Butterfly effect

noun

noun ·Rare ·Advanced level

Definitions

Noun
  1. 1
    The technical notion of sensitive dependence on initial conditions in chaos theory.
  2. 2
    the phenomenon whereby a small change at one place in a complex system can have large effects elsewhere, e.g., a butterfly flapping its wings in Rio de Janeiro might change the weather in Chicago wordnet
  3. 3
    The notion that small changes in the past via time travel can cause disproportionately large and unforeseeable consequences in the present. broadly

    "Example of butterfly effect: stepping on a bug 4,000 years ago causes a different person to win the presidential election today."

Example

More examples

"Example of butterfly effect: stepping on a bug 4,000 years ago causes a different person to win the presidential election today."

Etymology

Coined by American author and historian of science James Gleick in 1987 in his book Chaos: Making a New Science, whose first chapter bears the title “The Butterfly Effect”, and in which he discusses “the paradox of the butterfly’s wings” potentially making the difference whether a hurricane will or will not arise somewhere else later. Meteorologist Edward Lorenz, the founder of modern chaos theory, had in 1972, at a scientific meeting, presented a paper entitled “Does the flap of a butterfly’s wings set off a tornado in Texas?” without using the specific term butterfly effect. Lorenz also notes that representations of the strange attractor now known as the “Lorenz attractor” resemble a butterfly, as well as that correspondents have drawn his attention to Ray Bradbury’s short science fiction story “A Sound of Thunder”, in which a time traveler’s crushing a butterfly in the Late Cretaceous changes the outcome of a present-day presidential election. But the metaphorical butterfly was actually introduced in the title of the 1972 presentation by meteorologist Philip Merilees, who was not familiar with Bradbury’s story.