Zeeman's Dog Model
The Hysteresis Effect
Once the dog snaps to attacking, reducing rage alone won't make it retreat! The transition point for attack→retreat is different from retreat→attack. This is the essence of catastrophe.
Why do dogs suddenly snap from friendly to aggressive? Why do bridges collapse without warning? Catastrophe theory reveals how smooth changes in conditions can cause sudden, discontinuous jumps in behavior.
Once the dog snaps to attacking, reducing rage alone won't make it retreat! The transition point for attack→retreat is different from retreat→attack. This is the essence of catastrophe.
The behavior (u) satisfies u³ + au + b = 0, creating a folded surface. In some regions, there are THREE solutions (top, middle, bottom), but only top and bottom are stable. The middle is unstable.
The cusp-shaped curve marks where sudden jumps occur. Inside the cusp, there are two stable states. Cross the boundary from inside, and the system MUST jump to the other sheet—catastrophically!
René Thom named these "catastrophes" because small, smooth changes in control parameters can trigger sudden, dramatic changes in state—like a bridge collapsing or a dog attacking.
Stock market crashes, material failure, phase transitions, heartbeat irregularities, riot formation, addiction relapse, and even the "tipping point" in climate change all exhibit catastrophe behavior.