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What We've Learned from NKS Chapter 2: The Crucial Experiment 

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In this episode of "What We've Learned from NKS", Stephen Wolfram is counting down to the 20th anniversary of A New Kind of Science with [another] chapter retrospective. If you'd like to contribute to the discussion in future episodes, you can participate through this RU-vid channel or through the official Twitch channel of Stephen Wolfram here: / stephen_wolfram

Read all of NKS here: www.wolframsci...
3:49 Stephen introduces Chapter 2
4:42 Stephen discusses Section 1: How Do Simple Programs Behave?
15:52 Section 2: The Need for a New Intuition
23:30 Notes from NKS
51:17 Here's a story about Feynman and Rule 30
54:50 Notes continued
58:27 Section 3: Why These Discoveries Were Not Made Before
1:33:34 Notes from Section 3
1:41:32 History of Cellular Automata
1:51:10 Question. In this chapter's notes you say "I worked hard to analyze the behavior of cellular automata using ideas from statistical mechanics, dynamical systems theory and discrete mathematics." Could you tell us if after the book's publication there has been any progress in applying traditional methodologies to the analysis of rule 30?
1:52:07 Question: Are these Elementary Cellular Automata maybe correlated to Galois Pseudo Random Number generators? From my computer experiments I have a feeling that some of them are very similar.
1:52:30 what are the definition of "nested patterns", are they reversible, such that you can get back. i.e. are all bits and bit-patterns nested
1:52:49 What happened to the Rule 30 random number generator? Did you lose confidence in it? Is it still being used?
1:54:34 Is that a good rule of thumb? If it can't be decoded by Feynman that it is irreducible? Does that count as a proof?
1:55:14 Question: In the notes of ch.2. you write that "Programs that simulate natural systems are among the most computationally expensive." Do you have the same view on that today or has that changed?
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5 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 25   
@Shadolis
@Shadolis Год назад
What's really cool (to me) is I "discovered" partition theory myself before knowing it was a thing well before anything I did. From there, I played with matrices after I experimented with the geometry of an "abracadabra talisman." That's when I discovered that if you apply rules to cells in a matrix you could create simple patterns. Eventually I got curious to see if this was already a thing like it was with partition theory, and I found NKS by Stephen Wolfram. His work has led me on a path of intermittent experimentation and discovery. When Stephen mentioned in this video of perhaps a way to skip the need to compute everything before a value (or in my case getting to a close enough value to decrease computational reqs), I got excited, because that's what I've been working on. This could have massive impacts in CS if we figure it out, and not just with special circumstances of oddity.
@acommunistdwarf
@acommunistdwarf 2 года назад
Thank you very much Professor for such pleasant lectures. Really enjoying this complementary material to such incredible book
@VladimirRomanovsky-Errdonald
@VladimirRomanovsky-Errdonald 2 года назад
Starts at 3:10
@rsmith31416
@rsmith31416 2 года назад
Thank you for the stream. Really interesting!
@KaliFissure
@KaliFissure 2 года назад
3ish dimension and a compact time dimension. The Ricci curve is everything. Gravity is the evidence that fundamentally less moves towards more. In my fluidic model i call space thixotropic in that it becomes more dense and less viscous with shear stress (energy) but this can be described a few ways.
@KaliFissure
@KaliFissure 2 года назад
@Wolfram and total apologies of I'm a pest. My enthusiasm...
@KaliFissure
@KaliFissure 2 года назад
@Mike Fuller I don't active to big bang theory. If you want to understand my model "neutron decay cosmology" I have some videos on here.
@KaliFissure
@KaliFissure 2 года назад
@Mike Fuller never underestimate your potential. We are always growing.
@lucianmaximus4741
@lucianmaximus4741 2 года назад
Many Kudos !!!!
@freiesleben6126
@freiesleben6126 Год назад
I LOVE IT!
@davidrandell2224
@davidrandell2224 2 года назад
“The Final Theory: Rethinking Our Scientific Legacy “, Mark McCutcheon for real physics.
@KaliFissure
@KaliFissure 2 года назад
@Wolfram 🤘👍🖖Neutron decay cosmology is inevitable
@uploadJ
@uploadJ 2 года назад
Something 'spins down' ...
@KaliFissure
@KaliFissure 2 года назад
@@uploadJ ?
@CandidDate
@CandidDate 2 года назад
of course this is all in two dimensions. how about 3 or 4 dimensions?
@jamesbryan855
@jamesbryan855 Год назад
Am I the only one tripping balls?
@shthed
@shthed Год назад
No
@IN-pr3lw
@IN-pr3lw Год назад
No
@PCMcGee1
@PCMcGee1 2 года назад
I bet he is not fully aware that any computer program can be fully emulated by simple address movements in the registers.
@alepatrik3777
@alepatrik3777 2 года назад
xd
@Zeno2Day
@Zeno2Day Год назад
Y
@theartofmaths1126
@theartofmaths1126 2 года назад
You can learn nothing only from nothing
@rwnrealworldnews8752
@rwnrealworldnews8752 2 года назад
So you used 10 years to write pseudoscience book, explaining non experiments, because true ones are natural?
@sterlingveil
@sterlingveil 2 года назад
It would be so hard to accidentally miscomprehend Steven this badly that I can only assume it isn't accidental.
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