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To: Borges
I'd be curious to hear what the Scientific community here thinks about things like the Golden Mean and Mandelbrot sets. Reoccurring patterns throughout nature.

I don't count as a member of any sort of 'scientific community'--I'm a layman who never really 'got it' with calculus. But you've raised an interesting point, I'd be interested in some reflections as well. I do know that among some early Greek philosophers, such as Pythagoras, numbers seemed embued with all kinds of 'arcane' and supernatural powers. All ultimately hooey, of course--but a good illustration of the power of 'awe' on our minds, our need to find patterns (even if in the fleeting shapes of clouds).

And dare I suggest (I'm grimacing as I type this bit), that even the most 'hardened' Darwinist (and these days, I'm probably not too far off from such) can experience a sense of wonder, delight, and indeed reverence in the face of the splendid complexities of the natural world?

Or is that just some dreadful bit of wet quasi-hippy drivel I've just spouted?

112 posted on 09/08/2005 2:38:27 PM PDT by SeaLion (I wanted to be an orphan, but my parents wouldn't let me)
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To: SeaLion
And dare I suggest (I'm grimacing as I type this bit), that even the most 'hardened' Darwinist (and these days, I'm probably not too far off from such) can experience a sense of wonder, delight, and indeed reverence in the face of the splendid complexities of the natural world?

Yes!!! Read Unweaving the Rainbow by Richard Dawkins. It addresses exactly that. :-)
213 posted on 09/08/2005 6:07:52 PM PDT by Vive ut Vivas
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