The Butterly effect. The butterfly effect is a term used in jail's theory to describe the how small changes towards seemingly unrelated thing can affect large and and use systems. Example, butterfly flapping its wings can seemingly change the weather in a place taking it more broadly. The Butterly effect is a way of describing that how unless all factors are accounted for, large systems like the weather remain impossible to predict the total accuracy because there are too many unknown variables to track
Gautam Kaul
@GKaul2001 · 0:06
This was great. And thank you for letting me discover something new as well
Krishna Telang
@Krishnaroxs · 0:29
The butterfly effect is the perfect example for the chain reaction. Like a butterfly flapping its wing in Brazil is causing a change in the weather in India, just like the first atom that reacted with another atom, first rated compounds and elements, then group up of elements, then their hybrids, et cetera. And it's still going on. It's been freaking 13.8 billion years, and it's still going on. It's just so fascinating