This is a discussion of ham radio contesting - not a mathematical discussion
- right?
Syl, you're correct that to someone who may be unaware of the rules, the
operation of a contest may appear chaotic. That is because the observer is
ignorant of the structure defined by the rules, and cannot recognize it
readily.
I think that if you compare the "chaos created by rules" in a contest on the
20m fone band from 14.200 to 14.300 to the true chaos of a DXpedition
listening "200 to 300" you could easily identify the structure in the
contest.
73,
Bob W5OV
-----Original Message-----
From: VE5ZX [mailto:ve5zx@hotmail.com]
Sent: Wednesday, September 06, 2006 8:58 AM
To: CQ-Contest@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [CQ-Contest] A New Perspective [was:WRTC Spot/Log Correlation]
>I think that Bob W5OV didn't mean the scientific (pedantic?) chaos you
>have in mind.
>Just the old, simple and common chaos (mess, havoc, mixup, disorder).
Scientific chaos, deteministic chaos and old, simple common chaos are
indistinguishable in a mathematical sense. The point is that just because
rules are involved does not mean to an observer or a participant that the
process isn't chaotic. In otherwords, chaos created by rules and chaos
created by completely random or stochastic processes can be completely
indistinguishable.
Chaos is chaos :)
However, this is a discussion for another time and another reflector :)
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