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The Edge of Chaos
Life could not exist in
a totally ordered world or a totally chaotic world. We live in a world
where
there is a mix of both. There is enough structure that there is a sense
of
permanence and continuity in our lives. We can reasonably predict much
of what
will happen in our lives. We form a generally stable sense of personal
identity
which enables us to interact with the people around us. The patterns of
the
seasons and the heavens, the laws of physics, and even our own human
laws give our
lives enough structure and predictability to avoid becoming overwhelmed. At the same time there
is enough diversity and unpredictability in life so that new and
unknown things
regularly appear in our world, things we can make use of to improve and
grow.
That unpredictability is generally not so large that we are overwhelmed
by
change. Life exists at a balance point between order and chaos. Consider people running.
They want to get to their goal as quickly as possible. Some runners
will choose
to be slow, careful and ordered in their running to make sure they do
not fall
over and perhaps not even finish the race. While the risk of total
failure is
low, they take too long to reach the goal. Some runners will put all
their
efforts into going as fast as possible, using all their energy, running
in a
more chaotic fashion. They will indeed advance more quickly, but the
danger of
falling and injuring themselves would be much increased. Neither
approach is
effective in the long term. Being too ordered takes too long, while
being too
chaotic is too dangerous. What is needed is the best balance point
where the
runner reaches the goal in a shortest reasonable time and the risk of
injury is
sufficiently reduced, so that overall the running is optimally
effective. If it
is too ordered it needs to become more chaotic, and if too chaotic, to
become
more ordered. The most effective
balance point called the Edge of Chaos, turns out to be just before the
runner
lapses into chaos. The risk of falling into chaos and being injured is
still
real and catastrophes can and do occur in Edge of Chaos systems, but
overall,
it is the most effective place to be. The Edge of Chaos is not
a stable balance point. The balance point is a dynamic balance point
where
effort must be constantly made to maintain stability. The runner
similarly
needs to slow down a bit when the terrain becomes steeper or more
difficult to
traverse and speed up when it becomes more even. A tight rope walker is
also an
example of a dynamic balance point. The walker does not just set the
balance
and then forget it. The balance point is constantly being reset and by
maintaining that dynamic balance, the walker can traverse the rope. The Edge of Chaos is
more than just a balance point. It is a point of emergence. When the
Edge of
Chaos is reached, whole new behaviours can emerge that could not have
been
previously predicted before. Emergent behaviour occurs in many complex
systems,
where a system spontaneously develops new system wide properties and
new levels
of complexity that is not at all apparent, if we only view the
individual
agents. Looking an in individual ant gives us no clue as to the complex
co-ordination that is evident in an entire ant colony. There is a chemical
example of the Edge of Chaos system called the Belousov - Zhabotinsky
reaction
where two chemicals are mixed and spun around between two cylinders. At
the
critical point of the Edge of Chaos, the whole mixture changes
rhythmically
from one colour to another rather than just a mix of the two colours.
That
change could not have been predicted just by looking at the original
chemicals. The Edge of Chaos is
found very often in nature; throughout ecosystems, in human dynamics,
and in
many other places in the world about us. Per Bak is particularly known for his work developing the concept of self-organised criticality. It says that large complex systems such as those found in nature tend to move towards the Edge of Chaos. If they are too ordered they self-adjust to become more chaotic and if they are too chaotic they self adjust to become more ordered. When complex systems do move to the Edge of Chaos they tend to self-organise to be scale free and exhibit power law distributions (to be discussed later). Novel emergent properties can develop from this critical state. Self-organised criticality has also been proposed to apply to economics, traffic jams, forest fires and even the brain. Self organised criticality is also used in the theory of Punctuated Equilibria, which proposes that evolution has not occurred as a slow incremental process, but rather by long periods of time with relatively little change taking place, punctuated by times of intense change, triggered by some critical states in the eco-system. While it appears logical that the Edge of Chaos would
be the most effect
state for complex systems, there is a great deal of debate as to
whether
natural systems automatically move towards the Edge of Chaos. Measuring real life systems moving towards
self-organised criticality at
the Edge of Chaos proves more difficult that it would first appear. It
is
likely that in real life staying at the Edge of Chaos is just too
stressful to
maintain. Instead, organisms may move to the Edge of Chaos for short
periods,
where they receive a boost, but are not able to maintain that state.
They then
drop back until they have integrated the changes before once again
approaching
the Edge of Chaos. Rene Thom developed
Catastrophe Theory and looked at systems at the Edge of Chaos
identified
critical points where a complex system was more likely to lapse.
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