THE BUTTERFLY EFFECT - "The Butterfly Effect" metaphor is simply meant to demonstrate that little insignificant events can lead to significant results over time. Small variances in initial conditions can have profound and widely divergent effects on a system. Such chaotic systems are unpredictable by their very nature. All we can ever hope to do, therefore, is make an educated best guess or approximation of events. This is especially true for highly complex systems like weather patterns. Most things in nature tend to be the result of many interconnected, and interdependent, cause-and-effect relationships. This means they are staggeringly complex and probably impossible to ever resolve adequately in practice.
Is The Butterfly Effect a real thing? The answer might
surprise you.
By Christopher
McFadden
Whilst Butterfly wings can
be used to do some amazing things, do they really have the power to change the
weather? The answer might surprise you.
Chaos is about to
ensue so hold on tight.
What is the Butterfly Effect simple explanation?
One
of the best ways to understand a complex idea is to make an easy-to-understand
metaphor.
In the case of Chaos Theory, the term
"The Butterfly Effect" was created to attempt just such a thing.
The
metaphor goes:
“Does the flap of a butterfly’s wings in Brazil set off a
tornado in Texas?”
It isn't meant to
imply that this could actually happen, just that a small event, like this, at
the right time and place could, in theory, trigger a set of events that will
ultimately culminate in the formation of a hurricane on the other side of the
world.
This was coined by one Edward
Lorenz almost 45 years ago during the 139th meeting of the
Association for the Advancement of Science.
It would prove to be very
popular and has been embraced by popular culture ever since.
Lorenz was a meteorology
professor at MIT. He developed the concept but never actually intended for it
to be applied the way it has all too commonly been used.
Whilst
it sounds a little ridiculous as a concept, it is not meant to be taken
literally.
"The Butterfly Effect"
metaphor is simply meant to demonstrate that little insignificant events can
lead to significant results over time.
To
put it another way, small variances in initial conditions can have profound and
widely divergent effects on a system. Such chaotic systems are unpredictable by
their very nature.
This idea became the basis for a branch of mathematics known as Chaos Theory, which has
been applied in countless scenarios since its introduction.
This branch of mathematics has come to question some fundamental
laws of physics. Particularly those proposed by Sir Isaac Newton about the
mechanical and predictable nature of the Universe.
Similarly,
Lorenz challenged Pierre-Simon Laplace, who argued that unpredictability has no
place in the universe, asserting that if we knew all the physical laws of
nature, then “nothing would be uncertain
and the future, as the past, would be present to [our] eyes.”
Lorenz
was quick to point out one of the main problems we have is the imprecise nature
of our measurement devices for things like physical phenomena.
All we can ever hope to do,
therefore, is make an educated best guess or approximation of events.
This
is especially true for highly complex systems like weather patterns. Whilst
theories in other fields of science, like physics, try to model nature, in real life they are complex
systems.
Most
things in nature tend to be the result of many interconnected, and
interdependent, cause-and-effect relationships. This means they are
staggeringly complex and probably impossible to ever resolve adequately in
practice.
What is The Butterfly Effect for dummies?
The first thing to understand is that "The Butterfly
Effect" is just a metaphor for a field of mathematics called Chaos Theory.
Chaos Theory is, in effect, the science of surprises, the
nonlinear and the unpredictable. The theory teaches anyone who learns it that
we should come to expect the unexpected.
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