E-books and e-publishing by Samuel Vaknin (essential reading .TXT) 📕
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describe the emergence of “Replicators” - molecules which
created copies of themselves. The Replicators that survived in
the competition for scarce raw materials were characterized by
high longevity, fecundity, and copying-fidelity. Replicators
(now known as “genes”) constructed “survival machines”
(organisms) to shield them from the vagaries of an ever-harsher environment.
This is very reminiscent of the Internet. The “stable things”
are HTML coded web pages. They are replicators - they create
copies of themselves every time their “web address” (URL) is
clicked. The HTML coding of a web page can be thought of as
“genetic material”. It contains all the information needed to
reproduce the page. And, exactly as in nature, the higher the
longevity, fecundity (measured in links to the web page from
other web sites), and copying-fidelity of the HTML code - the
higher its chances to survive (as a web page).
Replicator molecules (DNA) and replicator HTML have one thing
in common - they are both packaged information. In the
appropriate context (the right biochemical “soup” in the case
of DNA, the right software application in the case of HTML
code) - this information generates a “survival machine”
(organism, or a web page).
The Semantic Web will only increase the longevity, fecundity,
and copying-fidelity or the underlying code (in this case, OIL
or XML instead of HTML). By facilitating many more
interactions with many other web pages and databases - the
underlying “replicator” code will ensure the “survival” of
“its” web page (=its survival machine). In this analogy, the
web page’s “DNA” (its OIL or XML code) contains “single genes”
(semantic metatags). The whole process of life is the
unfolding of a kind of Semantic Web.
In a prophetic paragraph, Dawkins described the Internet:
“The first thing to grasp about a modern replicator is that it
is highly gregarious. A survival machine is a vehicle
containing not just one gene but many thousands. The
manufacture of a body is a cooperative venture of such
intricacy that it is almost impossible to disentangle the
contribution of one gene from that of another. A given gene
will have many different effects on quite different parts of
the body. A given part of the body will be influenced by many
genes and the effect of any one gene depends on interaction
with many others…In terms of the analogy, any given page of
the plans makes reference to many different parts of the
building; and each page makes sense only in terms of cross-reference to numerous other pages”
What Dawkins neglected in his important work is the concept of
the Network. People congregate in cities, mate, and reproduce,
thus providing genes with new “survival machines”. But Dawkins
himself suggested that the new Replicator is the “meme” - an
idea, belief, technique, technology, work of art, or bit of
information. Memes use human brains as “survival machines” and
they hop from brain to brain and across time and space
(“communications”) in the process of cultural (as distinct
from biological) evolution. The Internet is a latter day meme-hopping playground. But, more importantly, it is a Network.
Genes move from one container to another through a linear,
serial, tedious process which involves prolonged periods of
one on one gene shuffling (“sex”) and gestation. Memes use
networks. Their propagation is, therefore, parallel, fast, and
all-pervasive. The Internet is a manifestation of the growing
predominance of memes over genes. And the Semantic Web may be
to the Internet what Artificial Intelligence is to classic
computing. We may be on the threshold of a self-aware Web.
END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, E-BOOKS AND E-PUBLISHING
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