The "butterfly effect" was originally a term in physics, referring to a dynamic system, a small change in initial conditions can drive a long-term huge chain reaction of the entire system. Also known as a chaotic phenomenon. The most commonly heard statement about the "butterfly effect" is: "A butterfly flapping its wings in Brazil can cause a tornado in Texas a month later." In 1963, an American meteorologist Edward Laurent This effect was analyzed in a paper by Edward Lorenz. "If this theory is proven correct, the flapping of a seagull's wings will be enough to change the weather forever." In later speeches and papers, Edward switched to the more romantic butterfly metaphor, which is the most romantic of today. popular saying.
The concept of "butterfly effect" is usually applied to complex systems such as weather and stock market that are difficult to predict within a certain period of time. Deviations will cause great differences in results. The "butterfly effect" is used in sociology to illustrate that a small loophole, if it is not improved and adjusted in time, will cause unimaginable disasters; and a small idea, as long as it is fermented for a period of time, can also produce big influence. In addition, the "butterfly effect" often appears in chaos related works.
"The Butterfly Effect" is beautiful, everyone knows it. "Butterfly Effect II" is really two...
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