Complexity & Chaos 175 bp» Vidas Spiel Ata hid ehn eeerlin AE Ep, Vip eae Neen Sido Lema a ioe Ley GI pee Peri efits rd tally Mcp ay) oy gether a ALE it elie ip Piet Bes aes Lie AETIEEE GLEE LE TPE IE En VE ERI A i I Ee fee ie eee LRG UD Di ogg NIN pep Tis Milian bphceion deplore WHA ee Leber re ped Waa Rei eee biter. Aietibe ene ay Samy wiaiginaeiern LE BEL IS LUE IL Te deh See Oe ne tik Vegi are aun Mra my ailyg thot on ape TnUaEN Lola EM ie: psy ears DapiarePe phere oie le he Seep ep Negra ON Weng aE I ee Le ILI ey pus Deepiies Wein ae oe Pasir y re ear uit i y) peepee Poth te dedi de tes eI SO gta OTN Era De ig Maia Se De AS VL pean eae Uige i ue Nira Mira Coury NNT asa LIN LETS ES ELGOMRa GIES ST Cellular Automaton prepared to call ourselves animals, so should the little creatures which emerge within the game. We simply emerged in a similar but slightly more complex game. This proposal would mean our Universe is entirely deterministic, our lives the result of a gigantic computer program that we live within and form part of. Chaos might make it impossible to predict the future without running the program and watching what happened, but the results would be inevitable, set in motion at the dawn of time. There is no place for free will in such a Universe, no place for reason. The world would simply be. But a strange idea will come to our aid to show us the limits of computation and allow us to question whether we live in a predetermined world. This idea is Aleph 1 - something larger than infinity. And it is infinity we will explore next. = Le a an fy at" he” ie oy oly = . tes ot . Pe ne thy . “1 “SE : iT: a nets? iF hy 2 it = ili “7 a= = 7 0 a Me a Pm a Fs . 2 i © o a é 2m x ” mr ~ os mr Par ars tye ch . . aie oS = es oe, alte 7 ety” eo Me oy “ a a onway's Game of Life Conway's G it