RE: Chaos Theory, Fractals, and Architecture

You are viewing a single comment's thread:

Inherent to chaos theory is the hypothesis of causality that exceedingly small changes have massive impacts like butterfly flaps its wings in our place, and it causes typhoon 100 miles away. It may vague at first, but it seems truthful in some sense if we understood in retrospect, which accurate forecasting is nearly difficult. We take climate change as an example. A small drop or increase in seawater temperature has far-reaching consequences on our weather. Or we can consider global warming by one degree Celsius higher, and our world's seas can't hold carbon dioxide due to a chemical quirk.

As I recall, chaos theory was popular around the world about 30 years ago. The theory held that the world followed the order of chaos, not cosmos.

I'm not familiar with the ideals of cosmos and chaos, but I do remember the claim of chaos theory that when a Beijing butterfly flaps its wings, a storm occurs in New York.
It is impossible to prove metaphysically that a Beijing butterfly can storm New York.

However, in reality, it is clear that the pollutants and fine dust emitted by Beijing increase the incidence of respiratory diseases and cancer in Korea.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-48346344



0
0
0.000
2 comments
avatar

The chaos theory is popular even to date. Chaos theory and universe link is not more about the literal link between the two. It is like the statement about flapping of butterfly's wing. Chaos theory looks at the fact that randomness and chaotic event are not really random at all. !PIZZA

0
0
0.000