information for a dissertation

LHudicek@AOL.COM LHudicek@AOL.COM
Sun, 17 Feb 2002 08:32:14 EST


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In a message dated 2/16/2002 11:45:51 AM Eastern Standard Time, 
cedel@supernet.com writes:


> Oh, come on now.  That I will never believe.  Have you done scientific 
> research to support such a conclusion? Regards, 
> Clyde Hollinger 
> 
> 

Actually it stems from the scientific/mathematical study of chaos (no not 
what we feel everytime we have to go to work - the idea that two trajectories 
that start out almost exactly the same will appear to be unrelated after a 
period of time).  No, I'm not positive that the toss of a coin is the only 
thing... in fact, I think that computers can be programmed to run random 
numbers. But there are few things that are truly random. I'm sure this isn't 
the appropriate list to post this to, and I'm not a chaos theorist, but I 
will rarely say something I cannot back up - a least a little bit.  Check out 
James Gleick's Chaos: Making a New Science. (I've never sounded more like a 
nerd in my life!)

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