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Memetic Lexicon
- Auto-toxic
Dangerous to itself. Highly auto-toxic memes are usually self-limiting
because they promote the destruction of their hosts (such as the Jim
Jones meme; any military indoctrination meme-complex; any "martyrdom"
meme). (GMG) (See exo-toxic.)
- Bait
The part of a meme-complex that promises to benefit the host (usually
in return for replicating the complex). The bait usually justifies,
but does not explicitly urge, the replication of a meme-complex. (Donald
Going, quoted by Hofstadter.) Also called the reward co-meme. (In
many religions, "Salvation" is the bait, or promised reward;
"Spread the Word" is the hook. Other common bait co-memes
are "Eternal Bliss", "Security", "Prosperity",
"Freedom".) (See hook; threat; infection strategy.)
- Belief-space
Since a person can only be infected with and transmit a finite number
of memes, there is a limit to their belief space (Henson). Memes evolve
in competition for niches in the belief-space of individuals and societies.
- Censorship
Any attempt to hinder the spread of a meme by eliminating its vectors.
Hence, censorship is analogous to attempts to halt diseases by spraying
insecticides. Censorship can never fully kill off an offensive meme,
and may actually help to promote the meme's most virulent strain,
while killing off milder forms.
- Co-meme
A meme which has symbiotically co-evolved with other memes, to form
a mutually-assisting meme-complex. Also called a symmeme. (GMG)
- Cult
A sociotype of an auto-toxic meme-complex, composed of membots and/or
memeoids. (GMG) Characteristics of cults include: self-isolation of
the infected group (or at least new recruits); brainwashing by repetitive
exposure (inducing dependent mental states); genetic functions discouraged
(through celibacy, sterilization, devalued family) in favor of replication
(proselytizing); and leader-worship ("personality cult").
(Henson.)
- Dormant
Currently without human hosts. The ancient Egyptian hieroglyph system
and the Gnostic Gospels are examples of "dead" schemes which
lay dormant for millennia in hidden or untranslatable texts, waiting
to re-activate themselves by infecting modern archeologists. Some
obsolete memes never become entirely dormant, such as Phlogiston theory,
which simply mutated from a "belief" into a "quaint
historical footnote."
- Earworm
"A tune or melody which infects a population rapidly." (Rheingold);
a hit song. (Such as: "Don't Worry, Be Happy".) (f. German,
ohrwurm=earworm.)
- exo-toxic
Dangerous to others. Highly exo-toxic memes promote the destruction
of persons other than their hosts, particularly those who are carriers
of rival memes. (Such as: Nazism, the Inquisition, Pol Pot.) (See
meme-allergy.) (GMG)
- Hook
The part of a meme-complex that urges replication. The hook is often
most effective when it is not an explicit statement, but a logical
consequence of the memeUs content. (Hofstadter) (See bait, threat.)
- Host
A person who has been successfully infected by a meme. See infection,
membot, memeoid.
- ideosphere
The realm of memetic evolution, as the biosphere is the realm of biological
evolution. The entire memetic ecology. (Hofstadter.) The health of
an ideosphere can be measured by its memetic diversity.
- Immuno-depressant
Anything that tends to reduce a personUs memetic immunity. Common
immuno-depressants are: travel, disorientation, physical and emotional
exhaustion, insecurity, emotional shock, loss of home or loved ones,
future shock, culture shock, isolation stress, unfamiliar social situations,
certain drugs, loneliness, alienation, paranoia, repeated exposure,
respect for Authority, escapism, and hypnosis (suspension of critical
judgment). Recruiters for cults often target airports and bus terminals
because travelers are likely to be subject to a number of these immuno-depressants.
(GMG) (See cult.)
- immuno-meme
See vaccime. (GMG)
- Infection
- Successful encoding of a meme in the memory
of a human being. A memetic infection can be either active or inactive.
It is inactive if the host does not feel inclined to transmit the
meme to other people. An active infection causes the host to want
to infect others. Fanatically active hosts are often membots or memeoids.
A person who is exposed to a meme but who does not remember it (consciously
or otherwise) is not infected. (A host can indeed be unconsciously
infected, and even transmit a meme without conscious awareness of
the fact. Many societal norms are transmitted this way.) (GMG) Some
memeticists have used `infection' as a synonym for `belief' (i.e.
only believers are infected, non-believers are not). However, this
usage ignores the fact that people often transmit memes they do not
"believe in." Songs, jokes, and fantasies are memes which
do not rely on "belief" as an infection strategy.
- Infection strategy
Any memetic strategy which encourages infection of a host. Jokes encourage
infection by being humorous, tunes by evoking various emotions, slogans
and catch-phrases by being terse and continuously repeated. Common
infection strategies are "Villain vs. victim", "Fear
of Death", and "Sense of Community". In a meme-complex,
the bait co-meme is often central to the infection strategy. (See
replication strategy; mimicry.) (GMG)
- Membot
A person whose entire life has become subordinated to the propagation
of a meme, robotically and at any opportunity. (Such as many Jehovah's
Witnesses, Krishnas, and Scientologists.) Due to internal competition,
the most vocal and extreme membots tend to rise to top of their sociotypeUs
hierarchy. A self-destructive membot is a memeoid. (GMG)
- Meme
(pron. `meem') A contagious information pattern that replicates by
parasitically infecting human minds and altering their behavior, causing
them to propagate the pattern. (Term coined by Dawkins, by analogy
with "gene".) Individual slogans, catch-phrases, melodies,
icons, inventions, and fashions are typical memes. An idea or information
pattern is not a meme until it causes someone to replicate it, to
repeat it to someone else. All transmitted knowledge is memetic. (Wheelis,
quoted in Hofstadter.) (See meme-complex).
- Primary Meme:
directly involved in auto-catalysis of memetic infopattern
- Secondary Meme:
dependant upon primary meme(s) for replication, may be adjunct
aid to primaries or may be an hyperparasite
- Low Level Meme:
attachment substrate is any biological program/mental structure
- High Level Meme:
attachment substrate is any other memeate
- Meme-allergy
A form of intolerance; a condition which causes a person to react
in an unusually extreme manner when exposed to a specific semiotic
stimulus, or `meme-allergen.' Exo-toxic meme-complexes typically confer
dangerous meme-allergies on their hosts. Often, the actual meme-allergens
need not be present, but merely perceived to be present, to trigger
a reaction. Common meme-allergies include homophobia, paranoid anti-Communism,
and porno phobia. Common forms of meme-allergic reaction are censorship,
vandalism, belligerent verbal abuse, and physical violence. (GMG)
- Meme-complex
A set of mutually-assisting memes which have co-evolved a symbiotic
relationship. Religious and political dogmas, social movements, artistic
styles, traditions and customs, chain letters, paradigms, languages,
etc. are meme-complexes. Also called an m-plex, or scheme (Hofstadter).
Types of co-memes commonly found in a scheme are called the: bait;
hook; threat; and vaccime. A successful scheme commonly has certain
attributes: wide scope (a paradigm that explains much); opportunity
for the carriers to participate and contribute; conviction of its
self-evident truth (carries Authority); offers order and a sense of
place, helping to stave off the dread of meaninglessness. (Wheelis,
quoted by Hofstadter.)
- Memeoid,
or Memoid
A person "whose behavior is so strongly influenced by a
[meme] that their own survival becomes inconsequential in their own
minds." (Henson) (Such as: Kamikazes, Shiite terrorists, Jim
Jones followers, any military personnel). hosts and membots are not
necessarily memeoids. (See auto-toxic; exo-toxic.)
- Meme
pool
The full diversity of memes accessible to a culture or individual.
Learning languages and traveling are methods of expanding one's meme
pool.
- Memetic
Related to memes.
- Memetic drift
Accumulated mis-replications; (the rate of) memetic mutation or evolution.
Written texts tend to slow the memetic drift of dogmas (Henson).
- Memetic engineer
One who consciously devises memes, through meme-splicing and memetic
synthesis, with the intent of altering the behavior of others. Writers
of manifestos and of commercials are typical memetic engineers. (GMG)
- Memeticist
One who studies memetics.
A memetic engineer. (GMG)
- Memetics
The study of memes and their social effects.
- Memotype
The actual information-content of a meme, as distinct from its sociotype.
A class of similar memes. (GMG)
- Meta-meme
Any meme about memes (such as: "tolerance", "metaphor").
- Meta-meme, the
The concept of memes, considered as a meme itself.
- Millennial
meme, the
Any of several currently-epidemic memes which predict catastrophic
events for the year 2000, including the battle of Armageddon, the
Rapture, the thousand-year reign of Jesus, etc. The "Imminent
New Age" meme is simply a pan-denominational version of this.
(Also called the `Endmeme.')
- Mimicry
An infection strategy in which a meme attempts to imitate the semiotics
of another successful meme. Such as: pseudo-science (Creationism,
UFOlogy); pseudo-rebelliousness (Heavy Metal); subversion by forgery
(Situationist detournement). (GMG)
- Replication
strategy
Any memetic strategy used by a meme to encourage its host to repeat
the meme to other people. The hook co-meme of a meme-complex. (GMG)
- Retromeme
A meme which attempts to splice itself into an existing meme-complex
(example: Marxist-Leninists trying to co-opt other sociotypes). (GMG)
- Scheme
A meme-complex. (Hofstadter.)
- Sociotype
The social expression of a memotype,
as the body of an organism is the physical expression (phenotype)
of the gene (genotype). Hence, the Protestant Church is one sociotype
of the Bible's memotype. A class of
similar social organisations. (GMG)
- Threat
The part of a meme-complex that encourages adherence and discourages
mis-replication. ("Damnation to Hell" is the threat co-meme
in many religious schemes.) (See: bait, hook, vaccime.) (Hofstadter)
- Tolerance
A meta-meme which confers resistance to a wide variety of memes (and
their sociotypes), without conferring meme-allergies. In its purest
form, Tolerance allows its host to be repeatedly exposed to rival
memes, even intolerant rivals, without active infection or meme-allergic
reaction. Tolerance is a central co-meme in a wide variety of schemes,
particularly "liberalism", and "democracy". Without
it, a scheme will often become exo-toxic and confer meme-allergies
on its hosts. Since schemes compete for finite belief-space, tolerance
is not necessarily a virtue, but it has co-evolved in the ideosphere
in much the same way as co-operation has evolved in biological ecosystems.
(Henson.)
- Vaccime
(pron. vak-seem) Any meta-meme which confers resistance or immunity
to one or more memes, allowing that person to be exposed without acquiring
an active infection. Also called an `immuno-meme.' Common immune-conferring
memes are "Faith", "Loyalty", "Skepticism",
and "tolerance". (See: meme-allergy.) (GMG.)
Every scheme includes a vaccime to protect against rival memes. For
instance:
- Conservatism: automatically resist all
new memes.
- Orthodoxy: automatically reject all new
memes.
- Science: test new memes for theoretical
consistency and(where applicable) empirical repeatability; continually
re-assess old memes; accept schemes only conditionally, pending
future re:-assessment.
- Radicalism: embrace one new scheme, reject
all others.
- Nihilism: reject all schemes, new and
old.
- New Age: accept all esthetically-appealing
memes, new and old, regardless of empirical (or even internal)
consistency; reject others. (Note that this one doesn't provide
much protection.)
- Japanese: adapt (parts of) new schemes
to the old ones.
- Vector
A medium, method, or vehicle for the transmission of memes. Almost
any communication medium can be a memetic vector. (GMG)
- Villain
vs. Victim
An infection strategy common to many meme-complexes, placing the potential
host in the role of Victim and playing on their insecurity, as in:
"the bourgeoisie is oppressing the proletariat" (Hofstadter).
Often dangerously toxic to host and society in general. Also known
as the "Us-and-Them" strategy.
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