
> aspects of this.
>
> I've been packing the idea of civic intelligence in many ways for 
> quite awhile. Sometimes it's used as a part of social inquiry, 
> sometimes it's meant to be aspirational, and sometimes it's intended 
> to be used as a goal or guideline — and other uses are possible 
> (ranking schools for example). These varieties of uses could be a 
> source of confusion (in either the critique or the exploration 
> itself). My belief and hope is that the diverse perspectives are in 
> fact coherent, although that might not be apparent without the 
> background logic.
>
> I'd like to think that a graphic depiction can be developed that 
> showed the main elements and regions of the overall exploration. 
> Ideally this would help maintain coherence, reduce misinterpretation, 
> and promote additional work in this area. (And, of course, critique 
> could help shape this effort into more productive ways.)
>
> I'm trying to explore a lot of things simultaneously — including the 
> fact that exploring and practicing civic intelligence seems to be 
> empowering to students, although this isn't addressed in this note.
>
> The following is an attempt to describe one region of the framework 
> which is largely positivistic and should have the necessary rigor and 
> logic to be palatable to social scientists of various types. I 
> consider that everything is subject to modification.
>
> (1) We start with a (working) definition of Intelligence. This seems 
> to be keeping with standard views of intelligence while containing 
> elements that lend themselves to characterization and analysis. I 
> wanted to focus on the potential richness of the concept (of 
> intelligence) rather that be limited to a minimal, quantified and 
> somewhat non-useful construct that some social scientists seem to prefer.
>
> Definition of Intelligence: An integrated set of processes that enable 
> an agent to act in ways that are appropriate to the agent's goals and 
> to the environment in which it exists / acts — particularly areas that 
> present actual or potential challenges or opportunities.
>
> An "agent" can be one or more people, any group, animal, computer 
> program, hybrids of the above, and others as well as any artifacts, 
> natural or otherwise, or system of artifacts that are useful in 
> pursuit of the goals.
>
> Collective intelligence is a major type of intelligence that is 
> distinguished from individual intelligence (e.g. that of a single person).
>
> Intelligence can also be distributed over space and time. And the 
> results of the diverse processes can be stored in many ways—in human 
> memories, libraries, online, or in tools, systems, or artifacts.
>
> (2) The various components / elements of the definition suggest ways 
> to characterize, analyze, categorize various approaches.
>
> Composition of the "agent"
> Environment in which the intelligence operates (Intelligence is 
> context dependent)
> Processes that are used and how they are integrated (i.e. the structure)
> Goals, values, and norm
> The products of the processes
>
> The claim that I'm making is that it is probably possible to identify 
> different versions of intelligence by the goals, types of actions, and 
> composition and coordination of the agent. This might not be 100% 
> certain but it could be useful.
>
> [TO BE CONTINUED]
>
> Douglas Schuler
> douglas at publicsphereproject.org <mailto:douglas at publicsphereproject.org>
> Twitter: @doug_schuler
>
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