Table of Contents

Level Confusion

Level confusion is confused thinking that arises from examining a system at different Levels without realizing that you are doing so or what the implications might be. Here are some common areas of level confusion:

Sources of Level Confusion

Clearly this thinking is confused, and something must be wrong here. Confusion can result from the failure to understand that:

The map is not the territory!
(Reality vs. Representation and hardware vs. signal) The brain is real and we can make factual statements about its functioning, but this tells us nothing about whether thoughts are true or real, or whether there is free will. Yet we must use abstraction (maps and categories) because the world has such a wealth of irrelevant particular details, most of which require considerable patience and sophisticated measurement merely to observe them.
More is different!
Because of Emergence simple thought experiments with commonsense interpretations can lead us far astray. Reality and the brain are not simple. Any system that consists of a huge number of complexly interacting parts can behave in unpredictable novel ways.
You don't know what you think!
The nature of Consciousness depends on both Representation and Emergence, but the design of our minds is evolutionary, proceeding by incremental modifications from an existing plan, and optimized to generate Adaptive Behavior. For The Cultural Animal it became necessary to understand ourselves to some degree, but it wasn't necessary (or even desirable) for our self-understanding to be entirely accurate, so it isn't. See Intentional and Representational opacity and The User Interface Analogy.

Catataxis

Catataxis is a name for level confusion coined by John Brodie Donald (see Catataxis.) He offers these observations about emergent levels and their associated analytic levels:

  1. Virtue reverses at a catataxic boundary: Another way of saying this is that what is good for the individual may be bad for the collective (and vice versa). [See Evolutionary Ethics]
  2. Conflict below creates stability above: The more disagreement there is on one level, the more likely there is to be calm and stability on the level above. This is best summed up in the saying “still waters run deep“. A calm surface often masks a roiling torrent underneath. A stock market is a good example of this.
  3. In the end, quantitative change becomes qualitative change: This is a more sophisticated way of saying more of the same is different. [See Emergence]
  4. Today's groups are tomorrow's individuals: over time, things tend to get bigger and clump together. The river of history is a grouping vector. [See Meta-Evolution]
  5. Categorization destroys information: Once the scale increases, the only way a human brain can function is by categorizing things. [See Levels, Modularity]

What to Do?

While confusion can easily result from crossing levels without noticing it, we don't say that it is always a mistake crossing levels. What takes place at those boundaries is often quite interesting, both practically and theoretically: