of the device. To this end, we need to examine at least a
cursory overview of the salient mechanisms.
The human impetus to form groups springs
from the full spectrum of the needs hierarchy; from physiological requirements
to the drive for transcendence. It has been through groups that the species has
thrived. Abraham Maslow indicated as much in Toward a Psychology of Being when he noted that most needs require
the support of others. When considered across the full range of needs, a number
of foundational concepts of group establishment and maintenance can be
recognized. To be a member of a group is to be part of a collection to which
others belong as well. Being the only member of a group is not conducive to
satisfying the broad range of needs that require others. Having multiple
members in any group, however, implies that we might well seek to tell them
apart. The characteristics of being lumped into a group and then of being
unique within that group are somewhat obtuse and hence the mechanisms used to
differentiate among the collectives, and the individuals within them, give rise
to the multi-faceted concept called identity.
Identity is a concept that is
known to all of us but understood by few of us. This is not a statement that
most people are dumb and a few are smart. Rather, it is a realization that we
all have an understanding of identity, but we have many different perceptions
of what that understanding is. The very term suggests so many nuances that it
is difficult to speak analytically about it with the words we typically use.
While thus far we have referred to identity as if it had a single, well-defined
meaning, this is in fact rather illusory. Consequently, some of the other
concepts we have previously introduced may need to be re-examined in light of a
more detailed understanding of the full concept of identity. To this end, we
need a more rigorous vocabulary in order to systematically understand or design
systems that involve services related to identity in all its guises.
Within the model of social ecosystems
that we have suggested, identity is a mechanism through which policy can be
specifically ascribed to the entities that participate in interactions.
Explicit within the model is the seminal provision of a trust infrastructure
that defines the extent of a specific ecosystem. In order to effect trusted
policy within this infrastructure, one must be able to establish trust in
identity. However, the single word identity encompasses many facets and it is
often difficult to focus on any one facet in a manner orthogonal to the other
facets and hence to derive trust from either causality or process. We suggest
that a necessary step toward alleviating these difficulties is to arrive at new
terms with more precise definitions for characteristics that too often are all
simply lumped under the single heading. We will pursue this expanded vocabulary
by considering the facets of identity through distinct perspectives ranging
from the physical ecosystem through current social orders.
In Chapter 3, we noted that within the
physical ecosystem among-species interactions tend to fall into five
categories: coexistence, competitive coexistence, symbiotic, parasitic and
predatory. We can see in certain of these categories the beginning of species
based identity and then subsequently of individual identity within a single
species. The most benign of interaction types, that of coexistence, already
assumes the differentiation of entities or of groups comprised of similar
entities. Competitive coexistence suggests that the differentiation among
individuals or groups is grounded in the reality of natural selection. The
entities that are in competition, whether individuals or groups, can be
classified according to interaction consequences, perhaps to the extreme that
one group might emerge from the competition in such a superior position that
the
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