(WikiWordified in this ugly way to avoid spelling mistakes. A compliment is a favourable remark.)
This concept can be helpful when thinking about things which elude your MentalGrasp, but currently I'm having a hard time explaining how or why.
In my mind this is an UncrystallizedThought, but in the minds of people like NielsBohr and RobertOppenheimer it was a .. tool? A way of thinking?
Despite the fact that physics introduces the idea at A-level (or earlier? I forget. 16 year olds can be expected to parrot these apparent facts, even if they don't understand), it wasn't until reading MakingOfTheAtomicBomb by RichardRhodes that I saw how it affects thought.
Examples in physics
- There are pairs of properties which, according to the UncertaintyPrinciple of QuantumMechanics, are linked. The more you know about one, the less you know about the other
- Position and momentum
- Energy and time
- Particles and waves
Other
(things I haven't fitted to the plan yet)
Maybe the mappers shouldn't write off the packers. Maybe they should embrace also their packer nature? Will ReadRefactorWrite. Three 'R's.
- GoodAndEvil? Or is that stratching the point?
Links
/me spouts Google results with subjective commentary
- Possibly a bit TouchyFeely for my liking, http://www.epcomm.com/fmbr/editoral/comarity.htm
- Adopted by psychology, http://www.personalityresearch.org/interpersonal/complementarity.html
SignedDocumentMode: I felt like doing some WikiWatering here. -- MatthewAstley
CategoryCreativity, Compare: DoubleThink