Unresolvable Indeterminacy

Another example would be George Spencer Brown's calculus of forms [⇒ Laws Of Form].

He presents in the form of a mathematical calculus how forms (marked distinctions) come to observe themselves.

Whereas the Hegelian dialectic ends with the concept completing its work and coming to itself, the calculus of forms ends with it exploding its own calculability and reaching a state that can only be described as "unresolvable indeterminacy," requiring imaginary worlds, time, memory, and free space to oscillate for further processing. The system thus becomes an unpredictable historical machine with an unpredictable future.

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See LUHMANN, Niklas, 2000. Organisation und Entscheidung. Wiesbaden: VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften. ISBN 978-3-322-97094-7.