About this episode
Send a text? ReadThere's a moment that comes to all of us, usually around 3 AM, when we realize we've been trying to control things that were never meant to be controlled. Maybe it's your teenager's future, maybe it's the trajectory of your career, maybe it's just trying to predict whether next Tuesday will be the day everything finally comes together or falls apart. We lie there, eyes open in the dark, running simulations in our heads, each one contradicting the last.Scientists call this the butterfly effect. The rest of us just call it Tuesday.The researchers discovered something that sounds completely backwards, almost offensive to our control-obsessed brains: sometimes, the way through chaos isn't to fight it. It's to add more chaos. The Hidden Logic: How Chaos, Flow, and Matter Shape Intelligence(S6  E8) ? The Wet Logic of Being: Why Silicon Dreams Can't Wake Up(S6 E20) ? The Gentle Art of Taming Chaos: What Neural Networks Teach Us About Living With Turbulence(S6 E22) ? When Chaos Becomes the Solution: What Dancing Particles Teach Us About Hidden Order (S6 E26) ? When Chaos Becomes the Compass: What Quantum Computing Teaches Us About Living With UncertaintyQuantum simulation of a noisy classical nonlinear dynamicsEfficient quantum algorithm for dissipative nonlinear differential equationsAvailable for Broadcast on PRX:  The Hidden Logic: How Chaos, Flow, and Matter Shape Intelligence This is Heliox: Where Evidence Meets EmpathyIndependent, moderated, timely, deep, gentle, clinical, global, and community conversations about things that matter. Breathe Easy, we go deep and lightly surface the big ideas. Support the showDisclosure: This podcast uses AI-generated synthetic voices for a material portion of the audio content, in line with Apple Podcasts guidelines. We make rigorous science accessible, accurate, and unforgettable. Produced by Michelle Bruecker and Scott Bleackley, it features reviews of emerging research and ideas from leading thinkers, curated under our creative direction with AI assistance for voice, imagery, and composition. Systemic voices and illustrative images of people are representative tools, not depictions of specific individuals. We dive deep into peer-reviewed research, pre-prints, and major scientific works—then bring them to life through the stories of the researchers themselves. Complex ideas become clear. Obscure discov