World Science Scholars
1.1 The Science of Computation
video
video
Note

Click on the Play/Pause button to watch/stop the video. Use the other controls to change the volume, speed, quality, and size of the video. All users can read the associated discussion; however, only registered users can add or reply to comments about the video. This lecture was recorded on October 4, 2019.




You must be logged in to reply to this discussion.
Robert Ruxandrescu
Stephen has been criticized for his ideas but I like to listen to what he has to say. It's pretty interesting.
Luke Gurbin
Thanks to Prof. Wolfram for the audit.
Luke Gurbin
Simple rules can produce complex results.
Sarang Bhasme
Thanks!
Jatin Gartan
I don't understand why no mathematicians or physicist paid attention to it before. This seems so fundamental and natural. You always see this problem in mathematics that some problems are hard and some are not. But why is there this hierarchy of problems,why can't we solve them easily. I have always felt there is something fundamental about computation like mass and energy. This is connected to the Godels incompleteness theorem and what are the sorts of problems that can be solved. This is fascinating and I'm very confident we're going to see more of this computational perspective in fundamental physics to answer the fundamental questions of reality.
×

Share with others

Select this checkbox if you want to share this with all users

Select Users

Enter the usernames or email IDs of the users you want to share with

Please enter message

Explain why you want them to see this

Send this to a friend