‘Fractal’ is a word invented by Mandelbrot to bring together under one  heading a large class of objects that have [played] … an historical  role … in the development of pure mathematics. A great revolution of  ideas separates the classical mathematics of the 19th century from the  modern mathematics of the 20th. Classical mathematics had its roots in  the regular geometric structures of Euclid and the continuously evolving  dynamics of Newton. Modern mathematics began with Cantor’s set theory  and Peano’s space-filling curve. Historically, the revolution was forced  by the discovery of mathematical structures that did not fit the  patterns of Euclid and Newton. These new structures were regarded … as  ‘pathological,’ … as a ‘gallery of monsters,’ akin to the cubist  paintings and atonal music that were upsetting established standards of  taste in the arts at about the same time. The mathematicians who created  the monsters regarded them as important in showing that the world of  pure mathematics contains a richness of possibilities going far beyond  the simple structures that they saw in Nature. Twentieth-century  mathematics flowered in the belief that it had transcended completely  the limitations imposed by its natural origins.Now, as Mandelbrot  points out, … Nature has played a joke on the mathematicians. The  19th-century mathematicians may not have been lacking in imagination,  but Nature was not. The same pathological structures that the  mathematicians invented to break loose from 19th-century naturalism turn  out to be inherent in familiar objects all around us.

Freeman Dyson. Characterizing Irregularity’, Science (12 May 1978),

‘Fractal’ is a word invented by Mandelbrot to bring together under one heading a large class of objects that have [played] … an historical role … in the development of pure mathematics. A great revolution of ideas separates the classical mathematics of the 19th century from the modern mathematics of the 20th. Classical mathematics had its roots in the regular geometric structures of Euclid and the continuously evolving dynamics of Newton. Modern mathematics began with Cantor’s set theory and Peano’s space-filling curve. Historically, the revolution was forced by the discovery of mathematical structures that did not fit the patterns of Euclid and Newton. These new structures were regarded … as ‘pathological,’ … as a ‘gallery of monsters,’ akin to the cubist paintings and atonal music that were upsetting established standards of taste in the arts at about the same time. The mathematicians who created the monsters regarded them as important in showing that the world of pure mathematics contains a richness of possibilities going far beyond the simple structures that they saw in Nature. Twentieth-century mathematics flowered in the belief that it had transcended completely the limitations imposed by its natural origins.
Now, as Mandelbrot points out, … Nature has played a joke on the mathematicians. The 19th-century mathematicians may not have been lacking in imagination, but Nature was not. The same pathological structures that the mathematicians invented to break loose from 19th-century naturalism turn out to be inherent in familiar objects all around us.
Freeman Dyson. Characterizing Irregularity’, Science (12 May 1978),

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