The Last Theory
The Last Theory
  • Видео 60
  • Просмотров 498 885
Jonathan Gorard: the complete first interview
0:00 The complete first interview
0:17 The founding of the Wolfram Physics Project
13:32 From clockwork to computation
23:09 Why I took a chance on Wolfram Physics
31:29 Why hypergraphs might be a good model of the universe
40:51 Graphs v hypergraphs
46:40 How to draw the hypergraph
53:43 Why I changed my mind about computational irreducibility
1:02:38 Causal invariance v confluence
1:14:51 How to find causally invariant rules
1:18:49 How to find interesting & plausible rules
1:25:57 One rule to rule them all?
1:32:00 Is the universe a tautology?
1:41:09 How to derive quantum mechanics from Wolfram Physics
1:55:32 How to derive general relativity from Wolfram Physics
2:07:54 How _special_ is general rel...
Просмотров: 4 409

Видео

In defence of Stephen Wolfram
Просмотров 9 тыс.2 месяца назад
You like Stephen Wolfram, right? I mean, if he’s to be believed, he has reinvented physics, not to mention philosophy. How could you not like such a thinker? Well... it turns out that there are plenty of people who don’t like Stephen Wolfram... or his physics... or his philosophy. Here are four criticisms of Stephen Wolfram I regularly hear... ...and here’s why these criticisms, though they hin...
Beyond physics: applying the Wolfram model in biology, chemistry, mathematics with Jonathan Gorard
Просмотров 6 тыс.3 месяца назад
In this final excerpt from our conversation in October 2022, Jonathan Gorard explains how ideas from Wolfram Physics can be applied in fields beyond physics, including biology, chemistry and mathematics. He describes the concept of compositionality, and digs deeper into why the hypergraph is able to model so much of our universe. - Jonathan Gorard • Jonathan Gorard at The Wolfram Physics Projec...
Who is Stephen Wolfram?
Просмотров 6 тыс.4 месяца назад
You know who Stephen Wolfram is, right? Whether you love him or, you know, don’t love him, there’s no denying that Stephen Wolfram has founded a host of fascinating projects... most of them named Wolfram-something-or-other. What are all these Wolfram-branded projects? Who is Stephen Wolfram? - Some of the things Stephen Wolfram created: • 1987 Wolfram Research www.wolfram.com/company/ • 1988 Ma...
Where's the evidence for Wolfram Physics? with Jonathan Gorard
Просмотров 78 тыс.4 месяца назад
I asked Jonathan Gorard the question I’m asked the most: can the Wolfram model make testable predictions about reality, predictions that differ from those of general relativity and quantum mechanics, predictions that might prove that Wolfram Physics is right? Jonathan showed how the Wolfram model might shed light on some of the most mysterious phenomena of our universe, from black hole inspiral...
The knowledge hypergraph
Просмотров 1,4 тыс.5 месяцев назад
Subscribe to the new Open Web Mind channel www.youtube.com/@openwebmind The Open Web Mind is a protocol for shared human intelligence, based on the knowledge hypergraph. Take a look at this quick introduction for subscribers to The Last Theory, then jump to the 2-minute trailer ruclips.net/video/D5ZHWn6XqV8/видео.html on the new channel. And if you haven’t done so already, make sure to subscrib...
Are electrons too big to simulate? with Jonathan Gorard
Просмотров 3 тыс.5 месяцев назад
How big are electrons compared to the hypergraph? Is one electron formed of 10 nodes, or 10100 nodes? And if it’s 10100 nodes, might it prove impossible to simulate an electron on any computer we can possibly imagine? When I asked Jonathan Gorard this question, he took us on a tour of the scales of the universe, from the Planck scale to the Hubble scale. He revealed how the Wolfram Physics Proj...
How to measure the curvature of space
Просмотров 1,3 тыс.6 месяцев назад
What if you’re inside a universe, and you want to measure the curvature of space? It’s important because getting a measure of the curvature of the hypergraph takes us one step further in Jonathan Gorard’s derivation of General Relativity from Wolfram Physics. Einstein’s equations relate the curvature of space to the presence of matter. So if we’re going to prove that Einstein’s equations follow...
A toy model of particles with Jonathan Gorard
Просмотров 2,9 тыс.6 месяцев назад
In this excerpt from my conversation with Jonathan Gorard, he proposes that particles in Wolfram Physics might be persistent topological obstructions in the hypergraph. He starts with a toy model in which elementary particles are non-planar tangles moving and interacting in an otherwise planar hypergraph. But he doesn’t stop there. He explains that there’s an infinite variety of hypergraphs tha...
How to tell if space is curved
Просмотров 1,4 тыс.7 месяцев назад
What if you’re inside a universe, and you want to know whether space is curved? The reason I’m asking is that according to Einstein’s general theory of relativity, our universe is curved, by the presence of matter. If Wolfram Physics is to be a true model of our universe, then the space represented by the hypergraph must also be curved by the presence of matter. Which means that determining whe...
How special is general relativity? with Jonathan Gorard
Просмотров 2 тыс.7 месяцев назад
I asked Jonathan Gorard what it felt like when he realized that general relativity can be derived from the hypergraph. His answer took us in an unexpected direction. If the Wolfram model is to be an accurate model of our universe, then it must give us the Einstein equations. But what if any old model with any old rules can give us the Einstein equations? What if general relativity isn’t so spec...
Why scientific theories need not make predictions
Просмотров 2,1 тыс.8 месяцев назад
In my exploration of Wolfram Physics, I’ve come across one objection more than any other. Over and over again, people have told me that the Wolfram model must be rejected because it makes no predictions. I could respond by saying that Wolfram Physics does make predictions. It predicts Einstein’s equations. It predicts Schrödinger’s equation. But it’s true that it doesn’t make any predictions th...
How to derive general relativity from Wolfram Physics with Jonathan Gorard
Просмотров 16 тыс.8 месяцев назад
Here’s a masterclass from Jonathan Gorard. One of the most compelling results to come out of the Wolfram Physics is Jonathan’s derivation of the Einstein equations from the hypergraph. Whenever I hear anyone criticize the Wolfram model for bearing no relation to reality, I tell them this: Jonathan Gorard has proved that general relativity can be derived from the hypergraph. In this excerpt from...
How to derive quantum mechanics from Wolfram Physics with Jonathan Gorard
Просмотров 12 тыс.9 месяцев назад
Here’s the first of two crucial excerpts from my conversation with Jonathan Gorard. The core idea of Wolfram Physics is that we can model the universe as a hypergraph. If we want this idea to be taken seriously, we’re going to have to derive physics from the hypergraph. The twin pillars of physics, as we know it, are quantum mechanics and general relativity. In this episode, Jonathan explains h...
Peer review is suffocating science
Просмотров 1,5 тыс.9 месяцев назад
You know peer review, right? It’s the way academics check each other’s research papers. It ensures that only the good ones are published and prevents the bad ones from getting through. Right? Wrong. Peer review does precisely the opposite of what you think it does. It prevents the good papers from being published, and ensures that only the bad ones get through. Peer review is suffocating scienc...
Is the universe a tautology? with Jonathan Gorard
Просмотров 4,1 тыс.10 месяцев назад
Is the universe a tautology? with Jonathan Gorard
What is a particle in Wolfram's universe?
Просмотров 14 тыс.10 месяцев назад
What is a particle in Wolfram's universe?
One rule to rule them all? with Jonathan Gorard
Просмотров 3,2 тыс.11 месяцев назад
One rule to rule them all? with Jonathan Gorard
John von Neumann and the art of being there
Просмотров 32 тыс.11 месяцев назад
John von Neumann and the art of being there
How to find interesting and plausible rules with Jonathan Gorard
Просмотров 2 тыс.Год назад
How to find interesting and plausible rules with Jonathan Gorard
Why has there been no progress in physics since 1973?
Просмотров 101 тыс.Год назад
Why has there been no progress in physics since 1973?
How to find causally invariant rules with Jonathan Gorard
Просмотров 1,7 тыс.Год назад
How to find causally invariant rules with Jonathan Gorard
How to knit the universe
Просмотров 1,9 тыс.Год назад
How to knit the universe
Animating the hypergraph with Dugan Hammock
Просмотров 2,3 тыс.Год назад
Animating the hypergraph with Dugan Hammock
Causal invariance versus confluence with Jonathan Gorard
Просмотров 3,2 тыс.Год назад
Causal invariance versus confluence with Jonathan Gorard
Loops and self loops in the hypergraph
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.Год назад
Loops and self loops in the hypergraph
Living in the fourth dimension with Dugan Hammock
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.Год назад
Living in the fourth dimension with Dugan Hammock
Why I changed my mind about computational irreducibility with Jonathan Gorard
Просмотров 14 тыс.Год назад
Why I changed my mind about computational irreducibility with Jonathan Gorard
What’s beyond the universe?
Просмотров 2 тыс.Год назад
What’s beyond the universe?
How to draw the hypergraph in Wolfram Physics with Jonathan Gorard - The Last Theory # 030
Просмотров 3 тыс.Год назад
How to draw the hypergraph in Wolfram Physics with Jonathan Gorard - The Last Theory # 030

Комментарии

  • @santoshbhandari1310
    @santoshbhandari1310 15 часов назад

    I really loved how you connected different pieces spread across various domains. Well presented.

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 15 часов назад

      Thanks Santosh, I appreciate that!

  • @dg-ov4cf
    @dg-ov4cf 16 часов назад

    move your teleprompter up a little

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 15 часов назад

      Teleprompter? Ah, now I wish I had a teleprompter :)

  • @rauckr09
    @rauckr09 День назад

    Jonathan seemed to suggest that the presence of computational irreducibility of a phenomenon leads to the ability to coarse-grain the behavior of it. Is he suggesting that this is universally true? Would that mean that Rule 30 would also follow this behavior?

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory День назад

      Good question. Yes, I would suspect that this is universally true of computationally irreducible rules that give rise to chaotic behaviour. The idea here is that the chaotic behaviour arising from computationally irreducibility is effectively the same as randomness, and randomness, though it means we can't make fine-grained predictions, allows coarse-graining to arise. As for Rule 30, Stephen Wolfram _suspects_ that it's computational irreducible, but that hasn't been proved yet. He has offered a prize for proving that it is at www.rule30prize.org/ but I don't think anyone has won that prize yet. Thanks for the great questions!

  • @WaynoGur
    @WaynoGur День назад

    One of the greatest minds of the 20th Century. Basic Von Neumann architecture is used in every computer on the planet.

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory День назад

      Yep, he was one of a kind, for sure, thanks Wayno!

  • @starexplorers1202
    @starexplorers1202 3 дня назад

    Once a profession is established ideas are carefully selected that will support current doctrine. Any ides that threaten that domain are universally ridiculed or ignored. This is why String Theory has been stuck for so long. The principle of Nature lies deep within it's concept but seeing the simplicity of it's true nature requires theoretical physicists to not make Nature look perfectly symmetrical. Asymmetry is key to unlocking the understanding the truth lying deep within Nature's laws.

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 2 дня назад

      Yes, asymmetry does seem key. Continuous theories like General Relativity seem too perfectly symmetric to give rise to our complex, chaotic universe. Discreteness seems better suited to explaining that complexity and chaos. Thanks for the comment!

    • @starexplorers1202
      @starexplorers1202 2 дня назад

      @@lasttheory 100% agree.

  • @sentientmango3259
    @sentientmango3259 4 дня назад

    Finishing my PhD in high energy physics in a couple of months. This video says nothing of substance. Waste of 11 minutes. Academia and physics has its problems, but this particular video doesn't touch any of them. Or anything meaningful, really.

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 3 дня назад

      Thanks for the comment, and good to hear that you're making your contribution in high energy physics. I'm sorry if my video doesn't speak to you, but I do thirst for significant progress in fundamental theoretical physics. Maybe you'll be the one to make it!

  • @alphaomega1089
    @alphaomega1089 4 дня назад

    The new kid on the block for sure. Great times ahead. Seen him twice and sense greatness. Makes me want to take it serious.

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 4 дня назад

      Yes, Jonathan's so clear and incisive, someone to watch, for sure!

  • @harriehausenman8623
    @harriehausenman8623 5 дней назад

    sry for being so late, that one took me a while 😄 Great editing! 🤗 Can't imagine how many micro-decisions had to be made 🤭 I think subtitles would be great and make it much more accessible. Also chapter marks could help. All in all: A historic document, in my book 😍

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 5 дней назад

      Yep, it takes a while to get through the whole thing, but it's worth it! Running through the whole interview again to tweak the editing really cemented some of Jonathan's insights in my mind. Thanks, as ever, for the feedback and the support!

  • @justincgs
    @justincgs 5 дней назад

    Thank you so much for posting full length interviews vs the shorts.

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 5 дней назад

      No problem, it took me a while to edit, but I got there in the end. Glad you're enjoying the full interview, thanks Justin!

  • @AspartameBoy
    @AspartameBoy 5 дней назад

    Dark matter is proof physics barking up wrong tree

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 5 дней назад

      Yes, thanks John, I agree. Scientists never seem to admit that they don't know all the answers. Instead they invent terms like "dark matter" to make it _sound_ like they know what's missing.

    • @AspartameBoy
      @AspartameBoy 5 дней назад

      @@lasttheory And to top it off they claim Dark Matter is the major constituent of the Universe. Which means at less than 50% .. THEY GET FAILING MARKS🤣

  • @jmlincolorado
    @jmlincolorado 7 дней назад

    someone buy this gentleman a strap for his glasses

  • @Anders01
    @Anders01 8 дней назад

    Great to hear an explanation of theoretical physics. Lots of complexity in how things have developed.

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 8 дней назад

      Yes, thanks. Complex, for sure!

  • @dmitryshusterman9494
    @dmitryshusterman9494 8 дней назад

    Its far from a theory explaining nature. Its only a framework in which to frame such a theory. It really has no explanotory power, but it gives a way how theories can be formed outside of space time. And thats amazing. But, the question still remains, why universe exist and why it is this specific way.

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 8 дней назад

      Yes, absolutely, it's a framework. Why the universe exists is a question we may never be able to answer - though Stephen Wolfram _claims_ to have an answer. But why it is this specific way is a fascinating question which I'm hoping this framework will be able to shed more and more light on.

  • @dmitryshusterman9494
    @dmitryshusterman9494 8 дней назад

    I knew, one day someone would explain whats going on.

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 8 дней назад

      I _hope_ this turns into a full explanation of what's going on! Thanks Dmitry.

  • @maynardtrendle820
    @maynardtrendle820 8 дней назад

    I promise you: We are cartoons drawing cartoon tools.

  • @Herman47
    @Herman47 10 дней назад

    *If he had lived long enough, Mr. Von Neumann would likely have won a Nobel Prize -- in Economics, for his work on Game Theory. But Nobel Prizes in Economics were not awarded until 1969, more than a dozen years after Mr. Von Neumann's death.*

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 10 дней назад

      Yes, it's extraordinary that a mathematician made contributions in so many fields well beyond mathematics!

  • @Sam-we7zj
    @Sam-we7zj 10 дней назад

    What about Wolfram’s idea that black holes and electrons might be the same thing. So causally disconnected regions in the data structure. does that relate to the idea of a particle being a Conwayesque structure?

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 10 дней назад

      Yes, absolutely, black holes might also be modelled as persistent tangles in the hypergraph, from the smallest scales to the largest. I'm not sure about the causal disconnection in the case of black holes. I know Jonathan Gorard has done some work on this, so I'll certainly ask him next time I talk to him! Thanks for the prompt, Sam.

  • @Dessoxyn
    @Dessoxyn 10 дней назад

    I was looking for the date or at least year of the interview, but instead discovered Los Alamos is run by "Triad National Security, LLC," which is both more personally relevant and something I should have known.

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 10 дней назад

      The date of the interview is 19 October 2022. And yes, I agree, Dess, that it's absurd that the lawyers at Los Alamos make me put that entire text in the description as a condition of using the photos of John von Neumann and Stanisław Ulam. They need to lighten up a little!

    • @Dessoxyn
      @Dessoxyn 10 дней назад

      @@lasttheory Like everything else surrounding nukes, turns out Triad is headexplode.gif "Triad is made up of three members" except it also has "two integrated subcontractors" and "three small business contractors." Big laugh about how among many things, Triad handles "stockpile management" and "nuclear nonproliferation" but a couple paragraphs later one of these "integrated subcontractors" handles what could only be described as "proliferation." "Huntington Ingalls Industries provides personnel, systems, tools and corporate reachback in the areas of pit production, plutonium manufacturing, production scale-up and nuclear operations and manufacturing." I'm not talking UFOs, but I'm sure between this being private and the DoE's own classification system there's space for all sorts of interesting stuff to lurk.

  • @User53123
    @User53123 10 дней назад

    Yay finally get to see the whole thing. Thanks for interview.

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 10 дней назад

      Yes, I got there in the end! Thanks Jaime

  • @samuelprice538
    @samuelprice538 12 дней назад

    When I was around 13 years old, over 30 years ago, I was thinking deeply about time and the speed of light, and other things like zetos paradox. I came to the conclusion then that either time or space or probably both HAD to be discreet, it was the only answer that made any sense. Ive been troubled ever since, until I found out about Wolfram's physics, that noone in science was talking about this. Tbh learning about WP was a relief. At least now I know it's something someone is studying earnestly, and that gives me much comfort.

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 12 дней назад

      That's really good to hear, thanks Samuel. I think the tools of continuous mathematics have been so productive in physics for so long that we didn't put enough thought into the question of whether that continuity might be a mere approximation to an underlying discreteness. It has taken the tools of discrete computation to change this. I'd be interested to hear why your 13-year-old self thought that space or time or both must be discrete?

    • @ireneisahuman
      @ireneisahuman 4 дня назад

      This is just exactly how I felt as well, until i found somebody was studying it And I hope to study it when I grow up as well

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 4 дня назад

      @@ireneisahuman Thanks, Irene, that's good to hear. I'm happy that there are people like you who'll be studying these things in the future!

    • @ireneisahuman
      @ireneisahuman 4 дня назад

      @@lasttheory ^_^

  • @MarkoTManninen
    @MarkoTManninen 13 дней назад

    Pure gold. My favourite new generation scientist, J.G. Thanks for your effort, both.

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 13 дней назад

      Thanks Marko. I agree, Jonathan is incredible.

  • @Stadtpark90
    @Stadtpark90 13 дней назад

    13:53 nine minutes of gold: on computationalism and constructivism “people confuse the substrate of a model for a statement about ontology” This reminded me of Joscha Bach talking about how “Correspondence Theories” are fundamentally flawed: it can’t be about setting individual pointers to reality right, because models can per definition only point (and talk) within themselves. ruclips.net/video/XsGfCfMQgNs/видео.htmlsi=Y5kRvydF131HHinB 22:39 “… there are situations in which you can prove formally: No experiment that you can in principle do, could distinguish wether the universe is discrete or continuous”, “it keeps running away from you” 31:30 nine more minutes of pure gold: wanting rewriting rules that preserve distance in the causal structure (- otherwise you would lose a notion of locality) - the hypergraph is what drops out naturally / obviously 40:55 implementation: how to do the plumbing 46:44 Edit: I finally have time to continue with this video. 1:34:14 The multiverse is more trivial than the universe. - Intuition: There is some content to the universe. // In my own words: You have to have starting conditions; you can’t just start with rules and arrive at our universe; the rules have to act on something preexisting. You can have a multiverse from nothing, but you can’t have “our” universe from nothing. It’s like a (random number?) “seed” in a sandbox-(computer-)game, that distinguishes this universe from all possible universes. 1:39:01 Where to place the computational burden? Bottom Up, or Top Down? The role of the observer in “slicing the Ruliad”. 1:41:10 Being more realistic about the nature of the observer: GR and QM were a start, what’s the next logical step? The observer imposes a coarse graining / “fake rules”: the observer imposes causal invariance post-hoc. 1:50:13 getting QM for free (- I’ll have to rewatch that a few more times.) 2:10:47 GR is more generic / less “special” than one might have hoped for: it applies quite “naturally” to a large part of possible hypergraph rewriting rules; it doesn’t narrow down / pick out “our” universe; vice versa: our type of universe might not be uncommon in the hypothetical space of reasonably constructed universes. 2:12:58 particles

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 13 дней назад

      Thanks for these timestamps! And yes, Jonathan is extraordinarily clear both on the mathematics and on the philosophy.

    • @Stadtpark90
      @Stadtpark90 13 дней назад

      @@lasttheory didn’t have time for watching the rest today; might continue tomorrow

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 13 дней назад

      @@Stadtpark90 Yes, it's a long one! Worth persisting for more brilliant insights from Jonathan. Anyway, thanks again for the timestamps!

    • @harriehausenman8623
      @harriehausenman8623 5 дней назад

      Yeah, I had tears in my eyes.

  • @TheGreenboxal
    @TheGreenboxal 13 дней назад

    The physical <> computational correspondence clicked for me when I realized how distributed computing is inherently bound by special relativity, and you can directly observe the effects here (and you have to work around them).

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 13 дней назад

      Yes, thanks Jonathan. I find it takes a while for these ideas to click.

  • @qualiacomposite
    @qualiacomposite 13 дней назад

    uploading a 3 hour video with no timestamps is very unethical

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 13 дней назад

      Yes, sorry, it's hard to fit timestamps, or much of anything else, into the details box, with all the legal nonsense the Los Alamos National Laboratory et al makes me put in there.

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 11 дней назад

      Timestamps now added! I've had to remove a bunch of the links to make room, but you can still find all the links at lasttheory.com/channel/059-jonathan-gorard-the-complete-first-interview

    • @scenFor109
      @scenFor109 10 дней назад

      ​@@lasttheoryI believe you can put them into a comment and pin the comment to the top.

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 10 дней назад

      @@scenFor109 Ah, I did wonder about that! I've made room for them in the description this time, but I'll try that trick next time, thanks!

    • @qualiacomposite
      @qualiacomposite 10 дней назад

      @@lasttheory Thank you

  • @Nah_Bohdi
    @Nah_Bohdi 13 дней назад

    Neat.

  • @DannyDanny-rn7ck
    @DannyDanny-rn7ck 13 дней назад

    You even know what your working on you little freak

  • @DannyDanny-rn7ck
    @DannyDanny-rn7ck 13 дней назад

    🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡🐸😊

  • @hypercube717
    @hypercube717 13 дней назад

    Your perspectives and videos have been very helpful. Thank you.

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 13 дней назад

      Thank you so much, that means a lot to me!

  • @hypercube717
    @hypercube717 13 дней назад

    Well said.

  • @NightmareCourtPictures
    @NightmareCourtPictures 13 дней назад

    "Wake up kids, we have a Last Theory upload."

  • @aminam9201
    @aminam9201 13 дней назад

    The theory of the mule and the cockroach! Planet of the apes is planet of endless wonders!

  • @Sam-we7zj
    @Sam-we7zj 13 дней назад

    Settling in with the popcorn

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 13 дней назад

      Yes, thanks Sam, it's a long one... enjoy the popcorn with your hypergraphs!

    • @harriehausenman8623
      @harriehausenman8623 5 дней назад

      literally the same. Got some fine toffee popcorn 😋

  • @hankseda
    @hankseda 13 дней назад

    Informative and candid interview! Well done 👏

  • @CrazyAssDrumma
    @CrazyAssDrumma 14 дней назад

    Incredible. I love the wolfram physics project! Can't wait to see more progress

  • @tokrv
    @tokrv 14 дней назад

    👍 You had the best interview with Jonathan. I would love to hear another one

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 13 дней назад

      Thanks, I really appreciate that! And yes, I'd love to do another one. I'll be reaching out to Jonathan again shortly!

    • @mitchtroumbly7056
      @mitchtroumbly7056 12 дней назад

      If it takes you 2 years to post it, don't bother

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 12 дней назад

      @@mitchtroumbly7056 Hey, Mitch, I've been releasing excerpts from this conversation every few weeks for the last year and a half. So yes, it has been slow, but I've put a lot of time and effort into editing them and adding information on-screen, so I think it has been worth the wait. Most of what Jonathan talks about in this interview is timeless.

  • @djbabbotstown
    @djbabbotstown 14 дней назад

    So this is the interview from last year?

    • @pooroldnostradamus
      @pooroldnostradamus 14 дней назад

      From 2 years ago it would seem

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 13 дней назад

      Yes, it's from October 2022, so a year and a half ago now. I'd really like to get an update from Jonathan and dig deeper into some of the topics we discussed. I'll be reaching out to him again soon!

    • @antonystringfellow5152
      @antonystringfellow5152 13 дней назад

      @@lasttheory Excellent!

  • @jamesshelley5912
    @jamesshelley5912 18 дней назад

    You might be wrong saying Von Neumann understood math. In the man's own words "... in mathematics you don't understand things. You just get used to them."

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 18 дней назад

      Yes, I love that quote, thanks James!

  • @peterwexler5737
    @peterwexler5737 18 дней назад

    J. von Neumann was an intellectual thief. I am well aware of the credit that he STOLE for ENIAC. I'd sooner trust Klaus Fuchs and David Greenglass with my intellectual property.

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 18 дней назад

      Yes, he was a complex character, for sure, and not always a likeable one. Have you read The MANIAC by Benjamín Labatut? It's an excellent fictionalized account of John von Neumann's life that focuses on the darker side. Thanks for the comment, Peter.

  • @mitchellhayman381
    @mitchellhayman381 18 дней назад

    He's just autistic. Autistic with genius IQ and high conscientiousness and curiosity. I believe he's a great man.

  • @lsb2623
    @lsb2623 19 дней назад

    The entire time this dude was giving this talk he was listening to Europe performing the song "The Final Countdown" on loop at top volume.

  • @pablocopello3592
    @pablocopello3592 21 день назад

    "Wolfram physics" is proposing to use certain mathematical tools (graphs, automata...) as the basic tools to formulate physics (formalism). Those are powerful tools that are currently not much used in physics. So, there is much "space" to investigate and potentially much to contribute to Physics itself. "Wolfram physics" also proposes a set of ideas of how to "represent" many physical facts (like space dimensions, or QM superposition etc.) in terms of those mathematical tools (hyper graphs and automata). In a way it is similar to string and M-theories that uses mathematical tools like spaces (and also objects) with higher dimensions and different topologies and other "advanced" mathematical tools (and should not be called "theories" either). I think that "wolfram physics" is promising, but, like in the case of the "string theory", there exist the "trap" of forgetting that this is physics (not mathematics) and that empirically testable (falsifiable!) predictions should be made asap. An exposition of "wolfram physics" should begin by saying how the main concepts in "standard" physics emerge, for it to have some meaning to physicists. It should begin by saying, for instance: how is the spacetime interval defined in terms of the graphs/hypergraph, or how do the "amplitudes of probability" and phases of QM emerge. Does a point of spacetime corresponds to a node in the hypergraph? or does it corresponds to certain graph structures? etc. etc.

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 21 день назад

      I agree with all of that, thanks Pablo. So yes, we should begin with how physics emerges from the Wolfram model. First is General Relativity. I'm working on a series of videos about how it emerges from the hypergraph, but for a more technical overview, see _How to derive general relativity from Wolfram Physics with Jonathan Gorard_ ruclips.net/video/1tjhE0U-mgc/видео.html Next is Quantum Mechanics. This one's more difficult, conceptually, but I'm working on it! Again, for an overview, see _How to derive quantum mechanics from Wolfram Physics with Jonathan Gorard_ ruclips.net/video/YZhCYLZanEE/видео.html Also, there are the basic concepts like mass/energy, space and time. I have a few videos on space already ruclips.net/p/PLVwcxwu8hWKkVdyXUcRLphco6Ie02OI-3 but much more to come on these! Hope my channel helps give you what you're looking for!

    • @pablocopello3592
      @pablocopello3592 19 дней назад

      @@lasttheory Thank you for the links. I will look at them as soon as time permits.

  • @samuelprice538
    @samuelprice538 23 дня назад

    A work colleague and I were discussing this very question the other week. He has a degree in physics whereas im just a commoner. His explanation was that Stephens work isn't attached to any university amd therefore there is a snobbish ignoring of it.

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 22 дня назад

      Right, yes, exactly. I suspect that the antagonism between Stephen Wolfram and academic is mutual. Jonathan Gorard, on the other hand, is working within academia, at major universities like Cambridge and Princeton. I hope that'll bridge the gap and get these ideas a fair hearing. Thanks Samuel!

  • @dustysoodak
    @dustysoodak 23 дня назад

    Does anyone here know if these models naturally collapse from infinite to 3 dimensional in particular?

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 22 дня назад

      That's a great question! It's on my list to ask Jonathan next time we talk. Sorry I don't know the answer, but I'm hoping Jonathan will enlighten me.

  • @ConnoisseurOfExistence
    @ConnoisseurOfExistence 23 дня назад

    Nice!

  • @andrewunger1276
    @andrewunger1276 24 дня назад

    For Gosh sakes it was “Johnny.” Teller, Bethe,Feynman- none of them ever called him “ John.”

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 24 дня назад

      Thanks Andrew! I'm sure you're right, and those three called him Johnny. Others called him János or Jancsi. We all have different names. I never knew John von Neumann, and certainly never received his permission to call him Johnny, so like most current sources (other than the Hungarian ones) I went with John.

  • @beaverbuoy3011
    @beaverbuoy3011 26 дней назад

    Lovely!

  • @En_theo
    @En_theo 26 дней назад

    I agree that most of physicists , especially in the field of particles research, are very closed minded to anything new. They just want to repeat what they read in a book and never try something else.

    • @lasttheory
      @lasttheory 26 дней назад

      Yes, it's a real problem when a passion for physics becomes a career. The incentives change. Conformity to your supervisor's preconceptions becomes more important than following your own ideas.

  • @dougmarkham
    @dougmarkham 27 дней назад

    In terms of the observer vs the universe, it maybe that fractal processes underlie the evolution of the universe and that somehow, the observer and the initial conditions and fractal processes of the early universe are equivalent. Here, the observer is a consequence of the observed but that the qualities of the observer that arose from the observed are the elements that permit limited observation. In other words, just as you can see copies of the Buddha in the Mandelbrot set (each being non-identical but yet mostly similar to the original form) so it is possible that varying structures generated by the universe exhibit consciousness, and that human consciousness is simply residing at some level of the overall fractal expansion of the whole universe. In this model the universe develops consciousness and that consciousness re-synthesizes self-consciousness, which itself re-synthesizes consciousness. Thus, our view of the universe is distorted by our own internal mental representations which have arisen as a result of our exposure to the world. The output of our consciousness will inform the development of human beings yet to come, such that their conscious experiences in 400 years from now~~~having been modified by the output of 400 years more observing~~maybe unfathomable by our current human paradigms.

  • @dougmarkham
    @dougmarkham 27 дней назад

    In terms of bottom up versus top-down or downwards causation, we see this clearly in molecular biology. For instance, it's clear that amino-acids combine to form proteins: the folding of strings of amino acids under the control of post-translational modification during the transit of newly synthesised amino-acid strings through the golgi apparatus leads to secondary structures that further fold into tertiary structures. These can then combine into quaternary structures which form functional proteins or enzymes. If those proteins happen to be Histones, they are sent to the nucleus to act as spools that DNA is wrapped around in order to facilitate the compression of DNA. One spool is composed of 4 histones, and many spools in sequence combine to condense the whole DNA string for a chromosome. Yet, that step is not enough: further folding of that string of spools into a rope conposed of spools and that rope is then folded upon itself to generate still more data compression~~~here we see evidence of bottom up processes leading to massive data compression. Yet, in order for any organism to survive, it must react to challenges in the environment. All the books in the library cannot be read unless they are first found, and second, extracted from the moving shelves~~by winding apart these moving book cases that sit on tracks to get access to the information. In the library system, a book is only read if am external agent comes to the library with the instruction to access a particular book. Similarly, if specific cell receptors are bound by their cognate ligands~~and if the ligands exist due to some change in the external world leading to the synthesis of a particular ligand~~then those bound receptors change their morphology such that second messengers connected to those receptors at the inner wall of the cell membrane become enzymatically modified. This event kicks off a whole sequence of modification events that travel towards the cell nucleus. Eventually, the signal reaches the nucleus leading to changes in Histone configuration that permit a section of DNA to be unwound and copied into messenger RNA. That mRNA is then cleaved of its non-coding sections and then sent to the protein manufacturing factory (the Rough Endoplasmic Reticulum) where the mRNA is used as a blueprint for the construction of a string of amini-acids. Ergo, the external world acts upon structures generated from a bottom up construction, leading to an internal response to the external challenge. Complex systems may form from bottom up cooperation due to non-component specific interactions leading to emergent structures and resulting functionality. Yet, due to complex structures sitting at the edge of chaos, external events can radically change the internal system such that the internal system rearranges itself into an alternative state. From the pov of modelling, this biological complexity will be hard to find from bottom up assumptions just because chaotic systems evolve quite differently from relatively minor changes in initial conditions, yet the question is which precise conditions lead to human biological systems. It might be practically impossible to bottom up reconstruct human biology, ergo you might need to start with that system and work backwards to define which sets of initial conditions exist that would permit evolution of eukaryotic biological systems.

  • @johndavis1465
    @johndavis1465 27 дней назад

    CERN is total BS