วันเสาร์ที่ 3 มีนาคม พ.ศ. 2555

The Complexity of Chaos is a Relatively straightforward thought

Today, with contemporary graphics, most people understand the complexity of chaos much better than they could before. Chaos can be seen just about everywhere, although sometimes it doesn't look like it is chaos. Take free markets for instance, it is hard to predict any individual transaction, but it is easy to predict the types of transactions which will occur, that is to say things will be bought, and sold based on old observations and old transactions.

Modern day computers have helped us frame out which customers are more likely to buy which things based on their buying habits. Although there is always the random possibility of deviation of any individual or individual transaction you see.

Book

If you were to draw a line from every individual who made a company transaction, let's say they bought a stock from a inescapable store, and then you drew a line from where that stock was purchased from, and then lines going out to all the vendors that the constructor bought from in order to produce that, and then from all the vendors that all of those vendors bought from, and so on - you can understand how incredibly involved and chaotic that principles is.

Also there's a lot of deviation going on all the time as vendors switch to separate suppliers, separate middleman in separate warehouses ship from separate points, etc., etc. If you will look at the giant maze of lines going every which way, it looks indubitably complex, and it appears to be so random and chaotic that it's roughly impossible to control. Nevertheless, people who like to control things, such as governments, try to place rules and regulations to control the flows of manufactures and free markets.

Unfortunately this commonly leads to unintended consequences and dismal failures, because there is no principles that can keep track of all that in such a way as to help streamline it. However, if you were looking for the complexity of chaos, and trying to rationalize it in your brain, looking at free markets and mental of the belief in this way makes it very simple. And yes, it is a inspiring subject indeed.

If this topic interests you as much as it does our think tank, and me personally, then I'd like to propose a very good book to you. This is one of the books that is in my personal library and sits close to my desk. The name of the book is; "Chaos - development a New Science" by James Geick (also the author of "Genius: The Life and Science of Richard Feynman" - published by Penguin Books, New York, Ny, (1987), 354 pages, Isbn: O-1400 -9250-1.

Indeed, I like this book because it is an older book on the topic, and he gets down to the religious doctrine of the science of chaos rather than just the pure mathematics of probability. It goes into deep discussions on the reality that randomness may not even exist in reality, but it appears to. And that the exiguous probability, can have a compounding effect.

If you want to get your creative juices flowing, engage your scientific mind, or get your brain mental and innovative ways, I propose you add to your list of studies the belief of chaos, in all its glorious complexity. Email me if you want to discuss this further, I'd be curious in your intellectual stimulation and dialogue. Please think all this.

The Complexity of Chaos is a Relatively straightforward thought

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