Hypothesis 1
Complex order or behavior is typical of any system which is determined by three or more different, but interdependent (sets of) variable entities of whatever kind (see: complex order).
Hypothesis 2
Complex order is deterministic, relativistic as well as probabilistic, and differs for that reason funda-mentally from disorder and simple or linear(izable) order (see: disorder, simple order & complex order).
Hypothesis 3
Complex order is characterized by a partially predictable, probabilistic (0<P<1) alternation of relatively well predictable, pseudo-probabilistic, pseudo-simple events and relatively badly predictable pseudo-non-probabilistic, seemingly coincidental, pseudo-chaotic adaptive chance events (see:
complex behavior).*
Hypothesis 4
Synthesis of axiomatic, basic, simple and/or complex knowledge induces, i.e. emerges or creates, increas-ingly complex knowledge (see:
degree of complexity).
Hypothesis 5
Analytical reduction of complex order yields less complex, simple, basic and/or axiomatic knowledge, but, in addition, serious loss of relevant complex information as well (see:
conclusions).
Hypothesis 6
Human language is, just like nature, of which it is part of and which it describes, a complex phenomenon itself too and, for that reason, able to describe nature's complexity adequately (see:
general conclusions).
Hypothesis 7
In order to be able to investigate complex behavior properly and solve complex problems adequately, modern science has to be extended with complex logic and a complex scientific method (see:
science).
*It is assumed that complexity-based physical probability (0<P<1) and physical significance (P<?) differ fundamen-tally from methodological-error based statistical probability (0<p<1) and statistical significance (p<0,05) (see: com-plex predictability).
Internet sources
-
Encyclopedia Britannica: chaos theory, complexity, complexity & simplicity, emergence, epistemology, knowl-edge, Kuhn, language, language (philosophy of), materialism, meaning, naturalism, physics, physics (philosophy of), positivism (logical), quantum mechanics, science, science (philosophy of), semantics
-
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: chaos, complexity (descriptive), emergent properties, epistemology, knowledge, knowledge (value of), Kuhn, language (of thought), meaning (theories of), naturalism, physicalism, quantum mechanics, science (models in), science (pseudo-)
©Memes Ltd.