Talk:Chaos Inducement/@comment-34296310-20180111120210

I'm about to bullshit you with some sick philosophy.

What is chaos? What is order? That depends only on one's point of view. For the sake of an experiment, let's assume that order is complexity, structure and capacity for patterns to be created, while chaos is the lack of those things.

The truth is, chaos and order are the same thing in disguise. Just take a look at our universe:

Many philosophers mention the concept of homogenous chaos that our world was before and at the time of its creation. They aren't wrong. That is what the world was at the time of big bang, monogenous space filled with protons, electrons and neutrons crammed neatly and tightly in the universe. Keep that word in mind, 'monogenous'.

Now look at our universe in the present-so many structures, so many elements of the periodic table, so many different things, patterns everywhere. Absolutes meet, so much variety. If you take two cubic metres of space from separate ends of the universe or close to each other, it is overwhelmingly likely they are very different in contents.

Chaos is monogenous, order is variety...

N̷O̵,̷ ̸T̷H̸I̶S̶ ̶I̷S̸ ̵W̵R̷O̴N̶G̸,̶ ̴I̷T̸ ̵M̴A̶K̵E̸S̶ ̴N̸O̵ ̶S̷E̷N̴S̷E̵.̷

Doesn't add up at all.

Monogeny, all-sameness, isn't this order. Everything being of the same structure, following the same rules in orderly fashion? Lack of rules and variety, isn't it chaos. Inconsistency, all makes little sense and follows different rules at each layer?

Anarchy will be followed more faithfully than law, more consistently, from a certain point of view its simplicity can be viewed as reliability, chaos does not require resources to keep itself from collapsing. Law is complex, contradicts human nature and itself, is very likely to break down.

Those who control chaos control order in the same way as someone who controls light controls darkness.

Is lack of order chaos, or is lack of chaos order? Is there even a difference?

In this case only the observer's choice matters.

But surely someone who controls one controls both.

Ketchup to the ketchup god. Funny bones to the funny bone throne.