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Krispen Hartung wrote: > I like this. Now this is starting to seem like the fractal examples I am > accustomed to reading about or seeing. <snip> > 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. :) Well, most of the naturally-occurring fractal structures I know about, e.g. soot particles, aerogels, etc., are only statistically fractal; they don't contain scaled-down exact duplicates of their larger structure. > 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. Monadology...what a great name for a bebop tune. > 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 I wonder if you could make a broad argument that this (the hand in the pocket trick) in some way presaged quantum entanglement? Nah, too much of a stretch. Anyway, I think you've just tripled my knowledge of philosophy. Thanks. :-) Brian