Voyage by Catamaran: Effecting Semantic Network "Bricolage" via Infinite-Dimensional Zero-Divisor Ensembles
Abstract
Continuing arguments presented [1] or announced [2][3] in "Complex Systems," zero-divisor (ZD) foundations for "scale-free" networks (evinced, in particular, in the "fractality" of the Internet) are decentralized. Spandrels, quartets of ZD-free or "hidden" box-kite-like structures (HBKs) in the 2^(N+1)- ions, are "exploded" from (and uniquely linked to) each standard box-kite in the 2^N-ions, N > 3. Any HBK houses, in a "cowbird's nest," exactly one copy of the (ZD-free) octonions, the recursive basis for all ZD ensembles. Each is a potential waystation for alien-ensemble infiltration in the large, or metaphor-like jumps in the small. Cowbirding models what evolutionary biologists [4], and structural mythologist Claude Levi-Strauss before them [5], term bricolage: the opportunistic co-opting of objects designed for one purpose to serve others unrelated to it. Such arguments entail switching focus, from the octahedral box-kite's four triangular "sails," to its trio of square "catamarans" and their box-kite-switching "twist products."
Cite
@article{arxiv.0804.3416,
title = {Voyage by Catamaran: Effecting Semantic Network "Bricolage" via Infinite-Dimensional Zero-Divisor Ensembles},
author = {Robert P. C. de Marrais},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0804.3416},
year = {2008}
}
Comments
30 pages, 6 figures, 2 tables, 20 references; V1 split into two parts, published separately: this longer will appear in "Complex Systems," where originally submitted (but with changed title); the shorter, in IEEE proceedings volume for October 18-20 ICNC-FSKD (Jinan, China), as "Natural Numbers, Natural Language: Architecting the Semantic Web."