However, classical physics also ignores those systems that cannot be accurately predicted. Stephen Kellert comments upon this “prejudice”: “Education in the natural sciences created the impression that linear and solvable systems were the only ones (or at least the only important ones).”9 The case of Edward Lorenz is exemplary. In 1963, he published what later came to be regarded as groundbreaking chaos-theory articles in meteorology journals, which physicists ignored.10 The classical physicist examines the dynamics of a pendulum or the solar system but not those of the weather or a dripping faucet or a water wheel. P4