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Chaos Theory
This paper discusses chaos theory based on James Gleick's "Chaos: Making a New Science" and Ian Stewart's "Does God Play Dice?: The Mathematics of Chaos". -- 1,500 words; MLA

The Chaos Theory
This paper discusses the possibility of more accurately forecasting weather through the application of Edward Lorenz' chaos theory as based on James Gleick's book "Chaos: Making a New Science". -- 2,315 words; MLA

Chaos Theory
This paper applies chaos theory to business management. -- 1,070 words; MLA

Order and Chaos in Homer, Sophocles and Aeschylus.
A discussion of philosophical texts of Homer, Sophocles and Aeschylus on the subjets of order and chaos. -- 1,650 words;

The Chaos of the Interwar Period
A review of the history of Europe and American in the period after the First World War, focusing on the chaos in the social, political and economic spheres that led to the Second World War. -- 1,559 words; MLA

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TERM PAPER ON CHAOS

The Theory of Chaos
Where chaos begins, classical science ends. Ever since physicists inquired into the laws
of nature, they began to explore the irregular side of nature, the erratic and
discontinuous side, which has always puzzled scientists. They did not attempt to
understand disorder in the atmosphere, the turbulent sea, the oscillations of the heart
and brain, or the fluctuations of wildlife populations. All of these things were taken
for granted until in the 1970's. Then American and European scientists began to
investigate the randomness of nature.
They were physicists, biologists, chemists and mathematicians but they were all seeking
one thing: connections between different kinds of irregularity. 
Physiologists found a surprising order in the chaos that develops in the human heart, the
prime cause of a sudden, unexplained death. Ecologists explored the rise and fall of
gypsy moth populations. Economists dug out old stock price data and tried a new kind of
analysis. The insights that emerged led directly into the natural world- the shapes of
clouds, the paths of lightning, the microscopic intertwining of blood vessels, the
galactic clustering of stars. (Gleick 32)
The man most responsible for coming up with the Chaos Theory was Mitchell Feigenbaum, who
was one of a handful of scientists at Los Alamos, New Mexico. Feigenbaum was a little
known scientist from New York, with only one published work to his name. He was working
on quasi periodicity, in which he and only he had twenty-six hour days instead of the
usual twenty-four. He gave that up because he could not bear to wake up to the setting
sun, which happened periodically. He spent most of his time watching clouds from the
hiking trails above the laboratory. To him, Chaos represented a side of nature that
mainstream physics had passed by, a side that was fuzzy, detailed, structured, but yet
unpredictable. He thought about these things quietly, without producing any work. (Gleick
2) 
After he started looking, chaos seemed to be everywhere. A flag snaps back and forth in
the wind. A dripping faucet changes from a steady pattern to a random one. A rising
column of smoke disappears into random swirls. (Dupre 19) 
Chaos breaks across the lines that separate scientific disciplines. Because it is a
science of the global nature of systems, it has brought together thinkers from fields
that have been widely separated...Chaos poses problems that defy accepted ways of working
in science. It makes strong claims about the universal behavior of complexity. The first
Chaos theorists, the scientists who set the discipline in motion, shared certain
sensibilities. They had an eye for pattern, especially pattern that appeared on different
scales at the same time. They had a taste for randomness and complexity, for jagged edges
and sudden leaps. Believers in chaos-- and they sometimes call themselves believers, or
converts, or evangelists--speculate about determinism and free will, about evolution,
about the nature of conscious intelligence. They feel that they are turning back a trend
in science towards reductionism, the analysis of systems in terms of their constituent
parts: quarks, chromosomes, or neutrons. They believe that they are looking for the
whole. (Gleick 137)
The Chaos Theory is also called Nonlinear Dynamics, or the Complexity Theory. They all
mean the same thing: a scientific discipline, which is based on the study of nonlinear
systems. To understand the Complexity Theory people must understand the two words,
nonlinear and system. A system can best be defined as the understanding of the
relationship between things which interact. For example, a pile of stones is a system
which interacts based upon how they are piled. If they are piled out of balance, the
interaction results in their movement until they find a condition under which they are in
balance. A group of stones which do not touch one another are not a system, because there
is no interaction. A system can be modeled. This means another system which supposedly
replicates the behavior of the original system can be created. Theoretically, one can
take a second group of stones which are the same weight, shape, and density as the first
group, pile them in the same way as the first group, and predict that they will fall into
a new configuration that is the same as the first group. A mathematical model can be made
of the stones through application of Newton's Law of Gravity. Using this we can predict
how future piles of the same type, and of different types of stones, will interact.
(Hilborn 39) 
The word nonlinear has to do with understanding mathematical models used to describe
systems. Before the growth of interest in nonlinear systems, most models were analyzed as
though they were linear systems. This meant that when the mathematical formulas
representing the behavior of the systems were put into a graph form, the results looked
like a straight line. Newton used calculus as a mathematical method for showing change in
systems within the context of straight lines. In addition, statistics is a process of
converting what is usually nonlinear data into a linear format for analysis. 
Linear systems are the classic scientific systems and have been used for hundreds of
years. They are not complex. They are easy to work with because they are very
predictable. For example, consider a factory a linear system. If more inventory is added
to the factory, or more employees are hired, it would stand to reason that more pieces
would be produced. By changing what goes into a system, we should be able to tell what
comes out of it. However, as any factory manager knows, factories do not actually work
that way. If the amount of people, the inventory, or whatever other variable is changed
in the factory you would get widely differing results on a day to day basis. That is
because a factory is a complex nonlinear system, as most systems found in nature.
(Kranser 171) 
When most natural systems are modeled, their mathematical representations do not produce
straight lines on graphs; these systems outputs are extremely difficult to predict.
Before the chaos theory was developed, most scientists studied nature and other random
things using linear systems. Starting with the work of Sir Isaac Newton, physics has
provided a process for modeling nature, and the mathematical equations associated with it
have all been linear. When a study resulted in strange answers, the failure was blamed on
experimental error or noise. 
With the advent of the Chaos theory and research into complex systems theory, we know
that the noise actually was important information about the experiment. When noise is
added to the graph results, the results are no longer a straight line, and are not
predictable. This noise is what was originally referred to as the chaos in the
experiment. Since studying this noise, or chaos, was one of the first concerns of those
studying complex systems theory, Glieck originally named the discipline Chaos Theory.
(Gleick 114) 
Another word that is vital to understanding the Complexity Theory is complex. What makes
us determine which system is more complex then another? There are many discussions of
this question. In Exploring Complexity, Nobel Laureate Ilya Prigogine explains that the
complexity of the system is defined by the complexity of the model necessary to
effectively predict the behavior of the system. The more the model must look like the
actual system to predict system results, the more complex the system is considered to be.
The most complex system example is the weather. This was demonstrated by Edward Lorenz,
which can only be effectively modeled with an exact duplicate of itself. One example of a
simple system to model is to calculate the time it takes for a train to go from city A to
city B if it travels at a given speed. To predict the time we need only to know the speed
that the train is traveling (in mph) and the distance (in miles). The simple formula
would be mph/m, which is a simple system. (Barrow 124) 
However, the pile of stones, which appears to be a simple system, is actually very
complex. If we want to predict which stone will end up at which place in the pile then
you would have to know very detailed information about the stones, including their
weights, shapes, and the starting location of each stone to make an accurate prediction.
If there is a minor difference between the shape of one stone in the model and the shape
of the original stone, the modeled results will be very different. The system is very
complex, thus making prediction very difficult. (Hilborn 39)
The generator of unpredictability in complex systems is what Lorenz calls sensitivity to
initial conditions or the butterfly effect. (Barrow 125) The concept means that with a
complex, nonlinear system, a tiny difference in starting position can lead to greatly
varied results. For example, in a difficult pool shot a tiny error in aim causes a slight
change in the balls path. However, with each ball it collides with, the ball strays
farther and farther from the intended path. If a butterfly is flapping its wings in
Argentina and we cannot take that action into account in our weather prediction, then we
will fail to predict a thunderstorm over our home town two weeks from now because of this
dynamic.(Krasner 97) 
The general rule for complex systems is that one cannot create a model that will
accurately predict outcomes but one can create models that simulate the processes that
the system will go through to create the models. This realization is affecting many
activities in business and other industries. For instance, it raises considerable
questions relating to the real value of creating organizational visions and mission
statements. 
Like physics, the Chaos theory provides a foundation for the study of all other
scientific disciplines. It gives us a variety of methods for incorporating nonlinear
dynamics into the study of science. Attempts to change the discipline and make it a
separate form of science have been strongly resisted. The work represents a reunification
of the sciences for many in the scientific community. 
One of Lorenz's best accomplishments supporting the Chaos Theory was the Lorenz
Attractor. The Lorenz Attractor is based on three differential equations, three
constants, and three initial conditions. The attractor represents the behavior of gas at
any given time, and its condition at any given time depends upon its condition at a
previous time. If the initial conditions are changed by even a tiny amount, checking the
attractor at a later time will show numbers totally different. This is because small
differences will reproduce themselves recursively until numbers are entirely unlike the
original system with the original initial conditions. However, the overall behavior of
the system will be the same. (Gleick 28)
A very small cause, which escapes our notice, determines a considerable effect that we
cannot fail to see, and then we say that the effect is due to chance. If we knew exactly
the Laws of Nature and the situation of the universe at the initial moment, we could
predict exactly the situation of that same universe at a succeeding moment. However, even
if it were the case that the natural laws had any secret for us, we could still know the
situation approximately. If that enabled us to predict the succeeding situation with the
same approximation which is all we require. We should say that the phenomenon has been
predicted, and is governed by the Laws of Nature. However, it is not always so; it may
happen that small differences in the initial conditions produce very great ones in the
final outcome. (Hilborn 492) 
The Complexity Theory has developed from mathematics, biology, and chemistry, but mostly
from physics and particularly thermodynamics, the study of turbulence leading to the
understanding of self-organizing systems and system states (equilibrium, near
equilibrium, the edge of chaos, and chaos). The concept of entropy is actually the
physicists application of the concept of evolution to physical systems. The greater the
entropy of a system, the more highly evolved is the system.(Hilborn 486) The Complexity
theory is also having a major impact on quantum physics and attempts to reconcile the
chaos of quantum physics with the predictability of Newton's universe.
With Complexity Theory, the distinctions between the different disciplines of sciences
are disappearing. For example, fractal research is now used for biological studies.
However, there is a question as to whether the current research and academic funding will
support this move to interdisciplinary research. 
Complexity is already affecting many aspects of our lives and has a great impacts on all
sciences. It is answering previously unsolvable problems in cosmology and quantum
mechanics. The understanding of heart rhythms and brain functioning has been
revolutionized by complexity research. There have been a number of other things developed
from complexity research, such as SimLife and SimAnt, which are a series of computer
programs. Fractal mathematics are critical to improved information compression and
encryption schemes needed for computer networking and telecommunications. Genetic
algorithms are being applied to economic research and stock predictions. Engineering
applications range from factory scheduling to product design, with pioneering work being
done at places like DuPont and Deere & Co. (Gleick 312) 
Other elements of nonlinear dynamics have appeared elsewhere. Most recently in graphic
applications like the successful Fractal Design Painter series of products. Fractal image
compression techniques are still being researched, but promise such amazing results as
600:1 graphic compression ratios. The movie special effects industry would have much less
realistic clouds, rocks, and shadows without fractal graphic technology. (Gleick 314)
Classical science has ended, and chaos has begun. With more and more research into this
young science it would be possible for us to make predictions on what will come in the
future. Though it is one of the youngest sciences, the Chaos Theory holds great promise
in the fields of meteorology, physics, mathematics, and just about anything else you can
think of. This science also has a chance to let scientist extrapolate information of what
will happen to possible allow us to find out what happen in the past. 

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