Come on, you know it. The story about the butterflies. How the flapping of their tiny, delicate wings somewhere on, say, the South American continent, will influence a storm in upstate New York or Southern California. The story is used to illuminate a central tenant of what has come to be known as chaos theory, the idea that an act so small, so distant, so seemingly random and irrelevant can have monstrous, life and universe-changing consequences.
The theory applies to more than just the weather, it can be used to explain the course of history, HIV/AIDS, interplanetary gravitational pulls, and yes, even our own messy lives. James Yorke coined the phrase “Chaos Theory.” He’s this year’s winner of the prestigious Japan Prize for his contribution to science. He’s with us this hour, bringing order finally, to our chaos
Guests:
James Yorke, Professor of Mathematics and Physics at the University of Maryland.