Author: omerasim
-
Three-Body II. ARK Lens: Why Mass is Not the Culprit
“Beyond Chaos: Rewriting the Three-Body Problem” Reinterpreting the Three-Body Problem through Adaptive Resonant Kinetics 1. Introduction In classical treatments of the Three-Body Problem, mass is held sacred: immutable, causal, central. The equations assume it, the instabilities trace back to it, and the chaos is often blamed on it. But what if mass is not the…
-
Three-Body I. The Problem That Refuses to Settle
“Beyond Chaos: Rewriting the Three-Body Problem” Reframing the Three-Body Problem through the Autorite Lens 1. Introduction Some problems endure not because they are unsolvable, but because the way we ask them is incomplete. The Three-Body Problem is such a question: elegant, historical, impossible. It has confounded mathematicians and physicists for centuries, not through lack of…
-
The Anatomy of Chaos
I. Chaos as Deterministic Uncertainty What if predictability were merely an illusion — a shadow cast by complexity onto the walls of our simplified models? Chaos theory introduces a foundational paradox into the structure of systems thinking: a system may follow strictly deterministic rules and yet remain functionally unpredictable. This tension is not the product…
-
Introducing DAM: Rethinking Mathematics for a Complex World
Why a New Mathematics? We live in a world that’s anything but simple. From ecosystems to economies, from climate to consciousness, the systems around us are tangled, adaptive, and ever-changing. Yet, for centuries, mathematics has tried to make sense of this world by reducing, simplifying, and abstracting away complexity. It’s worked—up to a point. But as…
-
From Simplification to Authenticity: DAM and the Quest to See the World As It Is
The Human Urge to Simplify Since the dawn of civilization, humans have used mathematics to decode the mysteries of the universe. From the motions of planets to the structures of atoms, mathematics has served as our language of order and predictability. But there’s a catch: the mathematics we use is almost always a simplification. Why?Because the…