The edge of chaos
HAVE you ever experienced that eerie feeling of a thought popping into your head as if from nowhere, with no clue as to why you had that particular idea at that particular time? You may think that such fleeting thoughts, however random they seem, must be the product of predictable and rational processes. After all, the brain cannot be random, can it? Surely it processes information using ordered, logical operations, like a powerful computer?
Actually, no. In reality, your brain operates on the edge of chaos. Though much of the time it runs in an orderly and stable way, every now and again it suddenly and unpredictably lurches into a blizzard of noise.
Disorderly genius: How chaos drives the brain, by David Robson in New Scientist.
Disorder is essential. I’m putting that on a t-shirt.
July 15th, 2009 at 13:19
Is chaos self-caused or there’s a hidden mechanism that generates it?
July 15th, 2009 at 16:46
I just finished reading A Home at the End of the World, and The Brief and Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, by Junot Diaz. Trying to reread Hamlet since I saw it on HBO.