
Why chaos is good, actually

There are countless directions to explore, and we never know which will guide us to a dead end and which will lead to new realms until we test it.
Rick Rubin • The Creative Act: A Way of Being: The Sunday Times bestseller
sometimes the most destabilizing chaos isn’t on the world stage. Nor is it a public outrage or even a shared experience.
It’s found instead in the quiet chaos of our everyday lives: making a home, raising a family, putting a meal on the table. These mundane corners of the human experience are also where we find the loosest pockets of culture today:
... See moreJasmine Bina • A Time to Build Tight Brands in the Chaos of Loose Cultures
The irreversibility of time is the mechanism that brings order out of chaos. —ILYA PRIGOGINE
Cesar Hidalgo • Why Information Grows: The Evolution of Order, from Atoms to Economies
chaos is a science of process rather than state, of becoming rather than being.
James Gleick • Chaos: Making a New Science
The world contained in this data does not operate according to the neat Newtonian rules of cause and effect but spirals into the baffling complexity of chaos theory, wherein everything is connected to everything else and even small changes have widespread repercussions. Or rather, this is the world that had always been there, lurking beyond our lim
... See moreMeghan O'Gieblyn • God, Human, Animal, Machine: Technology, Metaphor, and the Search for Meaning
Lorenz realized that it could. The most basic tenet of chaos theory is that a small change in initial conditions—a butterfly flapping its wings in Brazil—can produce a large and unexpected divergence in outcomes—a tornado in Texas. This does not mean that the behavior of the system is random, as the term “chaos” might seem to imply. Nor is chaos th
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