Ice77 Posted December 16, 2019 Share Posted December 16, 2019 The author is a physicist and a strong writer. The book has a meta framework that cuts across as varied situations/disciplines as species extinction events, forest fires, billionaire rich lists, earthquakes, market crashes, wars, scientific revolutions, sand piles, social networks etc. What's common among them? Their distributions are all governed by a new branch of physics: Non equilibrium statistical physics that builds upon chaos/complexity theory to show how power law (and some common organising principle) is pervasive across such diverse physical, biological, economic and social systems. Of interest is the concept of self organised criticality in these complex, interconnected systems. Once a system goes critical, small or large upheavals can happen anytime and in an unpredictable way. But their relative magnitude vs frequency still remains governed by the power laws. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MrB Posted December 16, 2019 Share Posted December 16, 2019 The author is a physicist and a strong writer. The book has a meta framework that cuts across as varied situations/disciplines as species extinction events, forest fires, billionaire rich lists, earthquakes, market crashes, wars, scientific revolutions, sand piles, social networks etc. What's common among them? Their distributions are all governed by a new branch of physics: Non equilibrium statistical physics that builds upon chaos/complexity theory to show how power law (and some common organising principle) is pervasive across such diverse physical, biological, economic and social systems. Of interest is the concept of self organised criticality in these complex, interconnected systems. Once a system goes critical, small or large upheavals can happen anytime and in an unpredictable way. But their magnitude vs frequency still remains governed by the power laws. Strikes me as design in the midst of perceived chaos. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cigarbutt Posted December 17, 2019 Share Posted December 17, 2019 The part dealing with the causality aspect of WWI is interesting (assassination of Austrian prince) but the Balkan region was called the power keg of Europe. Sometimes all you need is a match. When outcomes become known in multi-variable and complex systems, humans may find patterns when, in fact, there are none or the perception and the interpretation of the pattern may be highly tied to prior-held beliefs. The book is interesting if you have an interest in trying to understand chaos. Didier Sornette is another who's tried to correlate complex manifestations to mathematical formulations, with an uneven success (especially 'predictive'). The author is a physicist and a strong writer. The book has a meta framework that cuts across as varied situations/disciplines as species extinction events, forest fires, billionaire rich lists, earthquakes, market crashes, wars, scientific revolutions, sand piles, social networks etc. What's common among them? Their distributions are all governed by a new branch of physics: Non equilibrium statistical physics that builds upon chaos/complexity theory to show how power law (and some common organising principle) is pervasive across such diverse physical, biological, economic and social systems. Of interest is the concept of self organised criticality in these complex, interconnected systems. Once a system goes critical, small or large upheavals can happen anytime and in an unpredictable way. But their magnitude vs frequency still remains governed by the power laws. Strikes me as design in the midst of perceived chaos. Hi MrB, To be clear, the following is submitted as a learning tool. (and for fun) If you have 10 seconds, click on the following link, look at the fifth image without reading the text below before looking (although your unconscious eye may not collaborate) and try to see a pattern. Then read the text below. https://earthsky.org/human-world/seeing-things-that-arent-there The whole thing strikes me as design in the midst of perceived chaos. Post-scriptum: I'm planning to read a book over the holidays that I thought I had read before and may suggest it here at some point. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MrB Posted December 17, 2019 Share Posted December 17, 2019 Mmm. People see what they want to see. Attached is one I enjoyed. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MrB Posted December 17, 2019 Share Posted December 17, 2019 Just upside down. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cigarbutt Posted December 17, 2019 Share Posted December 17, 2019 ^So is it: believing is seeing, or is it the other way around? :-\ I've always thought that there'd be less chaos if more people could accept that both concepts can be reconciled. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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