The only problem with that seems to be that when people talk about emergent behavior they seem to be more often than not talking about “emergence” as a property of the territory, not a property of the map. So for example, someone says that “AI will require emergent behavior”- that’s a claim about the territory. Your definition of emergence seems like a reasonable and potentially useful one but one would need to be careful that the common connotations don’t cause confusion.
I agree. But given that outsiders use the term all the time, and given that they can point to a reasonably large cluster of things (which are adequately contained in the definition I offered), it might be more helpful to say that emergence is a statement of a known unknown (in particular, a missing reduction between levels) than to refuse to use the term entirely, which can appear to be ignoring phenomena.
The only problem with that seems to be that when people talk about emergent behavior they seem to be more often than not talking about “emergence” as a property of the territory, not a property of the map. So for example, someone says that “AI will require emergent behavior”- that’s a claim about the territory. Your definition of emergence seems like a reasonable and potentially useful one but one would need to be careful that the common connotations don’t cause confusion.
I agree. But given that outsiders use the term all the time, and given that they can point to a reasonably large cluster of things (which are adequately contained in the definition I offered), it might be more helpful to say that emergence is a statement of a known unknown (in particular, a missing reduction between levels) than to refuse to use the term entirely, which can appear to be ignoring phenomena.