Ergodic and Butterfly Theories of History I'm not sure what a configuration space is, but your idea is intriguing. I had a friend, a physics prof, years ago who would take a cigar box with a lid to class and open it, revealing a set of neat stacks of coins. The he would shake the box, reopen it and say, "That's entropy!" When notions are a tad vague and it's difficult to put them in some sort of numerical context, I'm out of my depth.
Thanks for the links. I hadn't heard of some of those ideas. "Ergodic" is difficult to pin down, but the statistical idea in a dynamical system is not hard to see. Roughly it can be explained as taking averages of a phenomenon two or three different ways and getting more or less the same result. But it's not entirely clear cut.
This is a mathematical concept, so I'll give a simple example. Start with the complex plane (corresponds to the XY plane) where z=x+iy, x and y real numbers and i^2=-1. An attracting fixed point is a point in the plane (or complex number) that attracts for some function f(z). It doesn't exist as an attractor by itself. The simplest and most powerful attractor is f(z)=a, where a is some point in the plane. Then no matter what value you use for z, the function takes you instantly to a.
A slightly more complicated example is f(z)=.5(z-a)+a. Starting with a particular value of z, let z1=f(z), z2=f(z1), z3=f(z2), .. . . .Then this process of iteration, with let's say each step taking one second, moves the point z as close as we wish to a in a finite period of time. This limiting process is the heart of the branch of mathematics called
analysis. And when analysis concerns complex numbers it is complex analysis, my specialty.