Catastrophe theory
Catastrophe theory is the study of how small, continuous changes in control parameters can produce sudden, discontinuous jumps in the behavior of a system. Developed by René Thom in the 1960s, it classifies the geometries of these jumps into seven elementary catastrophes — the fold, cusp, swallowtail, butterfly, and three umbilics — each a universal pattern that appears across physics, biology, and engineering. The theory was once oversold as a universal language of change, but its real contribution is precise: it maps the exact conditions under which smooth control produces abrupt outcomes, making it a topological companion to Bifurcation theory. The deeper claim is that these catastrophes are not anomalies but the natural geometry of systems whose stable states compete — and the competition itself is governed by a potential surface whose folds are the geometry of Structural instability.