FOTD -- February 05, 2009 (Rating 8)
Fractal visionaries and
enthusiasts:
The question of
fractal reality sometimes arises to puzzle even the most devoted fractal fans, and sooner or later every
fractal fan asks himself, "Are fractals real?"
To begin, fractals must have some kind of
reality. How else could we have pictures and
animations of them? But it is obvious that fractals are not made of material. They appear to be more like mathematical abstractions, but abstractions have no shape, so how can fractals be abstractions?
Mathematics is basically human thought processes stated in symbolic form, so could fractals be made of thought? Thoughts are usually considered to be less real than objective material objects. This is why we say, "ghosts are not real, they exist only in the mind". But sometimes thoughts can become almost real. In
dreams, for instance, thoughts can appear quite as objectively real as any material object. So are fractals made of semi-materialised thought?
If fractals are made of thought, we then wonder what thought is made of? A materialist would claim that thought is a by-product of the
brain. So if fractals are made of thought, they are therefore created by the neural activity of the brain. But what is
neural activity? Cognitive specialists tell us that neural activity consists mainly of electric and chemical interactions between neurons. Now it looks like fractals are made of electrochemical interactions. I could continue by asking what are the interactions made of, but an endless regression is now becoming apparent.
At the same time, an idealist, such as
myself, would tell us that with thought we have reached the end of the line. Conscious thought is
the ultimate reality, and it is meaningless to ask what thought is made of. My conclusion is that fractals are made of thought, which can take many forms from total abstraction to a rock-solid impression of objective material reality. Fractals are quite real, in fact they are as real as thought.
Now let's end the
philosophical fractal digression and say a few words about today's image.
I named the image
"Venusian Landscape" because something about it reminds me of the first pictures sent back from the
surface of Venus. I rated it at an 8 because, unlike the surface of that planet, the image has a rather sunny feeling about it.
The parent fractal is a
cubic Mandelbrot set surrounded by seven spokes inside a circle that makes the set resemble the hub of a wheel. Today's image is located some distance to the northeast of the cubic
Mandeloid.
The
calculation time of a zippy 1-1/4 minutes should bring happiness to every fractalist.
Hard-to-please fractalists may find comfort on the FOTD web site at:
where the finished image is posted for instant viewing.
Lots of sun prevailed here at
Fractal Central on Wednesday, though a morning low of 16F -9C made for quite a chilly start to the day. The high of 28F -2C was a little better. The
fractal cats thoroughly enjoyed the sun.
With the
main computer back and up and running, my day was fair enough. The next FOTD will be posted in 24 hours. Until then, take care, and is the mind a by-product of the brain or are the things we call brains actually sense-produced images in the mind?
Jim Muth
jamth@mindspring.com
jimmuth@aol.com
times.