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Re: [microsound] Chuck
On Wed, 27 Sep 2006, aleks vasic wrote:
> Beauty in Nature is chaos, but mass amounts of unorganized information always
> tends to organize itself in a systematic manner. Hence a tree always looking
> like a tree, or a snowflake always looking like a snowflake. They may not be
> identical, but you know an oak from a palm, just as you would know a Jet
> engine from a lawnmower engine.
How are trees and snowflakes composed of unorganized masses? It seems
likely that any observed disorder in the case of a tree is superficial and
due to a lack of order finding faculties, that each leaf is symptomatic of
organization. The axiom of choice seems always borne out, even if the
choice function is without apparent sense, or inaccessible.
Just how are unorganised masses supposed to come about to be organised
when there is, if not a prime mover, a before-this mover?
--
Dear Patron Saint,
your lips are lopsided
www.devo.com/exegene
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