- Edited
Lorraine Ford "Primordial" refers just to the initial, practically structureless (but already interacting and potentially rich) state of our world and its state-function describing that real-world configuration at that starting moment. Then the system interaction leads to progressive emergence of our world structures, transforming it from that "primitive" initial configuration to ever more complex structure always described by its respectively more complicated state-function (including ourselves analyzing that state-function configuration). Yes, all those ultimately complex structures of modern world emerge progressively from the deceptively simple initial interaction configuration, if only we do not neglect any "algorithmic steps" in this interaction development. The high structure-creation potential of the starting system configuration (not only this one) is also due to its many-body content, with its own internal interaction between elements (not resolved here, just constituent elements of an originally smooth material). It's basically about high structure-creation power of almost any real, unreduced interaction, ruthlessly "killed" by the technically "convenient" reduction of conventional theory. (However, it was semi-empirically emphasized in "self-organization", or "synergetics", but again within the fatal limitation of the standard description, just the empirical intuition about how external "simplicity" can contain and give rise to eventual complexity.) So, I just follow that unreduced "algorithm" of real-system development described by its respectively evolving state-function. I use analytical methods, but some computer application could help with further details. (In general, however, any real system dynamics is "noncomputable", as opposed to usual computer operation: one more source of usual science problems.)