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~akidna~ wrote:...
Memes: Introduction


HH wrote:~akidna~ wrote:...
Memes: Introduction
Meme ... "Me Me" ... "Me ... Me" ... Great Goat God ... Dost "Azazel" ... Please ... HELP!![]()
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http://www.flickr.com and meme ?ycr007 wrote:Saw something abt Memes in thsi month's Chip.....Link to http://www.flickr.com

Red Combat wrote:http://www.flickr.com and meme ?ycr007 wrote:Saw something abt Memes in thsi month's Chip.....Link to http://www.flickr.com

I think this is actually leading to a meme. what say ?ycr007 wrote:Red Combat wrote:http://www.flickr.com and meme ?ycr007 wrote:Saw something abt Memes in thsi month's Chip.....Link to http://www.flickr.com
well,are they not connected?? Actually i did'nt check,just posted the stuff...

Red Combat wrote:I think this is actually leading to a meme. what say ?ycr007 wrote:Red Combat wrote:http://www.flickr.com and meme ?ycr007 wrote:Saw something abt Memes in thsi month's Chip.....Link to http://www.flickr.com
well,are they not connected?? Actually i did'nt check,just posted the stuff...

Memes are contagious ideas, all competing for a share of our mind in a kind of Darwinian selection. As memes evolve, they become better and better at distracting and diverting us from whatever we'd really like to be doing with our lives. They are a kind of Drug of the Mind. Confused? Blame it on memes.
John Stoner has created a designer virus to spread the meme of generosity. Here's what he says about the virus: "A little while ago, I made up these cards. They create a chain of generous acts, memetically. How do you use them? You do something nice for someone, and you do it anonymously. For example, you could pay the toll of the car behind you at a tollbooth. One thing I've done is go to this wonderful bakery near my home, and buy a treat for the next person who walks in the door after I leave. Be creative! And you pass on one of these cards.... check them out."
Visit:
http://www.generosity.org/
Visit:
http://www.memecentral.com/

Meme
Meme, (comes from Greek root with the meaning of memory and its derivative "mimeme"), is the term given to a unit of information that replicates from brains and inanimate stores of information, such as books and computers, to other brains or stores of information. The term meme was coined in 1976 by Richard Dawkins in his bestselling book, The Selfish Gene. Inanimate sources of information have been termed 'retention systems'.
In more specific terms, a meme is a self-propagating unit of cultural evolution having some resemblance to the gene (the unit of genetics). The difference lies in the replicative potential and minimally required resources to replicate. Memes can represent parts of ideas, languages, elemental particles, tunes, designs, skills, moral and aesthetic values and anything else that is commonly learned and passed on to others as a unit. The study of evolutionary models of information transfer is called memetics.
The is an example of a visual meme. Having seen it one is likely to copy, reproduce, or modify it and then show it to others.
The smiley is an example of a visual meme. Having seen it one is likely to copy, reproduce, or modify it and then show it to others.
In casual use, the term meme is sometimes used to mean any piece of information that is passed from one mind to another. This is much closer to the analogy of "language as a virus" than it is to Dawkins's analogy of memes as replicating behaviors. Memes on the Internet tend to proliferate for periods of time then quietly die off, and many start as obscure running jokes within net cliques which gradually lose their original meaning or otherwise become detached. Some people consider absurdist humor to be a good source of memes.
"The key to every man is his thought. Sturdy and defying though he look, he has a helm which he obeys, which is the idea after which all his facts are classified. He can only be reformed by showing him a new idea which commands his own."
— Ralph Waldo Emerson
Visit:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meme
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Madhappyfaceblob.gif

Meme
*
A unit of cultural information, such as a cultural practice or idea, that is transmitted verbally or by repeated action from one mind to another.
**
n : a cultural unit (an idea or value or pattern of behavior) that is passed from one generation to another by nongenetic means (as by imitation); "memes are the cultrual counterpart of genes"
***
<philosophy> /meem/ [By analogy with "gene"] Richard Dawkins's term for an idea considered as a replicator, especially with the connotation that memes parasitise people into propagating them much as viruses do.
Memes can be considered the unit of cultural evolution. Ideas can evolve in a way analogous to biological evolution. Some ideas survive better than others; ideas can mutate through, for example, misunderstandings; and two ideas can recombine to produce a new idea involving elements of each parent idea.
The term is used especially in the phrase "meme complex" denoting a group of mutually supporting memes that form an organised belief system, such as a religion. However, "meme" is often misused to mean "meme complex".
Use of the term connotes acceptance of the idea that in humans (and presumably other tool- and language-using sophonts) cultural evolution by selection of adaptive ideas has become more important than biological evolution by selection of hereditary traits. Hackers find this idea congenial for tolerably obvious reasons.
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memetic algorithm
<algorithm> A genetic algorithm or evolutionary algorithm which includes a non-genetic local search to improve genotypes. The term comes from the Richard Dawkin's term "meme".
One big difference between memes and genes is that memes are processed and possibly improved by the people that hold them - something that cannot happen to genes. It is this advantage that the memetic algorithm has over simple genetic or evolutionary algorithms.
These algorithms are useful in solving complex problems, such as the "Travelling Salesman Problem," which involves finding the shortest path through a large number of nodes, or in creating artificial life to test evolutionary theories.
Memetic algorithms are one kind of metaheuristic.
Visit:
http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=meme
http://dictionary.reference.com/search? ... 0algorithm


marko wrote:... Douglas Adams ...
DNA : Douglas Noel Adams : 1952 - 2001
Visit:
http://www.douglasadams.com/
http://www.douglasadams.com/funeral.html

The "be happy" and "make others happy" memes
Some spiritual practices, e.g. Buddhism, clearly promote ecological and moral goals recognizable to most people, e.g. The Noble Eightfold Path emphasizes limited consumption, reduced cruelty, no delegation of violence or participation in violent systems, and a withdrawal from sexual and ethical processes that have no clear ecological or moral value to the practitioner - regardless of the value they may have to others.
The Judeo-Christian-Islamic "Western" religions, however, focus more on devotion to a transcendent deity and moral codes of behavior, including social and ethical codes affecting every aspect of life from selfless love to commerce to sexual behavior. People are urged to devote themselves to the needs of others.
The contrast between "be happy" and "make others happy", although not as stark in practice or theory as the traditional debate suggests, may satisfy constraints of different ecological or sexual norms in some non-obvious way. But it seems entirely unlikely that "they aren't particularly valuable to the believer." At least, the majority of people on Earth clearly don't think so.
Visit:
http://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meme

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