Chaos in Jurassic Park "Chaos theory proves the unpredictability of our daily life" (Crichton 313). Ian Malcolm's words solved the book's Jurassic Park in a very absolute way. Throughout the book Malcolm talks about his own argument of chaos theory and Malcolm effect to explain his reasoning in his prophecies. Ian Malcolm predicted the end of Jurassic Park before the opening of Jurassic Park and its multiple problems and difficulties. Malcolm's theory has been proved many times in the story of Jurassic Park, the dinosaur breeds, the dinosaurs escape, and the system is not functioning.
When I decided to listen to the podcast about Tableau, I was sitting in the hairdresser and waiting for my friend to finish. It was in this conversation that the speaker described the chaos theorist at Jurassic Park. This was not immediately a butterfly effect in the technical sense, but caused my thought about the butterfly effect, but it was related to a small cause of great effect. In two weeks, I talked to four people from four different regions of the world. Therefore, the role of chaos theorist begins, we will integrate these apparently random patterns into the world and form a system that will make a big change in the region.
Jurassic Park is a revolutionary genetic concept used to replicate endangered fear dinosaurs for people's performance. In the novel Jurassic Park, Michael Clayton explains how an idea like Jurassic Park works with examples of chaos theory and other human errors. One mistake that led to the infinite failure of the park was that Hammond and other designers in the park did not take into account the unpredictability of nature itself. Jurassic Park is like a zoo. The difference is that the owner Hammond wants the park to be more natural than the normal zoo. He feels that all guests feel they have retreated and are surrounded by this Jurassic era. The entire island is full of wildlife at the right time. The only problem is that the creator of Hammond and other islands were not thinking about introducing the flora and fauna that was extinct today to the world.
Jon Hammond built a theme park on an island full of dinosaurs (he grabbed DNA with resin). For simplicity, we call this Jurassic Park. He invited selected groups of people to come to the island before opening. These include (very smart) hunters and some dinosaur experts. He also invited rock star mathematician Ian Malcolm, an expert on chaos theory. I admit that this is a less obvious choice. If you read Jurassic Park books, the concept of chaos theory is actually a central theme.