http://www.supergrove.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/memes-about-8-4-reasons... -- // Alexander Halavais, Sociologist, Semiologist, and Saboteur Extraordinaire // Director of the MA in Social Technologies, Arizona State University // http://alex.halavais.net/bio @halavais On Mon, Jun 12, 2017 at 12:26 AM, Unger, Johann <j.unger@lancaster.ac.uk> wrote:
*Dr J W Unger*
Lecturer and Academic Director of Summer Programmes
Department of Linguistics and English Language
Lancaster University
LA1 4YL
e-mail: j.unger@lancaster.ac.uk
tel: +44 1524 592591 <+44%201524%20592591>
Follow me on Twitter @johnnyunger <http://twitter.com/#!/johnnyunger>
On 12 Jun 2017, 08:13 +0100, Alexander Halavais <alex@halavais.net>, wrote:
https://www.wordnik.com/img/humptydumpty.png
--
// Alexander Halavais, Sociologist, Semiologist, and Saboteur Extraordinaire // Director of the MA in Social Technologies, Arizona State University // http://alex.halavais.net/bio @halavais
On Sun, Jun 11, 2017 at 8:11 PM, Jean Burgess <je.burgess@qut.edu.au> wrote:
https://c1.staticflickr.com/4/3572/3685762238_8843196b53.jpg
On 11/6/17, 5:21 am, "Air-L on behalf of Robert W Gehl" < air-l-bounces@listserv.aoir.org on behalf of lists@robertwgehl.org> wrote:
I am not a meme scholar, but I think there is quite a bit of validity in taking seriously what people do on the Internet, as well as how they describe their own activities. One of those things they do is traffic in something they refer to as "memes." Perhaps all of those people who refer to those objects as "memes" are out of their depths in their understanding of social science, and yet they continue to make, share, and take meaning from these things called "memes." I have no advice for meme tracking, but I do have advice for studying them: do so, because they are part of human activity that matters, whether the word is right or wrong.
See: https://ixquick-proxy.com/do/spg/show_picture.pl?l=english& rais=1&oiu=http%3A%2F%2F68.media.tumblr.com%2F654ddf051c94d4c099a3a9664100 6159%2Ftumblr_optspwxfiH1vntq6no1_1280.png&sp= 7268cc951930ae53482a81dbdbbd07f1
- Rob Gehl
On 06/10/2017 01:06 PM, David Stodolsky wrote:
Once you fall into Newspeak, like “meme,” you have already
sacrificed your rationality on the altar of market fundamentalism:
http://cosmism.blogspot.dk/2011/07/artificial-ape.html
http://cosmism.blogspot.dk/2010/12/memes-selfish-genes-
and-darwinian.html
http://cosmism.blogspot.dk/2010/02/what-darwin-got-wrong.html
http://cosmism.blogspot.dk/2016/02/richard-selfish-gene-
dawkins-has.html
Margaret-thatcher: "And, you know, there's no such thing as society.
There are individual men and women and there are families" in an interview in Women's Own in 1987
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2013/apr/08/margaret-
thatcher-quotes
“Meme” is the same idea expressed by a zoologist, who is out of his
depth in social science.
He continues to be a fanatical opponent of group selection, when it
comes to genes.
As the refs below show, the term meme has no validity. Rumor propagation and the spread of innovative ideas has a long
history of study in social science.
dss
On 8 Jun 2017, at 15:05, Thomas Ball <xtc283@gmail.com> wrote:
A couple of years ago IARPA (https://www.iarpa.gov/) opened up a
thread
exploring the use of open source indicators (OSIs) for prediction
and
forecasting of unknown potential future events and threats. OSIs are basically text and keywords. In reaching out to the IARPA organizer
of the
discussion, links were requested to papers on the topic. The link
below was
his response. Note that this IARPA thread came shortly after the
so-called
'Arab Spring.' Thus, the papers reflect thinking of that vintage.
D12PC00337 OR D12PC00285 OR D12PC00347 - Google Scholar <https://scholar.google.com/scholar?q=D12PC00337+OR+
D12PC00285+OR+D12PC00347
D12PC00337 OR D12PC00285 OR D12PC00347 - Google Scholar
<https://scholar.google.com/scholar?q=D12PC00337+OR+
D12PC00285+OR+D12PC00347
On Thu, Jun 8, 2017 at 4:33 AM, Tanis Grandison <
tanis.grandison@me.com
wrote:
Hi All,
I was wondering if anyone could offer any advice (and useful
reading ) on
tracking Memes. Specifically, I am wondering if there is a way I can take a meme
and look
at how it has spread and been shared on different social media?
I wouldn’t be doing it in real time, more looking back at
significant
events and how political memes transcended networks and flowed
through
social media.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks Tanis Grandison _______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers
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David Stodolsky, PhD Institute for Social
Informatics
Tornskadestien 2, st. th., DK-2400 Copenhagen NV, Denmark dss@socialinformatics.org Skype/Twitter: davidstodolsky
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