The Paradox of Randomness


As I tried (in vain) to get a few more precious minutes of sleep this morning, my thoughts trailed off to the randomness of nature. 

Because the randomness of nature is, in truth, a paradox. 

I was thinking, specifically, of the course of a creek as it dances over rocks and sings as it splashes into small pools. It is a mesmerizing sound. 

Have you ever experienced it? Have you ever sat by a creek or stream as it winds its way down the creek bed, heading to some larger creek, river or lake? Have you ever allowed yourself to be free of intrusive thoughts, and let the creek sing to you? 

If you listen closely you can start to hear the pattern: the specific splashes made against rocks or boulders that happen with frequency, and in some cases, at specific times and intervals. And that's where the paradox lies.

For even within that pattern you can find that it's random. 

I have one of those sound makers by our bed with a "bubbling creek" sound, but I discovered after a while that it is looped, and that the loop lasts about 15 seconds. And so, instead of lulling me to sleep, I began to pay attention to the specific sound made at the beginning of each loop. 

But with nature, there is that paradox of randomness, where there is no loop: the sound repeats, yes. But it also continues on, perhaps changing pitch or loudness as the volume of water increases or decreases. Perhaps a tree branch or even a whole tree tumbles into the creek, changing the direction of the water over different rocks, or adding a new sound of its own.

And that brings me to the ultimate paradox: God. 

God created and continues to create within nature. What is done is done, but yet it is not finished. The creative act of God is ongoing. God never stops creating in nature, or in his beloved children. 

Just as the creek wanders and continually makes the same sounds, it is also changing. It is a small example of the work of God, and a metaphor for us as His children. 

The Truth is in the Paradox. 

Comments

Tim Riter said…
McGee Creek? John, I love the poetry imbedded in your prose, and it reminds me of the famous lines about rivers in Norman Maclean's "A River Runs Through It." Fine job.
David Rodecker said…
This comment has been removed by the author.
David Rodecker said…
The creation of life is marvelous. It's in everything in nature and it's just amazing. It doesn't seem as much chaotic as it is perpetually random. Even at an atomic level with the electron randomly spinning in perpetual motion around the atom at the speed of light, to the wobble of the earth around the sun.

I sometimes see it as Gods gift of free will, expressed in every living thing. All of us are essentially physically the same, yet everyone is a unique. Ultimately it seems the basis of love: we are attracted to the energy of others, to experience and share in our chaotic lives together.

Anyway... pretty ethereal. I rarely ramble on guest comments, but thank you John for a post that tickled me. Reminds me of how our solar system is like an oxygen atom.

BTW- Totally agree; the generic 15s loop of nature sounds loop sucks! I effectively have that on my Bose digital alarm clock and my latest car audio; you'd go crazy if actually forced to listen to it. It's really surprising that technology hasn't been able to simulate life's actual variances that well. (perhaps there will be a "Natures clock" kickstarter for that!)

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