Implications of Chaos Theory on Changing Scientific Framesets | Newton to Now

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers on the implications of chaos theory for the evolution of scientific frameworks, particularly the transition from deterministic views of the universe, as exemplified by Newtonian physics, to more chaotic or probabilistic interpretations. Participants explore whether chaos theory challenges the classical definitions of science and the concept of a clockwork universe.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Exploratory

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants question the implications of chaos theory on scientific development and whether it signifies a shift from deterministic to probabilistic views of the universe.
  • There is a contention regarding whether chaos theory is truly deterministic, with some asserting that chaos, as studied mathematically, is deterministic chaos, while others express confusion about its implications.
  • Participants discuss the relationship between initial conditions and outcomes in chaotic systems, with some arguing that identical initial conditions should yield identical results, while others highlight the complexity of human factors that may prevent this.
  • Some participants express skepticism about using philosophical interpretations, such as those from Ilya Prigogine, to understand chaos theory, while others defend Prigogine's contributions to the field.
  • There is mention of quantum mechanics introducing unpredictability and non-determinism, which some argue is distinct from classical chaos.
  • The role of probability in physical equations and its potential effects on scientific principles is questioned, with participants seeking to understand the broader implications of chaos and quantum physics.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of views, with no clear consensus on the implications of chaos theory or the validity of deterministic versus probabilistic interpretations. The discussion remains unresolved, with competing perspectives on the nature of chaos and its relationship to classical and quantum physics.

Contextual Notes

Participants note the complexity of defining initial conditions in chaotic systems and the potential influence of human factors on predictability. There is also a distinction made between classical chaos and quantum chaos, with ongoing debates about their implications for scientific understanding.

hypermonkey2
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The question i would like to raise is what exactly are the implications of chaos theory on the way science is developping? More specifically, is there any trouble in changing framesets from a deterministic view of the universe to a perhaps more chaotic or probabilistic one? If so, what changes had to be made from the definition of classical science and of its method from the days of Newton and Galileo? Does the idea of a clockwork universe still hold?
What do we think?
 
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I was under the impression that chaos theory was deterministic at low level processing.
 
But can we still say that every event is the consequence of another, and given the same initial conditions, the same results will be obtained? If so, where does human will fit in? ( i realize this is an expansion, so that question can be ignored if need be)
 
neurocomp2003 said:
I was under the impression that chaos theory was deterministic at low level processing.

Chaos as studied by mathematicians is deterministic, in fact it is often called Deterministic Chaos. The tracks of a chaotic system in phase space are perfectly well defined paths, but they get so close together so fast that you can't separate them in finite time.
 
selfAdjoint said:
Chaos as studied by mathematicians is deterministic, in fact it is often called Deterministic Chaos. The tracks of a chaotic system in phase space are perfectly well defined paths, but they get so close together so fast that you can't separate them in finite time.


So what does this mean exactly? I feel that perhaps i did not quite understand what Ilya Prigogine was saying about how Newtonian determinism has failed. Do scientists still believe that the universe is regular and predictable, or has chaos invoked slight changes to this view?
 
Quantum mechanics pretty much ruled out the 'predictable' aspect long ago.
 
hypermonkey2 said:
So what does this mean exactly? I feel that perhaps i did not quite understand what Ilya Prigogine was saying about how Newtonian determinism has failed. Do scientists still believe that the universe is regular and predictable, or has chaos invoked slight changes to this view?

I would strongly suggest you don't use a philosopher like Prigogine as a basis of understanding the principles of physics.

The term "chaos" should not be confused with the pedestrian use of the word as defined in a standard dictionary. Chaos in mathematics and physics does not mean "it's all a jumble of event and no one can deterministically predict an outcome". This is not true. The principle of classical chaos theory is deterministic - it is why it is called deterministic chaos.

However, there's an emerging area of quantum chaos which isn't deterministic. This is still a new, active research field and should NOT be used as the predominant definition of the whole field of chaos research.

http://www.physlink.com/News/11905QuantumChaos.cfm

Zz.
 
thanks for the link. But in this case, am i to understand that the introduction of probability into physical equations has had no effect on the underlying principles of science? I would really like to understand the implications. If not just chaos theory, then could such a conclusion (against regularity and predictability) be drawn from quantum physics in general?
 
Look at it this way. Chaos generally means classical chaos, and classical means predictable, deterministic etc.

In the early 20th century, classical mechanics was shown to be wrong for certain phenomena; it was replaced by quantum mechanics, as the most fundamental physical framework we have. This is where we get unpredictability, non-determinism etc. from. There is also a special kind of quantum chaos which is chaos but based on quantum principles; but fundamentally it's the quantum bit that makes it non-deterministic, not the chaos bit.
 
  • #10
yes hypermonkey given the same Initial conditions(exactly 100% the same exact ICs a system should repeat)...however unfortunately the human brain constitutes 100billion neurosn with an even higher exponential environmental factor. so ideally setting the same ICS may be impossible, in the physical sense.
 
  • #11
neurocomp2003 said:
yes hypermonkey given the same Initial conditions(exactly 100% the same exact ICs a system should repeat)...however unfortunately the human brain constitutes 100billion neurosn with an even higher exponential environmental factor. so ideally setting the same ICS may be impossible, in the physical sense.

Does this apply for radioactive decay as well? Or is it more in the sense that given the same ICS, the probabilities will remain the same?
 
  • #12
i think the issue is rather not will the mechanism be the same...but whether one can truly perform the exact same ICs.
 
  • #13
In QM, even if the probablilities are the same, the outcome will not be (which is why systems are only described in terms of probability functions).
 
  • #14
ZapperZ said:
I would strongly suggest you don't use a philosopher like Prigogine as a basis of understanding the principles of physics.

I do not think it is fair to dimiss Prigogine so casually offhandedly. Progogine was a talented physicist whose work on Nonlinear dynamics is greatly respected among those of the mathematics community who study such. I will not go so far as to say he was a leading authority on the subject but I do not feel it is fair to dismiss his work as nothing more than philosophy.

I think what he meant by the failure of Newtonian dynamics is nothing more than the insensibility of a concept of a clockwork universe.
 
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