Fig. 1. Science is the study of cause-effect relationships for
agents, whose internal workings usually involve other agents.
Fig. 2. Two simple examples of nonlinearities, one slower than
linear and the other faster than linear.
Fig. 3. Most scientists, of necessity, are studying a small part
of a much larger network, hoping that the part not being studied
can be treated as a fixed external stimulus, often leading to
erroneous conclusions and predictions.
Fig. 4. The simplest nonlinear networks that are capable of
exhibiting chaos.