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Okay, so I've been reading up on Chaos Theory, especially in regards to sociology. I seem to understand it fairly well; it's pretty simple stuff. My only question is what political system (i.e. socialism, democracy, anarchism, etc.) does Chaos Theory support? I would think it'd be somewhere in the field of anarchism and one of its many derivitives, considering how Chaos Theory explains the inevitability of everything; but I was reading an article on the internet that sort of justifies Karl Marx's "dialectic materialism" and his ideas of communism. So which is it?

2006-11-29 13:30:58 · 3 answers · asked by Smokey 2 in Politics & Government Politics

3 answers

A butterfly flaps its wings and it rains in new york

A man says happy birthday at Strom Thurmon's party and he is forced to resign

2006-11-29 13:51:34 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

all politics represent chaos theory. this is simply stated by looking at socioeconomic effect of political decisions. there are not directly correlated but effect it in different ways depending on the political and world climate at the time. simplistically you have to look at the world as a whole and think how one decision (or beginning of motion) will set off a catechism of effects in different perspectives throughout the world. there is no reason most of the time its just the tides eb and flows.

2006-11-29 14:38:21 · answer #2 · answered by CaptainObvious 7 · 1 0

Whenever you insert people into your equations - it's chaos theory at its finest.

Your question cannot be answered because the characteristics of any of the political systems you allude to have people as the prime factor - and, therefore, the outcome can not be determined.

2006-11-29 13:40:59 · answer #3 · answered by LeAnne 7 · 0 1

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