 The word "chaos" is sometimes taken to mean 
the opposite of "cosmos", in that the latter 
term has connotations of "order". Until the 
last few decades, chaotic systems have not
been studied nearly as much as ordered systems,
perhaps because chaotic systems are far more
difficult to understand...
The word "chaos" is sometimes taken to mean 
the opposite of "cosmos", in that the latter 
term has connotations of "order". Until the 
last few decades, chaotic systems have not
been studied nearly as much as ordered systems,
perhaps because chaotic systems are far more
difficult to understand...
One non-technical definition of a chaotic system goes as follows: A chaotic system is one in which a tiny change can have a huge effect. Thus the oft heard statement that a butterfly in China can cause a hurricane in the Atlantic (aka the Butterfly Effect.) What makes the situation even more difficult is that we have only recently begun to forge the mathematical tools necessary to study these problems. As usual, some of the seminal works on chaos were performed by physicists of the former USSR, whose work received scant attention until recently; although today, chaotic systems are being extensively studied both experimentally and theoretically.