Issue 21: Chaos

June, 2025

Cover Artist: Kerry Rawlinson


Editorial

For the Greeks, chaos was the primordial void – a state of total potential, where everything and nothing coexisted. To the Egyptians and Mesopotamians, it was symbolised by water and ocean – vast, shifting forces. In contemporary science, chaos often represents complexity beyond our capacity to measure or predict, from turbulent weather to ecosystems and economies…


Editor’s Picks

After the lecture there was time for questions by Clare Bryden
All of Us by Lou Hurst
The Butterfly Effect by Andy Jackson
Weeds and Stars by Lisa Rosenberg





Poems

After the lecture there was time for questions by Clare Bryden
All of Us by Lou Hurst
Chaos Paradox by Özge Lena
Creation by Jacco van Loon
Entropy by David Tatterson
final shot by Judith Shaw
From One, Came Two by Umael Qudrat
How to Defeat Chaos by David de Young
Love Letters from Entropy by SL Walsh


Mother Goddess by Natasha Allen
Once Upon a Time by Winona Anderson
Portents by Jeff Howard
Self-Conflagration by Khloe Kuckelman
She Needs No Server by Annee Lyons
Sparkle Brightly by Liam Holt
Stämmersong by Norman Miller
The Butterfly Effect by Andy Jackson
Weeds and Stars by Lisa Rosenberg


Art Pieces with ConciliARTe

Chaotic Disassociation by Martin Billingham
Cosmic Circles by Dickie Wilkinson
Cycle of Controlled Chaos by Jacob Campbell
Detritus by Kerry Rawlinson
Linear Chaos by Andrea Troncoso

Michelangelo's Touch of Chaos by Ilias Tsagas
The Machine That Goes Ping by Juliet Nolan
Urban Door by John Oughton
Vortex by Roger Camp


Copyright statement. This work is published under the CC BY-NC-SA license, unless stated otherwise.