Sunday 29 July 2012

Chaos - Definition & Inspirations










Chaos
cha·os/ˈkāäs/
Noun:
1.        Complete disorder and confusion.
2.       Behavior so unpredictable as to appear random, owing to great sensitivity to small changes in conditions.

The word itself brings is the idea of undefined order.  Despite the common idea : “chaos” taken for a negative word, there are some positive sides as well.

Chaos is the origin of order. Without chaos there is no order. Just like light and darkness or sound and silence.

Chaos is rejecting all you have learned, chaos is being yourself.  Emile M. Cioran

Chaos often breeds life when order breeds habit.  Henry Adams

Freedom is just Chaos, with better lighting. Alan Dean Foster

I have great belief in the fact that whenever there is chaos, it creates wonderful thinking. I consider chaos a gift.  Septima Clark

I'm definitely more attracted to chaos than to order. Connie Nielsen

You must have chaos within you to give birth to a dancing star.  Friedrich Nietzsche

Invention, it must be humbly admitted, does not consist in creating out of void but out of chaos.
Mary Shelley
Chaos results when the world changes faster than people.

Chaos often breeds life, when order breeds habit.

Chaos is the enemy of Order but the enemy of Chaos is also the enemy of Order.

In all chaos there is a cosmos, in all disorder a secret order. Carl Jung

Chaos was the law of nature; Order was the dream of man.

Chaos is where we take our creativity from. If there was no chaos we would do the same things over and over again. Inspiration is brought to us by our chaotic mind – ideas come out of chaos. Trying to define the word Is quite a task. Learning how to take the best out of our thoughts is very important.

Some more interpretations on Chaos under the form of a conversation between a student and a tutor taken from here 

                                        ""

Student: I have played the so-called Chaos Game and experimented with the Simple Forest Fire. Both of these are somehow related to chaos. I'm confused though because I thought chaos was a word to describe disorder such as the chaos of New York traffic.
Mentor: Well, that is one definition of chaos, but the term chaos is also used to express a mathematical theory. You are thinking of chaos in the vernacular sense, but for this activity it is representing a mathematical idea.
Student: OK, I'll try to think of it as a mathematical term. In that case, what is chaos??
Mentor: Let's see if you can figure it out. Chaos can be present in many ways. In the Chaos Game it's present when even though the result of each individual throw of the die is unpredictable there is an overall pattern resulting from many throws of the die. In the Fire!! activity a small change in the beginning probability of burn resulted in different overall percentages of the forest burned.
Student: Oh, I think I'm getting it. Chaos is when there is an overall pattern that results from seemingly random events.
Mentor: Yes, you are getting it. But there is a little more than just that. Chaos is also present when the final outcome of a chain of events becomes unpredictable because of a small change in the events leading up to the outcome. This can also be seen in the Fire!! activity. By slowly changing the probability of burn, the resulting overall percent of the forest burned fluctuates drastically.
E. N. Lorenz first stumbled upon this latter idea in 1956 when he was trying to look at modeling the weather using mathematical equations. He found some good equations to work with (they now bear his name) and saw that if he made very small changes to the initial inputs for the weather, he got dramatically different, unpredictable results (outputs). Moreover, the further into the future he tried to predict, the worse it got!
Student: Weather forecasters seem to be able to predict the weather now at least for a little while into the future.
Mentor: That's because they've had over 40 years to find better equations. But they still don't have great predictions past two or three days.
Student: So if chaos is present, we can't do anything with our computer information? If it is not good for predicting, why do it?
Mentor: There are several reasons to look at chaos. Think about the Chaos game. The unpredictability on the small scale (where to move next) results in a predictable fractal shape! Chaos and Fractals are very closely linked. Chaotic things can end up with very interesting -- and predictable -- fractal patterns. The particular individual numbers are not predictable, but the overall pattern can be. With chaotic systems like weather, we just have to be careful about how far into the future we can predict.

                           ""
The main idea of this project is to demonstrate how we create. How we gather information, that we have received from various sources ( exhibitions, music, TV, news, shows, conversations...) and have transformed it into something new. I think this represents chaos and order of thoughts. The ability of a creative mind to take many bits and pieces and give them a whole new meaning and form. The Artistic chaos is something quite common, and in order to put everything in order first it has to be a chaos. 
I want to give a visual representation of this chaos. To find as many forms of chaos in our lives and to visualise them via photography and typography.

Here are some inspirational examples of Chaos:














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