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Slate explains that the opening line of the movie, “Chaos is order yet undeciphered” is from a line from José Saramago’s The Double, the novel on which the movie is based. Slate suggests that the Enemy is "a parable about what it’s like to live under a totalitarian state without knowing it."
Graffiti with quote from The Double: O caos é uma ordem por decifrar ("Chaos is order yet undeciphered."). Alberto Manguel in The Guardian said Saramago did not push the concept of the double far enough, noting that every culture plays with this idea.
List of ciphertexts. ... in chronological order by date, are: Year of origin Ciphertext Decipherment status ... Undeciphered writing systems ...
MIT scientists discovered particles transition from chaos to order due to entropy. This breakthrough reveals hidden dynamics of collective motion in systems.
Beyond Order has been criticized by literary critics for the way that it portrayed their reviews on the book's back cover. On a social media post, James Marriott, who had called Peterson's philosophy "bonkers" on several occasions, shared a photo of the back cover of the book, which quoted him describing the book as "a philosophy of the meaning ...
The prominent feature of systems with self-adjusting parameters is an ability to avoid chaos. The name for this phenomenon is "Adaptation to the edge of chaos". Adaptation to the edge of chaos refers to the idea that many complex adaptive systems (CASs) seem to intuitively evolve toward a regime near the boundary between chaos and order. [19]
As suggested in Lorenz's book entitled The Essence of Chaos, published in 1993, [6]: 8 "sensitive dependence can serve as an acceptable definition of chaos". In the same book, Lorenz defined the butterfly effect as: "The phenomenon that a small alteration in the state of a dynamical system will cause subsequent states to differ greatly from the ...
Chaos and Order (or officially The Gap into Madness: Chaos and Order) is a science fiction novel by American writer Stephen R. Donaldson, the fourth book of The Gap Cycle series. [1] It was published in 1994.