Be Careful Whether Chaos, Climate Change, And Rev. Martin Luther’s Flea Join.

Pandemics used to be the consequence of several events’ conjunction.

Agustín Muñoz-Sanz
ILLUMINATION

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Jules Henri Poincaré (1854–1912) was an intellectual whose wisdom encompassed diverse subjects. An authentic polymath. He made significant contributions to the mathematical sciences.

On his three-body problem solution, Albert Einstein (1879–1955) based the relativity theory. The cited three-body problem is a complex issue on stars’ mobility in the solar system. Poincaré laid the foundations of chaotic systems.

Nothing depends on chance, and nothing is random. There are specific laws that explain the fortuitous processes. Chance is only the measure of our ignorance, Poincaré wrote in his book Science and Method.

Let say something about chaos and butterflies.

(I apologize to mathematicians and meteorologists for my boldness in this field).

In the 1960s, American mathematician Edward Norton Lorenz (1917–2008) developed chaos theory. It happened by chance. What a curious paradox! Chance driving to the idea of non-chance. His original is in the article Deterministic Nonperiodic Flow.

Lorenz’s professional interest was in weather forecasting. He said the following: the outcome of something depends on different variables. And it is impossible to predict. With his idea, he put in flight the…

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Agustín Muñoz-Sanz
ILLUMINATION

Medical Doctor (Infectious Diseases specialist/Professor of Medicine) and writer (narrative, theater).