jimharvard said:
simply put, if one finds that the proportion of large and small trees occurring randomly in a forest is exactly what a fractal mathematical formula would predict that the forest should look like based upon a given fractal formula
I saw that show too. Nova? Bottom line is that whatever "orthodox" science may state, I dare say (IMHO) that no thinking (open-minded and reasonable...) scientist would suggest that fractals play no role in physical environments, at least as a "tendency." (The coastline of Britain is just how long again? Crystals grows exactly... how?)
The problem as I see it, and I suggest it as a "problem" if only because you felt the need to ask the question you asked (and I am rather grotesquely overgeneralizing here, likely consequence of some bad experiences with "scientists") is when you get "them" (i.e the scientific establishment as an entirety) thinking about human environments; and then all logic goes out the window.
For instance: Can the study of fractals be applied to the study of social and psychological environments? To me it's a no-brainer. Which, in part, is why I view Ken Ono et al's recent mathematical discovery regarding the fractal behavior of partition numbers as truly ground-breaking. How do "we," individually or collectively, partition "thought" in the cognitive and/or social "forest" of mind/society?
Answer: Nobody knows.
But, in tandem with the common sense understanding that a) human cognition is recursive in nature (i.e one thought leads to another), and b) that while history may not repeat, it does "rhyme" (Mark Twain), there is now a powerful new mathematical tool out there, from a modeling standpoint, to (maybe) begin to try to find out.
Yet, from personal anecdotal experience, I can only suggest that notions such as I herein state or imply (i.e that the "laws" of both Mathematics and Physics can at times be applicable within the human domain, and vice-versa...) are regarded as tantamount to "heresy" by at least some working scientists. Go figure. "The Dark Ages" is very much a relative term.
- RF