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Re: Around 1960, mathematician Edward Lorenz found unexpected be [#permalink]
Can you please explain why doesn't C. (They are governed mostly by seemingly trivial events, such as the flapping of a butterfly's wings) apply for the 6th question ?
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Re: Around 1960, mathematician Edward Lorenz found unexpected be [#permalink]
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A better understanding is that the butterfly causes uncertainty about the precise state of the air. This microscopic uncertainty grows until it encompasses even hurricanes

From this part of the passage, you can infer that the butterfly bite is not trivial. It is given to show you a particular effect in terms of future events.

So, C is wrong.

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Re: Around 1960, mathematician Edward Lorenz found unexpected be [#permalink]
can anyone explain me question 4?why is it not D?
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Re: Around 1960, mathematician Edward Lorenz found unexpected be [#permalink]
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Supreeth27112 wrote:
can anyone explain me question 4?why is it not D?


Hi Supreeth27112

From the Passage - According to the popular interpretation of the "Butterfly effect", a butterfly flapping its wings caused hurricanes. A better understanding is that the butterfly causes uncertainty about the precise state of the air.

Now a butterfly flapping its wing is not equal to the "flight path" of the butterfly, the question is deliberately using closely related words handpicked from the passage to use your short term memory against you, but if you slow it down and really read through the options and refer back to the passage, this difference will become clear to you.

Hope it helps
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Re: Around 1960, mathematician Edward Lorenz found unexpected be [#permalink]
Could you please explain why option C in Q2 is wrong.
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Re: Around 1960, mathematician Edward Lorenz found unexpected be [#permalink]
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Question 1

The main purpose of this passage is to
(A) explore a common misconception about a complex physical system

Explanation: The passage's primary goal is to define chaos theory and clarify its relationship to randomness. The first paragraph explicitly states that chaos theory, "despite its name, has little to do with randomness," which is the misconception the author sets out to correct. The rest of the passage uses examples (bowls, bread dough) to illustrate how unpredictable behavior stems from deterministic equations, not chance.
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Re: Around 1960, mathematician Edward Lorenz found unexpected be [#permalink]
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Question 2

In the example discussed in the passage, what is true about poppy seeds in bread dough, once the dough has been thoroughly mixed?
(E) They are in positions dictated by the underlying equations that govern the mixing process.

Explanation: The passage directly addresses the nature of chaotic systems in the third paragraph: "But this randomness is illusory. In fact, the poppy seeds are captured by 'strange attractors,' staggeringly complex pathways whose tangles appear accidental but are in fact determined by the system's fundamental equations."
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Re: Around 1960, mathematician Edward Lorenz found unexpected be [#permalink]
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Question 3

According to the passage, the rounding errors in Lorenz's model
(C) were imperceptibly small at first, but tended to grow

Explanation: The first paragraph states that Lorenz realized "tiny rounding errors" in his computer "mushroomed over time," leading to erratic results. This perfectly matches the idea that they were initially small (tiny) but amplified
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Re: Around 1960, mathematician Edward Lorenz found unexpected be [#permalink]
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Question 4

The passage mentions each of the following as an example or potential example of a chaotic or non-chaotic system EXCEPT
(E) fluctuating butterfly flight patterns

Explanation: The passage mentions the butterfly's flapping wings as the cause of microscopic uncertainty in the air (atmospheric system), but it never discusses the butterfly's own flight patterns as an example of a chaotic system.
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Around 1960, mathematician Edward Lorenz found unexpected be [#permalink]
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Question 5

It can be inferred from the passage that which of the following pairs of items would most likely follow typical pathways within a chaotic system?
(D) Two baseballs placed into a device designed to mix paint.

Explanation: Chaotic systems are characterized by stretching, folding, and mixing (like the bread dough example), where two items initially close together are deterministically driven far apart. A paint mixer performs an identical function to the dough mixer, subjecting any objects inside to continuous stretching and folding, thus amplifying initial differences (sensitive dependence).
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Re: Around 1960, mathematician Edward Lorenz found unexpected be [#permalink]
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Question 6

The author implies which of the following about weather systems?
A. They illustrate the same fundamental phenomenon as Lorenz's rounding errors.

Explanation:
- A. Correct: Lorenz's errors demonstrated sensitive dependence on initial conditions-a tiny error grows to encompass major changes. The weather system is given as the prime example of this exact phenomenon in the last paragraph.
- B. Incorrect: The passage says "Few meteorologists believe..." which implies that some do, contradicting the word "unanimously."
- C. Incorrect: The passage explicitly corrects this popular interpretation, stating that the butterfly causes uncertainty that grows, rather than governing the system itself.
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Re: Around 1960, mathematician Edward Lorenz found unexpected be [#permalink]
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Question 7

Select the sentence in the second or third paragraph that illustrates why "chaos theory" might be called a misnomer.

The core reason "chaos theory" is a misnomer is that it is fundamentally deterministic, not random.

The sentence that best illustrates this in the third paragraph is:

But this randomness is illusory.
(This sentence directly addresses the perception of "chaos" or randomness and immediately dismisses it, underscoring the deterministic nature of the strange attractors discussed thereafter.)
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Re: Around 1960, mathematician Edward Lorenz found unexpected be [#permalink]
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