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----- Original Message ----- From: "Brian Good" <bsgood@adelphia.net> > You could make things even "fractaler" by applying the same method to > pitch, if you don't mind jettisoning the twelve-note-per-octave >chromatic > scale. Play a chord. Pick one note as the root. Note the ratios of the > frequencies of all the other notes to that of the root. Scale the ratios > by a number much less than one, generating a new "chord" whose pitches >are > likely much closer together than a half step. Replace each note in the > original chord with a copy of the "chord," pitch-shifted to the original > root. Repeat until traumatized. I like this. Now this is starting to seem like the fractal examples I am accustomed to reading about or seeing. By the way, having a background in philosophy, I discovered that some of Leibniz' thoughts influenced fractal theory, which makes a lot of sense to me in the above example. He built a metaphysical system of thought, his depiction of the universe, which consisted of an infinite number of "monads"...sort of like self-contained "windowless" metaphysical atoms. According to his system each monad is a world unto itself, in that it reflects the whole like a mirror. It's a bizarre theory, very spooky. In short, each part reflects some nature of the whole, as in the example above with those chords, as in the phenomenon of holographic images (though only in similarity, not exactness, to appease Rainer and Andy)....the whole is the big monad, or "Modad" as I like to call it. :) By the way, Leibniz looked like a modern rock star: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leibniz "Mandelbrot's well-known fractal geometry drew on Leibniz's notions of self-similarity and the principle of continuity: natura non facit saltus. We also see that when Leibniz wrote, in a metaphysical vein, that "the straight line is a curve, any part of which is similar to the whole..." he was anticipating topology by more than two centuries." Here is another really interesting article on Leibniz' monads and their fractal properties...fascinating. Now I want to go back and read his Monadology again. Another analogy to fractal theory, which actuallyl came before fractal theory is the Rationalist theory of knowledge (Leibniz was a Rationalist by the way, so this makes sense), such as from Decartes and Spinoza. One might describe Descartes system of knowledge by the "pocket paradox" analogy, wherebye putting my hand in my own pocket, I can tell what is in the contents of someone else's pocket, direct knowledge with no empirical data. Likewise, according to Rationalists, you can actually reveal the secrets of the universe (truths) via the mind alone...again, that concept of the whole being contained in each part in some fashion. The cosmos inside the mind, such that we can metaphorically "view" its structure and deduce truths. Kris