分形:创造的秘密密码

IF 0.2 0 RELIGION
J. Lisle
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The first chapter, \"The Secret Code,\" claims that \"those who reject God like to explain the complexity of biological life by appealing to Darwinian evolution,\" but that mathematics is free from this \"because numbers do not evolve.\" The fractals in this book, beginning with the Mandelbrot set, give an \"infinitesimal glimpse into the mind of God\" (p. 9). This sets the theme: there are only two worldviews, and these are in direct competition. The mathematics of fractals is to lead the reader toward the Christian worldview, indeed to a \"secret code.\" *A computer-generated example of a fractal, introduced by Benoit Mandelbrot,1 is created in the complex plane by iterating the quadratic function f (x) = x2 + c. Pick a complex number c and examine the sequence c, f (c), f (f (c)), and so on. Ask the question, \"Do these iterates of the function form a bounded sequence?\" If the sequence is bounded, then the complex number c is in the Mandelbrot set. In the complex plane, color that point, c, black. If the sequence c, f (c), f (f (c)), … is not bounded, give c a color based on the speed of growth of the sequence. Use a modern computer to color the points in the complex plane. With this coloring, the mathematical analysis of the Mandelbrot set gives rise to intricate paintings of the complex plane. *After this introduction, the book describes the required mathematical material: sets, complex numbers, function iteration. The mathematical descriptions are well done and intended for a popular audience. There are no frightening equations to drive away the reader. The prose, along with the accompanying artwork, is inviting. One might use much of this book as an invitation into the study of mathematics. Indeed, many mathematicians have used the study of fractals to do just that. *Chapters two through seven explore the mathematics of the Mandelbrot set with text-printed elegant pictures of various regions of the fractals. Chapters two through five, with picturesque titles--\"Valley of the Seahorses,\" \"Valley of the Double Spirals,\" \"Infinite Elephants, Scepters on Seahorses\"--focus on a particular region of the Mandelbrot set, zooming in to display intricate spirals, bays, peninsulas. The infinite complexity of these drawings is beautiful and agrees with my belief that mathematics is the language of the great artist. *The sixth chapter, \"Changing the Formula,\" asks what happens if the simple quadratic f (x) = x2 + c is replaced by other quadratics. It is shown, by examples, that other quadratics merely transform the Mandelbrot set, shifting it in some obvious manner. A mathematics student comfortable with function transformations will recognize that any quadratic function can be transformed into any other quadratic--this is the essence of the quadratic formula--and so it should not be surprising that nothing new is achieved by replacing one quadratic by another. *Later chapters replace a quadratic function by other polynomials, then by functions involving fractional exponents, then by a conjugate function and finally by trigonometric and exponential functions. Euler's marvelous identity eiθ = cosθ + i sinθ briefly comes into play, linking trigonometric and exponential functions in the complex plane. In all these chapters, the mathematical explanations are kept simple, and the beautiful artwork continues. The chapter, \"Geometric and 3D Fractals,\" asks about higher dimensional figures and introduces the quaternions. The chapter does not go deeply into the material but intends to leave the reader curious and intrigued. The concluding chapter describes occurrences of fractals as physical objects in nature (shorelines, clouds, trees, etc.), returning to the topic found in Mandelbrot's introductory book. *Chapter 8, \"Fractals and the Christian Worldview,\" is an interlude to the mathematics, returning to the claim that of the two suppositions, a Christian or a non-Christian worldview, only the Christian worldview truly explains fractals. Yes, the infinite complexity of the Mandelbrot set is beautiful. Many mathematicians agree that beautiful objects like this are independent of human thought, a form of mathematical platonism. But the leap from mathematical platonism to belief in a creator and then to belief in the biblical God is not well supported by Lisle. He ignores the difficulties involved in these steps: first from mathematical platonism to deism, and then from deism to belief in the God that Christians worship. *In the final (twelfth) chapter, Lisle returns to his argument that mathematics points to the God of the Bible. He quotes physicist Eugene Wigner's article, \"The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Mathematics in the Natural Sciences,\" which discusses the \"miracle\" of mathematics in explaining the modern world.2 Lisle then quickly dismisses other religious views and claims that only the Bible makes sense of our universe. The book ends with a gospel presentation. *One can argue (Rom. 1:20) that God's divine nature is visible in the beauty of mathematics, but Lisle quickly dismisses the beliefs of atheists and non-Christian religions and leaps to claiming (as implied by the book's subtitle) that the only legitimate reaction to fractals is to believe in the Christian God. While most of my mathematical colleagues identify with mathematical platonism, their beliefs vary across a spectrum from atheism/agnosticism through Judaism, Islam, and Christianity. The jarring leap from \"the beauty of fractals comes not from people\" (p. 125) to the Christian worldview, will leave a thoughtful skeptic with whiplash. At no place is the \"secret code\" to creation explained explicitly. *Lisle's approach to apologetics is that of presuppositionalism. He assumes that only a Christian worldview is reasonable. However, presuppositional apologetics has several significant flaws. It can quickly become a circular argument: if one assumes the truth and accuracy of the Bible as an axiom then the Christian worldview is a foregone conclusion. This approach receives quick approval from people who already believe the scriptures but is readily dismissed by the sceptic. Even when the circular argument is avoided, the best one can argue is that the universe--and mathematics--appears to be beautiful, appears to have design. The appearance of design is roughly equivalent to mathematical platonism and parallels the argument of Romans 1. But the sceptic who accepts this argument will immediately point out that there are many worldviews that begin with this assumption. The leap to the Christian worldview is not proven by this approach; it requires the additional confirmation of special revelation. *In other publications, Lisle rejects both the big bang theory and evolution. Ironically, this beautiful book on fractals makes it clear that elegant and complex structures do indeed arise from quite simple processes. This is a concept that underlies the theory of evolution, which Lisle opposes. *Would I put this book on my coffee table? No, because ultimately this book is an attempt at apologetics. The flaw in the apologetics will be apparent to the thoughtful sceptic. And the author's attempt to establish the Christian worldview includes simplistic claims that are dismissive of people with other beliefs. *Notes *1Benoit B. Mandelbrot, The Fractal Geometry of Nature (New York: W. H. Freeman, 1982). *2E. P. Wigner, \"The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Mathematics in the Natural Sciences,\" Communications on Pure and Applied Mathematics 13 (1960): 1-14. *Reviewed by Ken W. Smith, Professor of Mathematics, retired, Manton, MI 49663.","PeriodicalId":53927,"journal":{"name":"Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith","volume":"34 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2023-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Fractals: The Secret Code of Creation\",\"authors\":\"J. 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In the complex plane, color that point, c, black. If the sequence c, f (c), f (f (c)), … is not bounded, give c a color based on the speed of growth of the sequence. Use a modern computer to color the points in the complex plane. With this coloring, the mathematical analysis of the Mandelbrot set gives rise to intricate paintings of the complex plane. *After this introduction, the book describes the required mathematical material: sets, complex numbers, function iteration. The mathematical descriptions are well done and intended for a popular audience. There are no frightening equations to drive away the reader. The prose, along with the accompanying artwork, is inviting. One might use much of this book as an invitation into the study of mathematics. Indeed, many mathematicians have used the study of fractals to do just that. *Chapters two through seven explore the mathematics of the Mandelbrot set with text-printed elegant pictures of various regions of the fractals. Chapters two through five, with picturesque titles--\\\"Valley of the Seahorses,\\\" \\\"Valley of the Double Spirals,\\\" \\\"Infinite Elephants, Scepters on Seahorses\\\"--focus on a particular region of the Mandelbrot set, zooming in to display intricate spirals, bays, peninsulas. The infinite complexity of these drawings is beautiful and agrees with my belief that mathematics is the language of the great artist. *The sixth chapter, \\\"Changing the Formula,\\\" asks what happens if the simple quadratic f (x) = x2 + c is replaced by other quadratics. It is shown, by examples, that other quadratics merely transform the Mandelbrot set, shifting it in some obvious manner. A mathematics student comfortable with function transformations will recognize that any quadratic function can be transformed into any other quadratic--this is the essence of the quadratic formula--and so it should not be surprising that nothing new is achieved by replacing one quadratic by another. *Later chapters replace a quadratic function by other polynomials, then by functions involving fractional exponents, then by a conjugate function and finally by trigonometric and exponential functions. Euler's marvelous identity eiθ = cosθ + i sinθ briefly comes into play, linking trigonometric and exponential functions in the complex plane. In all these chapters, the mathematical explanations are kept simple, and the beautiful artwork continues. The chapter, \\\"Geometric and 3D Fractals,\\\" asks about higher dimensional figures and introduces the quaternions. The chapter does not go deeply into the material but intends to leave the reader curious and intrigued. The concluding chapter describes occurrences of fractals as physical objects in nature (shorelines, clouds, trees, etc.), returning to the topic found in Mandelbrot's introductory book. *Chapter 8, \\\"Fractals and the Christian Worldview,\\\" is an interlude to the mathematics, returning to the claim that of the two suppositions, a Christian or a non-Christian worldview, only the Christian worldview truly explains fractals. Yes, the infinite complexity of the Mandelbrot set is beautiful. Many mathematicians agree that beautiful objects like this are independent of human thought, a form of mathematical platonism. But the leap from mathematical platonism to belief in a creator and then to belief in the biblical God is not well supported by Lisle. He ignores the difficulties involved in these steps: first from mathematical platonism to deism, and then from deism to belief in the God that Christians worship. *In the final (twelfth) chapter, Lisle returns to his argument that mathematics points to the God of the Bible. He quotes physicist Eugene Wigner's article, \\\"The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Mathematics in the Natural Sciences,\\\" which discusses the \\\"miracle\\\" of mathematics in explaining the modern world.2 Lisle then quickly dismisses other religious views and claims that only the Bible makes sense of our universe. The book ends with a gospel presentation. *One can argue (Rom. 1:20) that God's divine nature is visible in the beauty of mathematics, but Lisle quickly dismisses the beliefs of atheists and non-Christian religions and leaps to claiming (as implied by the book's subtitle) that the only legitimate reaction to fractals is to believe in the Christian God. While most of my mathematical colleagues identify with mathematical platonism, their beliefs vary across a spectrum from atheism/agnosticism through Judaism, Islam, and Christianity. The jarring leap from \\\"the beauty of fractals comes not from people\\\" (p. 125) to the Christian worldview, will leave a thoughtful skeptic with whiplash. At no place is the \\\"secret code\\\" to creation explained explicitly. *Lisle's approach to apologetics is that of presuppositionalism. He assumes that only a Christian worldview is reasonable. However, presuppositional apologetics has several significant flaws. It can quickly become a circular argument: if one assumes the truth and accuracy of the Bible as an axiom then the Christian worldview is a foregone conclusion. This approach receives quick approval from people who already believe the scriptures but is readily dismissed by the sceptic. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

《分形:创造的秘密代码》,作者:Jason Lisle。Green Forest, AR: Master Books, 2021。224页。平装书;29.99美元。ISBN: 9781683442400。*杰森·莱尔的《分形:创造的秘密密码》是一本精美的咖啡桌书,它不仅邀请读者去欣赏数学之美,还邀请读者去信仰基督教。作者隶属于《创世纪的答案》,也是圣经科学研究所的创始人,这两个研究所都坚持对《创世纪》1-3的年轻地球解释。*数学章节写得很好,但这本书实际上是为狭隘的基督教世界观辩护。这本书声称,数学,特别是曼德布洛特分形和类似的对象,展示了上帝的本性。第一章“密码”声称,“那些拒绝上帝的人喜欢用达尔文进化论来解释生物生命的复杂性”,但数学却不受此影响,“因为数字不会进化”。这本书中的分形,从Mandelbrot集合开始,提供了“对上帝思想的微小一瞥”(第9页)。这设定了主题:只有两种世界观,这两种世界观是直接竞争的。分形的数学是为了引导读者走向基督教的世界观,实际上是一个“密码”。*一个由Benoit Mandelbrot引入的计算机生成的分形例子,1是通过迭代二次函数f (x) = x2 + c在复平面上创建的。选择一个复数c并检查序列c, f (c), f (f (c)),等等。问这样一个问题:“函数的这些迭代是否形成一个有界序列?”如果序列是有界的,那么复数c在Mandelbrot集合中。在复平面上,把点c涂成黑色。如果序列c, f (c), f (f (c)),…是无界的,根据序列的增长速度给c一个颜色。使用现代计算机给复平面上的点上色。有了这种着色,对Mandelbrot集合的数学分析产生了复杂平面的复杂绘画。*在此介绍之后,本书描述了所需的数学材料:集合,复数,函数迭代。数学描述做得很好,适合大众读者。没有什么吓人的方程式能把读者吓跑。这本书的散文和附带的艺术作品都很吸引人。人们可以用这本书的大部分内容作为对数学研究的邀请。事实上,许多数学家已经利用分形的研究来做到这一点。*第二章到第七章探索了曼德尔布罗特集的数学与文本打印的精美图片的分形的各个区域。第二章到第五章的标题如画——“海马谷”、“双螺旋谷”、“无限的大象,海马上的权杖”——聚焦于曼德布洛特集合的一个特定区域,放大显示复杂的螺旋、海湾、半岛。这些图画的无限复杂性是美丽的,并与我的信念一致,即数学是伟大艺术家的语言。*第六章,“改变公式”,问的是如果简单的二次函数f (x) = x2 + c被其他二次函数取代会发生什么。通过例子可以看出,其他二次函数仅仅变换了Mandelbrot集合,以某种明显的方式变换了它。熟悉函数变换的数学学生会认识到,任何二次函数都可以变换成任何其他二次函数——这是二次公式的本质——因此,用一个二次函数代替另一个二次函数不会产生任何新结果也就不足为奇了。*后面的章节将二次函数替换为其他多项式,然后是包含分数指数的函数,然后是共轭函数,最后是三角函数和指数函数。欧拉的奇异恒等式eθ = cost θ + isinθ在复平面上将三角函数和指数函数联系起来。在所有这些章节中,数学解释都保持简单,而美丽的艺术作品仍在继续。“几何和三维分形”这一章讨论了高维图形,并介绍了四元数。这一章并没有深入探讨材料,而是想让读者感到好奇和好奇。最后一章将分形描述为自然界中的物理对象(海岸线、云、树等),回到了曼德尔布罗特入门书中的主题。*第8章,“分形和基督教世界观”是数学的插曲,回到基督教或非基督教世界观的两种假设中,只有基督教世界观真正解释了分形。是的,曼德尔布罗集合的无限复杂性是美丽的。许多数学家认为,像这样美丽的物体是独立于人类思想的,这是数学柏拉图主义的一种形式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Fractals: The Secret Code of Creation
FRACTALS: The Secret Code of Creation by Jason Lisle. Green Forest, AR: Master Books, 2021. 224 pages. Paperback; $29.99. ISBN: 9781683442400. *Fractals: The Secret Code of Creation, by Jason Lisle, is a beautifully crafted coffee-table book which invites readers not only to the beauty of mathematics, but also to belief in Christianity. The author is affiliated with Answers in Genesis and is a founder of the Bible Science Institute, both of which insist on a young earth interpretation of Genesis 1-3. *The mathematical chapters are well written, but the book is really an apologetic for a narrow Christian worldview. The book claims that mathematics, particularly the Mandelbrot fractal and similar objects, displays God's nature. The first chapter, "The Secret Code," claims that "those who reject God like to explain the complexity of biological life by appealing to Darwinian evolution," but that mathematics is free from this "because numbers do not evolve." The fractals in this book, beginning with the Mandelbrot set, give an "infinitesimal glimpse into the mind of God" (p. 9). This sets the theme: there are only two worldviews, and these are in direct competition. The mathematics of fractals is to lead the reader toward the Christian worldview, indeed to a "secret code." *A computer-generated example of a fractal, introduced by Benoit Mandelbrot,1 is created in the complex plane by iterating the quadratic function f (x) = x2 + c. Pick a complex number c and examine the sequence c, f (c), f (f (c)), and so on. Ask the question, "Do these iterates of the function form a bounded sequence?" If the sequence is bounded, then the complex number c is in the Mandelbrot set. In the complex plane, color that point, c, black. If the sequence c, f (c), f (f (c)), … is not bounded, give c a color based on the speed of growth of the sequence. Use a modern computer to color the points in the complex plane. With this coloring, the mathematical analysis of the Mandelbrot set gives rise to intricate paintings of the complex plane. *After this introduction, the book describes the required mathematical material: sets, complex numbers, function iteration. The mathematical descriptions are well done and intended for a popular audience. There are no frightening equations to drive away the reader. The prose, along with the accompanying artwork, is inviting. One might use much of this book as an invitation into the study of mathematics. Indeed, many mathematicians have used the study of fractals to do just that. *Chapters two through seven explore the mathematics of the Mandelbrot set with text-printed elegant pictures of various regions of the fractals. Chapters two through five, with picturesque titles--"Valley of the Seahorses," "Valley of the Double Spirals," "Infinite Elephants, Scepters on Seahorses"--focus on a particular region of the Mandelbrot set, zooming in to display intricate spirals, bays, peninsulas. The infinite complexity of these drawings is beautiful and agrees with my belief that mathematics is the language of the great artist. *The sixth chapter, "Changing the Formula," asks what happens if the simple quadratic f (x) = x2 + c is replaced by other quadratics. It is shown, by examples, that other quadratics merely transform the Mandelbrot set, shifting it in some obvious manner. A mathematics student comfortable with function transformations will recognize that any quadratic function can be transformed into any other quadratic--this is the essence of the quadratic formula--and so it should not be surprising that nothing new is achieved by replacing one quadratic by another. *Later chapters replace a quadratic function by other polynomials, then by functions involving fractional exponents, then by a conjugate function and finally by trigonometric and exponential functions. Euler's marvelous identity eiθ = cosθ + i sinθ briefly comes into play, linking trigonometric and exponential functions in the complex plane. In all these chapters, the mathematical explanations are kept simple, and the beautiful artwork continues. The chapter, "Geometric and 3D Fractals," asks about higher dimensional figures and introduces the quaternions. The chapter does not go deeply into the material but intends to leave the reader curious and intrigued. The concluding chapter describes occurrences of fractals as physical objects in nature (shorelines, clouds, trees, etc.), returning to the topic found in Mandelbrot's introductory book. *Chapter 8, "Fractals and the Christian Worldview," is an interlude to the mathematics, returning to the claim that of the two suppositions, a Christian or a non-Christian worldview, only the Christian worldview truly explains fractals. Yes, the infinite complexity of the Mandelbrot set is beautiful. Many mathematicians agree that beautiful objects like this are independent of human thought, a form of mathematical platonism. But the leap from mathematical platonism to belief in a creator and then to belief in the biblical God is not well supported by Lisle. He ignores the difficulties involved in these steps: first from mathematical platonism to deism, and then from deism to belief in the God that Christians worship. *In the final (twelfth) chapter, Lisle returns to his argument that mathematics points to the God of the Bible. He quotes physicist Eugene Wigner's article, "The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Mathematics in the Natural Sciences," which discusses the "miracle" of mathematics in explaining the modern world.2 Lisle then quickly dismisses other religious views and claims that only the Bible makes sense of our universe. The book ends with a gospel presentation. *One can argue (Rom. 1:20) that God's divine nature is visible in the beauty of mathematics, but Lisle quickly dismisses the beliefs of atheists and non-Christian religions and leaps to claiming (as implied by the book's subtitle) that the only legitimate reaction to fractals is to believe in the Christian God. While most of my mathematical colleagues identify with mathematical platonism, their beliefs vary across a spectrum from atheism/agnosticism through Judaism, Islam, and Christianity. The jarring leap from "the beauty of fractals comes not from people" (p. 125) to the Christian worldview, will leave a thoughtful skeptic with whiplash. At no place is the "secret code" to creation explained explicitly. *Lisle's approach to apologetics is that of presuppositionalism. He assumes that only a Christian worldview is reasonable. However, presuppositional apologetics has several significant flaws. It can quickly become a circular argument: if one assumes the truth and accuracy of the Bible as an axiom then the Christian worldview is a foregone conclusion. This approach receives quick approval from people who already believe the scriptures but is readily dismissed by the sceptic. Even when the circular argument is avoided, the best one can argue is that the universe--and mathematics--appears to be beautiful, appears to have design. The appearance of design is roughly equivalent to mathematical platonism and parallels the argument of Romans 1. But the sceptic who accepts this argument will immediately point out that there are many worldviews that begin with this assumption. The leap to the Christian worldview is not proven by this approach; it requires the additional confirmation of special revelation. *In other publications, Lisle rejects both the big bang theory and evolution. Ironically, this beautiful book on fractals makes it clear that elegant and complex structures do indeed arise from quite simple processes. This is a concept that underlies the theory of evolution, which Lisle opposes. *Would I put this book on my coffee table? No, because ultimately this book is an attempt at apologetics. The flaw in the apologetics will be apparent to the thoughtful sceptic. And the author's attempt to establish the Christian worldview includes simplistic claims that are dismissive of people with other beliefs. *Notes *1Benoit B. Mandelbrot, The Fractal Geometry of Nature (New York: W. H. Freeman, 1982). *2E. P. Wigner, "The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Mathematics in the Natural Sciences," Communications on Pure and Applied Mathematics 13 (1960): 1-14. *Reviewed by Ken W. Smith, Professor of Mathematics, retired, Manton, MI 49663.
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