What’s the last dollar they can print before financial crisis?
In the field of mathematics, chaos theory studies the behavior of systems that are highly sensitive to initial conditions.
The idea in chaos is that, like life itself, where you start today has tremendous influence on what happens next.
In chaos, even very tiny changes to initial conditions can lead to wildly divergent outcomes further down the line.
Again, think about life: how different would your outcome be if you’d been born in the next town over? Or to different parents?
The film ‘Jurassic Park’, adapted from Michael Crighton’s novel, brought chaos theory into the popular realm.
A wealthy scientist, John Hammond (played by Richard Attenborough), uses DNA derived from fossilized mosquitoes to recreate dinosaurs on a remote island.
But once brought back to life, won’t they breed?
No, says Hammond. Because all the dinosaurs on the island are engineered to be female, by way of chromosome control.
Dr. Ian Malcolm, a chaos expert played by Jeff Goldblum, has been brought along to assess the project. His assessment is skeptical to the point of hostility:
“[T]he kind of control you’re attempting is not possible. If there’s one thing the history of evolution has taught us, it’s that life will not be contained. Life breaks free. It expands to new territories. It crashes through barriers. Painfully, maybe even… dangerously…
“I’m simply saying that life… finds a way.”
Life -nature- does indeed find a way, and Malcolm barely survives into the inevitable sequel.
Jurassic Park is, of course, a work of fiction.
That central banks that exist today, on the other hand, are fact.
And it is fact that for several years they have been attempting to artificially manipulate the market.
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