Languages which use their own words for to express the notion of "crisis", are seldom found in Europe, but Hungarian is one such rare language, which expresses the notion of "crisis" through the strange word "válság", for which I was unable to find an etymology.
It is however noticeable that "válság", sounds similar and has a similar meaning, to that of the Romanian word "valmasag", which means "disorder, chaos".
If this closeness between the Hungarian word for "crisis" and the Romanian word for "chaos" is true, then this Romanian-Hungarian linguistic space will contribute a suggestion which is extremely valuable from a theoretical point of view, to help establish the nature of the crisis from the perspective of the Chaos Theory, based on the laws of entropy.
When we approach the crisis through the Chaos Theory, we can agree that the progressive organization of systems involves expulsion from the system, disorganization, (the "valmasag"), in a progressing process, which is similar to the pace at which the organizing is taking place.
Thus, the internal structuring, leads to the destructuring of what is located outside the system, just like in order to have a clean house, the trashcan outside must always be full.
From this point of view, globalization becomes at least an imprudence, if not a fatal mistake.
Because a planet which has a global unified structure, with a world banking authority, as Pope Benedict the 16th unexpectedly and strangely recommended this week, would have no place left to throw out the trash into.
Today at least, the European Union has somewhere else to go, for instance from the BRICS countries with emerging economies, but if they had already been part of such a world union, then the system would have been forced to keep its "disorganized parts" inside its own structure because there would no longer be an