13 Quotes About Chaos Theory

Chaos theory is a branch of science that studies the behavior of complex systems, in particular, the behavior of many simple models when they are subjected to noise or randomness. The following quotes are all about chaos theory and how it’s changed our understanding of the world around us.

In fact, the mere act of opening the box will...
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In fact, the mere act of opening the box will determine the state of thecat, although in this case there were three determinate states the catcould be in: these being Alive, Dead, and Bloody Furious. Terry Pratchett
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It’s not an academic question any more to ask what’s going to happen to a cloud. People very much want to know–and that means there’s money available for it. That problem is very much within the realm of physics and it’s a problem very much of the same caliber. You’re looking at something complicated, and the present way of solving it is to try to look at as many points as you can, enough stuff to say where the cloud is, where the warm air is, what its velocity is, and so forth. Then you stick it into the biggest machine you can afford and you try to get an estimate of what it’s going to do next. But this is not very realistic. James Gleick
3
Postmodern science - by concerning itself with such things as undecidables, the limits of precise control, conflicts characterized by incomplete information, "fracta", catastrophes, and pragmatic paradoxes - is theorizing its own evolution as discontinuous, catastrophic, nonrectifiable, and paradoxical. Unknown
Government succeeds by failing.
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Government succeeds by failing. L.K. Samuels
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If patterns of ones and zeroes were "like" patterns of human lives and deaths, if everything about an individual could be represented in a computer record by a long strings of ones and zeroes, then what kind of creature could be represented by a long string of lives and deaths? Thomas Pynchon
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There (is) order and even great beauty in what looks like total chaos. If we look closely enough at the randomness around us, patterns will start to emerge. Aaron Sorkin
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Government in and of itself is the foremost agent for destroying order and imposing chaos."" To accept the legitimacy of the state is to embrace the necessity for war."" Political theory would be fine in a perfect world, but in an uncertain one, it is a dangerous gamble. L.K. Samuels
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Ideology follows the money."" Governments don't protect people, people protect governments."" To accept the legitimacy of the state is to embrace the necessity for war. Lawrence Samuels
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Change requires one to start now here or nowhere. Both places require one to pass through the same starting point — today, right now” from Cinderella In Focus H.L. Balcomb
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Overwhelmed by life's complexity? Realize that our alphabet consists of only 26 letters, calculations are based on a set of 10 numbers, all variations in music are based on 7 musical notes, our DNA can be dissected into 4 letters and space on the Planck scale is probably made solely out of binary code Martijn Budel
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In short, the idea dawns that the one universal principle which possibly .. between force and structure, the embodiment of the Principle of Least Action and the (unknown) force, which in mathematics is known as the attractor which pulls .. in the direction of the most optimal and relatively stable self-organized criticality, could very well be the Golden Ratio dynamic. the universal principle which as the balance between finiteness and infinity, stability and flexibility underlies self-similar fractal forms emerging at the 'edge of chaos' indeed seems to be the Golden Ratio Spiral. . Marja De Vries
12
If we increase r [in a logistic map] even more, we will eventually force the system into a period-8 limit cycle, then a period-16 cycle, and so on. The amount that we have to increase r to get another period doubling gets smaller and smaller for each new bifurcation. This cascade of period doublings is reminiscent of the race between Achilles and the tortoise, in that an infinite number of bifurcations (or time steps in the race) can be confined to a local region of finite size. At a very special critical value, the dynamical system will fall into what is essentially an infinite-period limit cycle. This is chaos. Gary William Flake