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Redefining Reality - The Intellectual Implications of Modern Science

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One <strong>of</strong> the simplest fractal patterns is the Koch curve, also called<br />

<br />

equilateral triangle and building<br />

additional equilateral triangles<br />

<strong>of</strong>f it. Because <strong>of</strong> the way it is<br />

constructed, any place we look<br />

<br />

how close or how far we are<br />

from it, it looks the same. This<br />

self-similarity across different<br />

scales is the hallmark <strong>of</strong> fractals.<br />

<br />

in all sorts <strong>of</strong> irregular but not<br />

random places in nature: leaves<br />

on trees, cracks in the Earth,<br />

coastlines, the internal structure<br />

<strong>of</strong> crystals, and so on. Because<br />

<br />

also use them to model nature,<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

been using fractals to create more realistic landscapes in computergenerated<br />

graphics used for the backgrounds <strong>of</strong> movies.<br />

<strong>Reality</strong> seems more real to us when it is modeled on chaos. <strong>Science</strong><br />

<br />

seems to give rise to disorder. In examining that disorder in a closer<br />

<br />

within the universe that we never thought was present.<br />

© AdrianHancu/iStock/Thinkstock.<br />

<br />

Barabasi, Linked.<br />

Bradbury, “A Sound <strong>of</strong> Thunder.”<br />

Gleick, .<br />

73

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