Hij heeft/had een relatie met Khaos Chaeus Chaos Kaos Χάος ::infinite.
Kind(eren):
{geni:occupation} Dios Primigenio - the initial state of the universe, and, by extension, space, darkness, or an abyss[1] (the antithetical concept was cosmos)., aka Air, Khaos, he made fire, water, earth, and air, The void
{geni:about_me} Chaos (derived from the Ancient Greek Χάος, Chaos) typically refers to a state lacking order or predictability. In ancient Greece, it referred to the initial state of the universe, and, by extension, space, darkness, or an abyss[1] (the antithetical concept was cosmos). In modern English, it is used in classical studies with this original meaning; in mathematics and science to refer to a very specific kind of unpredictability; and informally to mean a state of confusion.[2] In popular culture, the word can occur with all three meanings.
[edit] Chaos in mythology, literature, and religion
Main article: Chaos (mythology)
Hesiod and the Muse, by Gustave Moreau
In Greek myth, Chaos is the original dark void from which everything else appeared. According to Hesiod's Theogony (the origin of the gods), Chaos was the nothingness out of which the first objects of existence appeared. In a similar way, the book of Genesis in the Bible refers to the earliest conditions of the Earth as "without form, and void",[3] while Ovid's Metamorphoses describes the initial state of the Universe as a disorganised mixture of the four elements:
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Chaos (derived from the Ancient Greek Χάος, Chaos) typically refers to a state lacking order or predictability. In ancient Greece, it referred to the initial state of the universe, and, by extension, space, darkness, or an abyss[1] (the antithetical concept was cosmos). In modern English, it is used in classical studies with this original meaning; in mathematics and science to refer to a very specific kind of unpredictability; and informally to mean a state of confusion.[2] In popular culture, the word can occur with all three meanings.
[edit] Chaos in mythology, literature, and religion
Main article: Chaos (mythology)
Hesiod and the Muse, by Gustave Moreau
In Greek myth, Chaos is the original dark void from which everything else appeared. According to Hesiod's Theogony (the origin of the gods), Chaos was the nothingness out of which the first objects of existence appeared. In a similar way, the book of Genesis in the Bible refers to the earliest conditions of the Earth as "without form, and void",[3] while Ovid's Metamorphoses describes the initial state of the Universe as a disorganised mixture of the four elements:
Rather a rude and indigested mass:
A lifeless lump, unfashion'd, and unfram'd,
Of jarring seeds; and justly Chaos nam'd.
No sun was lighted up, the world to view;
No moon did yet her blunted horns renew:
Nor yet was Earth suspended in the sky,
Nor pois'd, did on her own foundations lye:
Nor seas about the shores their arms had thrown;
But earth, and air, and water, were in one.
Thus air was void of light, and earth unstable,
And water's dark abyss unnavigable.[4]
[edit] Scientific and mathematical chaos
Main article: Chaos theory
Bifurcation diagram of a chaotic function
Mathematically, chaos means deterministic behaviour which is very sensitive to its initial conditions.[5] In other words, infinitesimal perturbations of initial conditions for a chaotic dynamic system lead to large variations in behaviour.
Chaotic systems consequently look random. However, they are actually deterministic systems governed by physical or mathematical laws (predictable in principle, if you have exact information) that are impossible to predict in practice beyond a certain point.[6] A commonly used example is weather forecasting, which is only possible up to about a week ahead.
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Chaos, in Greek mythology, the vacant, unfathomable space from which everything arose. In the Olympian myth Gaea sprang from Chaos and became the mother of all things.
Source: From The Concise Columbia Encyclopedia
by Columbia University Press, and Wikipedia2
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Chaos, in Greek mythology, the vacant, unfathomable space from which everything arose. In the Olympian myth Gaea sprang from Chaos and became the mother of all things.
Source:
From The Concise Columbia Encyclopedia
by Columbia University Press, and Wikipedia2
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