mijopaalmc
Philosopher
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2007
- Messages
- 7,172
It is relevant by showing a system that does not show periodic orbits yet is chaotic. It demonstrates that the definition of chaos that you have provided is too restrictive.
Although this spat over the definition of chaos is irrelevant insofar as we're talking about evolution. Whether we call them apples or oranges doesn't matter.
OK, I was a little hasty in saying that chaos required a dense set of periodic orbits. It was a published definition by an expert in choas theory, Robert Devaney, but, as Devaney himself admits, it is not the only definition of chaos and there is no universally agreed upon definition of chaos. Nonetheless, it seems that you are ignoring that the Kolmogorov–Arnold–Moser theorem (which applies to the KAM tori mentioned in the MathWorld article on chaos) mentions only quasiperiodic orbits and says nothing about periodic orbits themselves.