After 10 years I started uploading again. Check out my new videos. Still science (and probably more), but animated: ruclips.net/user/RationalAnimations
@gamer 2020 Nonsense. Only fabricated chaos brings order, but that implies that the order is also fabricated, and that the chaos is no real chaos, but an invented situation.
and if you play around with it a little bit, you will find out that a single pixel out of place will almost surely turn everything into a complete warzone, no matter how organized everything seemed
Such a simple rules can create these wonderful almost alive structures imagine what 3 dimensional molecular chemistry could do in about 4 billion years. This comment for example ;)
I'm studying computer science at university, and our prof. showed this video in his lecture (ofc he gave credits to this video). It's amazing to see how all of this is based on simple logic, aswell as Mandelbrot fractal geometries! It's somehow inspirational isn't it?
it's cool to know studies are going well there. my teachers didn't even taught me how to count 0s and 1s. really, fundamentals were skipped, we went straight to some database code bs to be made monkeys for corporations. I had to study most things at home. Brazil uni sucks...
Ok, so then i have a question for you. I was just about to try and google it... but i doubt i would've succeeded. Lol.. ok so you know how there are uniform patterns. How do they organize themselves?? Does it start out a blank grid, you add a couple "cells" and they communicate. Cause thats what i thought. Then i seen the one that said "golly" with a four leaf clover and thought that was a little weird. Like maybe they programmed a starting point. You understand my question?? And i actually learned about this from a guy who works alot with DMT and he has a theory about how the multidimenaional worlds communicate. You should check it out. Especially if you are familiar with dmt and psychadelics and consciousness in general. Anyways, please answer this for me. Because i cant see how this simulation knew how to spell. Lol
youtube doesn't like links, but here's a cool video on the topic ruclips.net/video/-nbTrPwQudo/видео.html Does a universe only exist if its simulated? Well, the rules are already certain, doesn't matter if you simulate it or not, the future of that state is already set. So if you were to shut off the simulation, would the cells cease to exist?
@@matterasmachine I dunno. I wonder if it's possible to create life with these set of physics. Not the alive or dead states of cells, I mean life that can evolve and create more of itself.
@@anarchy8968 Easily. To let them evolve we need to add probability factor. But then we don't know what they evolve into, so there is no future that is already set. The only thing that is set in that case is that they will evolve.
It's amazing how somehow, the easier a sandbox games mechanics are, the more impressively that people will mold and exploit the possibilities to create something truly breathtaking
The Covid-19 pandemic killed many tall trees in every area of the modern world. Today is sad to hear that John Horton Conway, one of the most famous and charismatic mathematicians in the world, died of Covid-19 on April 11, 2020 at home, in New Jersey, USA. , 82 years old.
What's really interesting about this project is, its rules also work in a 3D dimension. I was sure it doesn't but then I remade it in unity 3d and it WORKED!!!
This is by far the coolest game of life I’ve seen ruclips.net/video/xP5-iIeKXE8/видео.html I’ve also seen it done with smooth continuous shapes instead of cells in a grid
Conway designed the rules around eight neighboring cells per cell, being in 3D you might want to tweak the rules in the interest of making patterns last, but not grow infinitely without negative reinforcement. If every cell has 26 possible neighbors then 4 or more isnt whole lot to be sufficient for selfmurder.
You would just multiply by however many more connections there are in a cube compared to a square. So would keep the same logic balanced just at a different scale
I'd guess that "spaceship factory" is pretty close to the mathematically technical term for that formulation. I know that the little moving dudes are actually called spaceships, and a lot of stuff in GoL is named like that.
It really can't be a 2011 video without Requiem for a Dream as its soundtrack. Anyways praise to the almighty algorithm God for letting me discover this gem!
1:11 the glider couple 1:22 the glider factory (size=small) 1:36 the glider factory (size=medium) 1:46 the glider factory (size=large) 1:56 the spaceship constructor 2:23 the diamond 2:27 the farmlands 2:57 the construction of the *universes* 3:03 the construction of the universe but thanks snapped it 3:09 the bouncers 3:14 the launcher 3:16 *humanity* 3:18 still humanity but this time in a war 3:27 the rocket launcher 3:30 collection of trinkets 3:34 explosive trinkets 3:40 the blade 3:45 the chainsaw 3:52 boat outpost 3:58 the message writer 4:06 the numbers 4:21 destruction of the thanos snapped universe 4:34 the tunnels of transport 4:40 bomb and ship 4:47 the triplication factory 5:05 the farmers 5:11 *WEB*
Actual names: 1:11 glider pair 1:22 Gosper Glider Gun 1:56 P416 gun firing 60P5H2V1 spaceships 2:23 Spacefiller after destruction 2:27 Game of Life Turing Machine 2:57 a collection of patterns called "Cambrian Explosion" by the man that put it together 3:03 Spacefiller (this one is called Max) 3:09 reflectors (left-to-right: p5 bouncer, p6 bouncer, p7 bouncer, p8 bouncer, p15 bouncer) 3:14 P690 gun firing 3-engine Corderships 3:16 Spacefiller during destrution 3:18 the Stargate 3:27 P784 gun firing 6-engine Corderships 3:30 the Queen Bee Turner 3:34 p45 extensible oscillator which can be easily turned into a glider gun 3:40 Gabriel's p138 3:52 P165 gun firing MWSS (MiddleWeight SpaceShips) 3:58 Golly ticker 4:06 Actually this pattern shows how arrangments of blocks can be used to turn and split gliders, numbers show time 4:51 Someone just drawn some cells in the middle of the Zebra Stripes 4:34 a wick 4:40 the Sawtooth 4:47 Infinite Glider Hotel 5:05 a Breeder 5:11 P34 glider gun 5:16 the Line Puffer 5:22 the Slide Breeder 5:28 some sort of c/3 rake but for the Life of me I can't find it 5:35 Puffer 2 5:41 3-engine Cordership rake 5:47 P90 MWSS forerake 5:53 P30 glider advancer 5:54 P46 gun assembly 5:56 P10150 2c/5 puffer 5:59 Rake collection 6:06 P270 c/3 glider rake 6:12 P360 c/5 glider rake 6:18 P18 c/2 block puffer followed by P30 3c/10 block fuse
@@davenarisotto3674 P means 'period', that is the number of generations (steps) needed for the pattern to regenerate itself in exactly the same shape and orientation, but possibly displaced and/or having produced something So e.g. the Gosper Glider Gun (first glider producer in the video) is P30, meaning that it produces 1 glider every 30 steps
I'd just like to point out what a perfect example this is of how audio can influence our perception of visual content. Imagine if this video had cricket sounds instead of that epic Requiem for a dream soundtrack. It was pretty cool, though.
DAAAAAAAAAD i took over NASA and blew up the sun and made another dimension and made a multiverse, blew up the under world, burnt the devil in his own fire and brought heaven to earth.... Whoops my bad
1:56 That freaked me out a little. Maths is creating flying insects now. Makes you think what if everything is the result of one formula repeating over time?
Abdoh Ash Yes, really. I am aware that computers are based around maths, probably more than you as I have studied three years of computer science. That doesn’t change what I said though, game of life itself has nothing to do with maths, the creator himself has stated that he’s a bit bitter because the thing he’s most known for doesn’t really involve maths.
This made me think of a Veretasium video called What is Not Random. If Everything is based on 12 particles that interact in 4 predictable ways... How similar is Conway's game of life to your game of life? ruclips.net/video/sMb00lz-IfE/видео.html (Don't attack me if I'm wrong. I'm no expert on quantum physics etc. I just like learning new things.)
Not really. You need processing on every cell to do it. Essentially every cell on the entire plane has to be a simple CPU, each one acting independently, and has to change its answer of its output potentially an infinite number of times i.e. each cell in worst case has to do an infinite amount of processing. As opposed to a fractal for instance, which is a lot simpler in how the images arise by the very nature of how it is produced.
@@medexamtoolscom interesting. This infinite amount of processing would keep the cell alive, is this what you say? If it interrupts the processing, it means it's going to die resp. when it mistakes the outcome as "alive" and it's instead "dead"? I am afraid I don't get this whole thing.
This got me thinking, what if a supercomputer simulates this long enough (perhaps with a very clever/powerful genetic algorithm or neural network algorithm at play as well), that extremely complex intelligent organisms develop, start to gain curiosity, question their existence, and conduct scientific experiments? Those pixel-creatures would eventually discover the nature of the world they live in, including the four laws as illustrated in the beginning of the video. But they would never be able to figure out what causes their world to exist -- there is no way for them to know about the transistors in the supercomputer which is running them, let alone the humans who built the supercomputer. In that same way, we might one day discover the deepest secrets of the universe, and the grand unified "theory of everything". But if we are in a simulation, or part of a program within a parent universe, there is no way for us to ever understand or detect those things which birthed our universe.
+Max Loh That's a good theory, but the thing is that our universe and that "universe" work by different laws of physics. In ours, from the beginning we have been in a desperate search for energy causing those of us who were better at finding it to survive and create more of our selves, in that universe all you need is to be stable enough to live on.
+Max Loh I know what you are talking about, I have watched and read a lot about the subject and yes it is very likely to happen. Except these "cells" can never learn anything.I know because I studied a bit artificial intelligence (I'm a software engineer) and these "cells" don't work anything like that. Each cell only has 2 states: dead and alive. An AI has something we call a neuron, more than one to be precise.And it's the interaction of those neurons together that makes it intelligent. And the learning process happens by changing the way those neurons interact.It's a bit complicated, but it's something about the weight (importance) of the output of each neuron that changes after each generation. And again I say , these cells have nothing of the sort , they live then die without learning anything :p
Vlat Kozelka that is why i inserted the qualifier "perhaps with a very clever/powerful genetic algorithm or neural network algorithm at play as well". Also, just consider what our brains are made of. Dumb cells that are made of dumb atoms that do nothing but react with predictable laws of physics to the physical environment around them. Like the "cells" you described, the carbon atoms in our neurons are dead and can never "learn" anything. Yet, somehow in tandem the right combination of these dumb cells produces extremely aware neural networks. Also, just because neural networks are the only *known* way to produce intelligence doesn't mean they are the only way. Maybe one day a superintelligence figures out how to do it better.
+Vlat Kozelka If you had read "Allot" about the subject then you would have read that Game of life is actually turing complete. So, large cells can basically learn anything any other computer can learn. However, I see no reason it would be easier to make self aware AI with this than with any other computer.
somewhere right now God is watching a computer screen at his basement sipping some semi-cold coffee laughing that holy shit this thing has kept evolving for long
@@HermanWillems how long is long? Our long, or the bro sipping his cold coffees perception of long? Is it the same? How longs a day when living in space? 28 hours? 4? Or like that episodes in black mirror when its controlled from an outside being its 1 minute but a year to the person inside? So many questions so little "time" lol
@@meyes1098 that's crazy if you think about crews on a long flight generation ship, when the 1st and 2nd generations die off and nobody aboard even experienced earth or a direct relative who had. Just passed down stories about why the clock is 24 hours long. Itd be all (is theoretical right) and theyd have nothing to compare their clocks to
It is what real magic is, Something utilized by one who has little knowledge of its underlying workings. The typical interpretation of magic, something breaking the laws of physics... just think about it. You have a defined input that results in a dependent output, there is a rule being followed. To break a rule is to have a defined input with an independent result... nothing to determine the result and therefore chaos and lack of order, rendering the universe in a complete loss in information and meaning.Let's take a look at... idk, the world of harry potter. Every act of magic you see has a defined input and a dependent output. If something does not go as expected, it is because of an unknown or unconsidered factor in the equation. Is this not how things also work in your everyday life? I'm sorry if i went into way too much detail... but i'm happy you read this far :D ... or you skimmed my comment :/
@@medexamtoolscom why are so angry about this? he's quoting a character in a movie so he is pretty much quoting the creation of the person who made that movie.
Zenthex I think that the analogy is more fitting with formal languages. So the rules are the inference rules and the initial alive cells in the grid are the axioms.
Actually, the rules and the cells are both axioms. Everything is constructed from axioms, but to construct in the first place there must be a definition for construction which are the inference rules. They are abstract axioms which arbitrarily define construction instances.
+Tim-J.Swan No. Construction is done by applying logic to axioms. "Inference" is the act of creating new sentences from axioms and already exists before any axioms.
A very nice aspect is that the gamne of life literally shows us how several molecular components with simple functions can produce complexer forms which have complexer functions. Life MUST be everywhere in the Galaxy.
@@hummedtuner2847 i agree thats why i meant meant to reply to the original comment. The chances of life starting organically are not 0% but damn near close
Why people hate China when other country fails to respond to the outbreak? Yes China hid it but it is US who remain ignorant for months and took literally no response towards it. And almost every leader in the world know about the virus from Jan 2020. Why shouldn't they take responsibility but China should?
@@sanjay_swain the main reason people hate China specifically is because it originated from there. There are numerous other reasons to hate China as well, for one thing, the culture there is complete ass, the government sucks, and probably a bunch of other reasons I’m forgetting rn. People already hate the American government, so that’s kinda already apparent. China refuses to give accurate numbers, didn’t properly shut themselves down and didn’t tell anyone it was happening for a while. My stance is neutral btw, I’m just saying the reasons
@@Callie_Cosmo Order and chaos are essentially the same think, order is chaos we can understand and predict, and chaos is too complex order for our understanding. Therefore there is no difference. And there is no real randomness in universe.
They are the pre made life patterns on the program golly. It was made by “the golly gang.” I actually recommend getting golly, you can make your own rules and do lots of cool stuff.
@@mrcat1043 the Golly Gang (Andrew Trevorrow, Tom Rokicki et al.) only got this all together, the patterns are made by a lot of people from various time periods
The editing here is really good, particularly toward the end. I've been a fan of Conway's Game of Live for decades, and I'm really enjoying these things being put to music in such a dramatic way. Some of these are reminding me of The Tholian Web (Star Trek). It makes me want to see someone make an attempt at a voice over script giving these a more specific story line.
This is beautiful is very deep sense! One can see how protein / cell construction arise from logical mechanism... Stunning really. Does anyone else feel a deep connection between this and cellular biology?
when you're so good at the game of life, you create a self-sustaining colony that creates a ship that makes a freaking pattern in space. HOW DO PEOPLE DO THIS?!?
Same way people are good at anything. And also the same way everything that exists does exist with no end in sight. Keep checking out all possibilities and combining them into new ones. Life is as simple as it gets if you don't get distracted by the products of it.
Holy cow I remember this!!!!! It’s been so long and I had to find you again Rational Animator! This was impressive the first time but right now, it slaps!
@@lumi2030 im a weirdo who talks to his google ai on my phone and asked her when she was born whats her purpose ect lol, she had a lot of slightly scary things to say but hey we on good terms
FirearesJR They are "still lifes"; they are patterns that can remain stable. If you zoomed in you'd actually see those numbers are patterns of 2x2 squares with small gaps between them. These squares are called "blocks" in the community.
This video missed the coolest part of the image at 2:45- that’s a Turing machine! The game of life allows you to build simulated rudimentary computers in it, which is fucking bonkers
@@aendriu514 a turing machine is an abstract computer. it can execute any algorithm that a computer can. and the game of life can simulate any turing machine. meaning it can also run any algorithm a computer can.
youtube's been recommending me this game of life thing, but this video in particular has given me a huge nostalgia wave of old youtube (because the music of course)
You cannot "input" something, you can only run or pause. But you could make a maschine which destroys 2 numbers and a + sign and produces another number.
When I was a kid first learning to code I picked up a book called "101 games in basic" and Conway's game of life was one of them. I spent hours typing in the code to my C64 but when I was done.. wow! It was never as good as this one though!
Considering just how simple these rules are, it isn't difficult to see how the amazing things in our universe can come from 'slightly' more complex rules.
This is amazing, and this is why I think life exists today. The universe started as a blank slate, with rules JUST like this. If one small thing is pushed, they domino effect begins, with the properties of matter working together, creating interesting patterns (Like weather and rock formations) and eventually, given the right conditions and ample time, life :)
Yeah, because most formations have high entropy, but some have the one goal of reducing entropy and creating patterns instead of just spewing things here and there.
I think what is more amazing about the Game of Life, is that it is one of the simplest programs you could write, with just three major rules, and it can create things similar to actual life and even replication. I always wondered if Conway when he first came up with this realized just how amazing his simple math game became.
Nicholas Chandler The grey goo hypothesis is a cautionary tale, maybe hysterical, that nanotechnology (microscopic machines) will keep progressing until a replicator is devised that is so efficient as to convert all matter (plants, people, obsolete cellphone cables) into copies of itself. The earth will become a giant mass of the machines. Because they're microscopic and serve no purpose but to copy themselves, they will be amorphous and colorless. Hence grey goo. It kind of happens in this video at 3:01. And again at 3:15.
When I was a kid I was just like, "Haha dots go brrrr", but seeing this blew my mind. I've never seen multicellular organisms like this in Conway's Game of Life, like, ever. @_@
What is amazing to me is the fact that you can have systems created out of these simple rules that are self-creating. This is incredible discovery in my view
To save your time: For a space that is 'populated': Each cell with one or no neighbors dies, as if by solitude. Each cell with four or more neighbors dies, as if by overpopulation. Each cell with two or three neighbors survives. For a space that is 'empty' or 'unpopulated' Each cell with three neighbors becomes populated. Try it here: playgameoflife.com/
Correct on a 2 dimensional boundless grid with 8 neighbors and 2 states (alive and dead). Cellular automata have all those conditions: -constant amount of neighbors -constant amount of states -set of rules -boundless grid (sometimes bounded actually) -constant amount of dimensions
For all you zoomers reading, closest comparable feeling I got back then to this sorcery was when Slime Block flying machines came out in minecraft when that block was released in 1.8. Learned of this in the early 00s. Seeing all these patterns and that GOLLY printing machine was nostalgic. All I remembered how to make was that L with a dot on the side and it could move on its own.
After 10 years I started uploading again. Check out my new videos. Still science (and probably more), but animated: ruclips.net/user/RationalAnimations
nice
epic
Hey so what happened for 9 years, where are u now?
@@keanus6873 I want to know this too!
@@keanus6873 Heyo, I started uploading again. Thoughts on the first new video? ruclips.net/video/GgyX-MnRAuY/видео.html
I like how at some points it seems perfectly organized and harmonious, whereas other times it’s a complete war zone.
I find that inspiring. But it's also way way way more complex
*Life.*
@gamer 2020 Nonsense. Only fabricated chaos brings order, but that implies that the order is also fabricated, and that the chaos is no real chaos, but an invented situation.
Poetic
and if you play around with it a little bit, you will find out that a single pixel out of place will almost surely turn everything into a complete warzone, no matter how organized everything seemed
It's actually hard to believe John Conway is now dead from the coronavirus, it's a big loss for people in the math community. Rest in peace man.
Glatier Is this for real?!! Omg ;-;
@@Game_Sometimes Yeah.
Yeah what a lousy coincidence, the damn thing has only killed like 100 thousand people worldwide so far, it sucks that he had to be one of them.
@@Thecoffinofmari_andsunny143 just because covid started in Wuhan doesnt mean you need to insult them
@@AeroTheVaporeon Dont insult Wuhan, insult their government.
1:13 2 glider salvo
1:21 Gosper glider gun
1:36 Two GGGs
1:45 One-dimensional glider stream
1:55 P416 60P5H2V0 gun
2:26 Turing machine
2:56 Day & Night
3:02 Spacefiller that's nowhere close to the other spacefillers...
3:09 Glider loops
3:14 3-engine Cordership gun and eater
3:16 Spacefiller being destroyed
3:18 LWSS gun
3:27 6-engine Cordership gun
3:53 MWSS gun
3:58 Golly ticker
4:05 Seeds
4:20 Spacefiller destruction, again
4:28 Spacefiller
4:33 Cambrian Explosion
4:39 Sawtooth
4:45 LWSS gun
4:52 Cambrian Explosion again
4:57 Dying spacefiller
5:04 Switch engine breeder
5:10 p34 gun
5:15 Line puffer
5:22 Guns
5:28 c/3 rake
5:35 Puffer 2
5:41 Cordership rake
5:47 p90 rake
5:52 Inline inverter?
5:55 ???
5:57 2c/5 puffer
6:00 Rakes
6:13 c/5 rake
6:17 Pi ship
Whew, what a long list...
AND IT IS
can you explain why the end is called the pi ship?
It is a spaceship, where the back (the pi) moves slower than the front providing fuel for the pi.
Szymon Bartosiewicz aa
Szymon Bartosiewicz nice
Such a simple rules can create these wonderful almost alive structures imagine what 3 dimensional molecular chemistry could do in about 4 billion years. This comment for example ;)
Indeed. Very bizarre.
@@7cpm293 ?
@@7cpm293 nothing
@@7cpm293 literally nothing would happen
@@7cpm293 that there'd be two things suddenly. Thats all thatd happen
Mumbo Jumbo: the redstone is actually pretty simple.
The redstone:
Yes
yes
yes
yes
yes
"That's a pretty good animation. What did you use to make it?"
"Conway's game of life"
Xboy Dubose reply
@@aimanazmi458 ?
Liu Dora I state that I have, in fact, replied
@@aimanazmi458 reply of reply
@@dat1pengu1n reply of reply of reply
I love the fact that even though this video is 9 years old, he still hearts some comments from a few months ago. Truly amazing.
Exactly.
I even started making new videos. Want to check them out?
@@RationalAnimations sure
@@RationalAnimations Bet
@@RationalAnimations these aren't what I was expecting but still absolute bangers
I'm studying computer science at university, and our prof. showed this video in his lecture (ofc he gave credits to this video).
It's amazing to see how all of this is based on simple logic, aswell as Mandelbrot fractal geometries! It's somehow inspirational isn't it?
it's cool to know studies are going well there. my teachers didn't even taught me how to count 0s and 1s. really, fundamentals were skipped, we went straight to some database code bs to be made monkeys for corporations. I had to study most things at home. Brazil uni sucks...
@@lukashenrique4295 Oh that's a bummer :c
anyway, I wish you good luck for the future!
Ok, so then i have a question for you. I was just about to try and google it... but i doubt i would've succeeded. Lol.. ok so you know how there are uniform patterns. How do they organize themselves?? Does it start out a blank grid, you add a couple "cells" and they communicate. Cause thats what i thought. Then i seen the one that said "golly" with a four leaf clover and thought that was a little weird. Like maybe they programmed a starting point. You understand my question?? And i actually learned about this from a guy who works alot with DMT and he has a theory about how the multidimenaional worlds communicate. You should check it out. Especially if you are familiar with dmt and psychadelics and consciousness in general.
Anyways, please answer this for me. Because i cant see how this simulation knew how to spell. Lol
Definitely
@@SlashZooka thanks! GL to you too!!
Meanwhile in the video all the cells denying they're in a simulation.
youtube doesn't like links, but here's a cool video on the topic
ruclips.net/video/-nbTrPwQudo/видео.html
Does a universe only exist if its simulated? Well, the rules are already certain, doesn't matter if you simulate it or not, the future of that state is already set. So if you were to shut off the simulation, would the cells cease to exist?
they don't evolve
@@matterasmachine I dunno. I wonder if it's possible to create life with these set of physics. Not the alive or dead states of cells, I mean life that can evolve and create more of itself.
@@anarchy8968 Easily. To let them evolve we need to add probability factor. But then we don't know what they evolve into, so there is no future that is already set. The only thing that is set in that case is that they will evolve.
Some of them are racist
Combined with that music, it looks like evil, soul-less factories preparing for war.
It's like Factory Inspection, from Kirby 64.
Actually that really looked like a simple Version of Factorio, a computer game....
@@arillistionis4799 yes i have thougt the same !
@@arillistionis4799 what a dramatic coincidence
This is fucking awesome comment
It's amazing how somehow, the easier a sandbox games mechanics are, the more impressively that people will mold and exploit the possibilities to create something truly breathtaking
Yes!!!
Redstone
Not true look at real life the sandbox has infinite potential but we still are super creative
They literally built a spaceship factory...
with gliders
First :Adam and eve
Random glitter: probably atom
human make spaceship ,
eevolution? o7
Glider guns
just watch elon make a completely automated rocket factory using this game to guide the automation
I think someone made a functional tetris game in conways game of life
The Covid-19 pandemic killed many tall trees in every area of the modern world. Today is sad to hear that John Horton Conway, one of the most famous and charismatic mathematicians in the world, died of Covid-19 on April 11, 2020 at home, in New Jersey, USA. , 82 years old.
Amicis I am looking for a comment like yours
RIP
😢
Rip John Conway
rip
This got recommend to me after watching Sam Hogan's recent video
Same Lol Cell Machine
I looked it up
Same
Same...
me too
Imagine accidentally putting a block in a spot without noticing and it just ruins everything
Fortunately that doesn’t happen because you’ve got ctrl c ctrl v
You mean ctrl z??
you mean hitler
Copy it off a site
Then golly loads it
What's really interesting about this project is, its rules also work in a 3D dimension. I was sure it doesn't but then I remade it in unity 3d and it WORKED!!!
This is by far the coolest game of life I’ve seen ruclips.net/video/xP5-iIeKXE8/видео.html I’ve also seen it done with smooth continuous shapes instead of cells in a grid
Conway designed the rules around eight neighboring cells per cell, being in 3D you might want to tweak the rules in the interest of making patterns last, but not grow infinitely without negative reinforcement. If every cell has 26 possible neighbors then 4 or more isnt whole lot to be sufficient for selfmurder.
You would just multiply by however many more connections there are in a cube compared to a square. So would keep the same logic balanced just at a different scale
Automata banger
I see this, like I'm staring in the face of a force like gravity, not knowing its profoundness, but still realizing its somehow profound.
1:10 me and my bro running to the ice cream truck
Naruto running ofc
Naruto
If those things are apparently humans then what the f*ck are the things at 1:22
@Scullgaming 962 well, when a mommy and a daddy love each other very much...
@Spariton Apologies,
But it's actually zero since they're ALL DEAD
I have *_no_* idea whats going on but it looks awesome..
if you mute the music it's a tad less so lol
Vendrin MD Hahahahaha *same* dude xDD
it's phisics. takes a while to understand the complexity of it all, I've seen more complex things than this.
BBTimba Wulf do to things like that, yes
Bloody Snails It's mathematics, not physics.
it literally looks like they're building and sending out ships in the fourth one
Abstract of here? I like a multiverse . Are there 3d versions?
I'd guess that "spaceship factory" is pretty close to the mathematically technical term for that formulation. I know that the little moving dudes are actually called spaceships, and a lot of stuff in GoL is named like that.
it is.
Obviously they are
1:46
It really can't be a 2011 video without Requiem for a Dream as its soundtrack.
Anyways praise to the almighty algorithm God for letting me discover this gem!
I didn't know what the title could mean by "epic" but I was not disappointed.
I think the uploader misspelled eric
Paul Halvorson r and p are way to far from each other to make it a typo
@@2chill2bbored72 P is cyrillic R.
MishaGold o, but still it should be epic considering it looks dramatic and awesome
Anybody know what the title of this song is?
1:11 the glider couple
1:22 the glider factory (size=small)
1:36 the glider factory (size=medium)
1:46 the glider factory (size=large)
1:56 the spaceship constructor
2:23 the diamond
2:27 the farmlands
2:57 the construction of the *universes*
3:03 the construction of the universe but thanks snapped it
3:09 the bouncers
3:14 the launcher
3:16 *humanity*
3:18 still humanity but this time in a war
3:27 the rocket launcher
3:30 collection of trinkets
3:34 explosive trinkets
3:40 the blade
3:45 the chainsaw
3:52 boat outpost
3:58 the message writer
4:06 the numbers
4:21 destruction of the thanos snapped universe
4:34 the tunnels of transport
4:40 bomb and ship
4:47 the triplication factory
5:05 the farmers
5:11 *WEB*
Actual names:
1:11 glider pair
1:22 Gosper Glider Gun
1:56 P416 gun firing 60P5H2V1 spaceships
2:23 Spacefiller after destruction
2:27 Game of Life Turing Machine
2:57 a collection of patterns called "Cambrian Explosion" by the man that put it together
3:03 Spacefiller (this one is called Max)
3:09 reflectors (left-to-right: p5 bouncer, p6 bouncer, p7 bouncer, p8 bouncer, p15 bouncer)
3:14 P690 gun firing 3-engine Corderships
3:16 Spacefiller during destrution
3:18 the Stargate
3:27 P784 gun firing 6-engine Corderships
3:30 the Queen Bee Turner
3:34 p45 extensible oscillator which can be easily turned into a glider gun
3:40 Gabriel's p138
3:52 P165 gun firing MWSS (MiddleWeight SpaceShips)
3:58 Golly ticker
4:06 Actually this pattern shows how arrangments of blocks can be used to turn and split gliders, numbers show time
4:51 Someone just drawn some cells in the middle of the Zebra Stripes
4:34 a wick
4:40 the Sawtooth
4:47 Infinite Glider Hotel
5:05 a Breeder
5:11 P34 glider gun
5:16 the Line Puffer
5:22 the Slide Breeder
5:28 some sort of c/3 rake but for the Life of me I can't find it
5:35 Puffer 2
5:41 3-engine Cordership rake
5:47 P90 MWSS forerake
5:53 P30 glider advancer
5:54 P46 gun assembly
5:56 P10150 2c/5 puffer
5:59 Rake collection
6:06 P270 c/3 glider rake
6:12 P360 c/5 glider rake
6:18 P18 c/2 block puffer followed by P30 3c/10 block fuse
@@jiqci what do the Ps followed by numbers mean?
@@davenarisotto3674 P means 'period', that is the number of generations (steps) needed for the pattern to regenerate itself in exactly the same shape and orientation, but possibly displaced and/or having produced something
So e.g. the Gosper Glider Gun (first glider producer in the video) is P30, meaning that it produces 1 glider every 30 steps
@@jiqci Very cool, thank you!
Do they all use standard rules?
I'd just like to point out what a perfect example this is of how audio can influence our perception of visual content. Imagine if this video had cricket sounds instead of that epic Requiem for a dream soundtrack.
It was pretty cool, though.
I would close it immediately if it had garbage techno music
That's a great point lol. Requiem for a dream was an epic movie.
Or super Mario bros song
Hand sanitizer: *kills 99% of germs*
The remaining 1%:
Lmfao
Haha this is pretty accurate.
4:58 "moooom, i accidently formed a new galaxy"
+BrotWurst That's great sweetie. Play nice.
lol
The music makes it even more epic
DAAAAAAAAAD i took over NASA and blew up the sun and made another dimension and made a multiverse, blew up the under world, burnt the devil in his own fire and brought heaven to earth.... Whoops my bad
The question that is completely irrelevant to the topic: do you know where is my nuclear bazooka and a couple of tsar bombs?
1:56 That freaked me out a little. Maths is creating flying insects now.
Makes you think what if everything is the result of one formula repeating over time?
Squiderrant Game of life has nothing to do with maths
Abdoh Ash Yes, really. I am aware that computers are based around maths, probably more than you as I have studied three years of computer science. That doesn’t change what I said though, game of life itself has nothing to do with maths, the creator himself has stated that he’s a bit bitter because the thing he’s most known for doesn’t really involve maths.
@@jensb3946 The game's code is just pure algebraic equations.
This made me think of a Veretasium video called What is Not Random.
If Everything is based on 12 particles that interact in 4 predictable ways... How similar is Conway's game of life to your game of life?
ruclips.net/video/sMb00lz-IfE/видео.html
(Don't attack me if I'm wrong. I'm no expert on quantum physics etc. I just like learning new things.)
Well everything is just a bunch of sequential equations repeating until one or more variables change. It’s fucking horrifying...
3:15 it looks like bacteria is eating the uniform lines.... What do you see??
This whole videos feels like cells preforming homeostasis and growing - definitely someones bowels ;)
And that was made just by putting 1 cell in the middle.
A new country flag
I see a swastika but I doubt that’s intentional
Blitzkrieg
Nine years and this video still fascinates me as if it's the first time I'm seeing it.
nice one piece is better ngl
...Such simple rules....
...such complex behaviour...
// ANT // fkin turing COM🅱LETE
That's exactly the objective of the sim
Not really. You need processing on every cell to do it. Essentially every cell on the entire plane has to be a simple CPU, each one acting independently, and has to change its answer of its output potentially an infinite number of times i.e. each cell in worst case has to do an infinite amount of processing. As opposed to a fractal for instance, which is a lot simpler in how the images arise by the very nature of how it is produced.
Just like the life itself.
@@medexamtoolscom interesting. This infinite amount of processing would keep the cell alive, is this what you say? If it interrupts the processing, it means it's going to die resp. when it mistakes the outcome as "alive" and it's instead "dead"? I am afraid I don't get this whole thing.
Whoever made the one at 2:12 is a genius lol
they are building an army...
DrDead Pasta
That is a fuckin spaceship factory omg!
And has way too much time on their hands...
thats where they got the xbox logo from!
2:13 that's how space invaders are made :P
Shh... children are watching!
Wow, youve made someones mind blown after two years
No, these "aliens" are sending their troops and starships into the vast void of the unknown.
I remember watching this nine years ago, and still watching
better than infinity warfare
Lol that's true
Lol
+Do not go gentle into that good night. Rage, rage against the dying of the light. Ok
+KaneDoesStufoKlaof HD yea
+Do not go gentle into that good night. Rage, rage against the dying of the light. So then What? Come to my house to play infinity warfare?
This got me thinking, what if a supercomputer simulates this long enough (perhaps with a very clever/powerful genetic algorithm or neural network algorithm at play as well), that extremely complex intelligent organisms develop, start to gain curiosity, question their existence, and conduct scientific experiments?
Those pixel-creatures would eventually discover the nature of the world they live in, including the four laws as illustrated in the beginning of the video. But they would never be able to figure out what causes their world to exist -- there is no way for them to know about the transistors in the supercomputer which is running them, let alone the humans who built the supercomputer.
In that same way, we might one day discover the deepest secrets of the universe, and the grand unified "theory of everything". But if we are in a simulation, or part of a program within a parent universe, there is no way for us to ever understand or detect those things which birthed our universe.
+Max Loh That's a good theory, but the thing is that our universe and that "universe" work by different laws of physics. In ours, from the beginning we have been in a desperate search for energy causing those of us who were better at finding it to survive and create more of our selves, in that universe all you need is to be stable enough to live on.
+Max Loh I know what you are talking about, I have watched and read a lot about the subject and yes it is very likely to happen.
Except these "cells" can never learn anything.I know because I studied a bit artificial intelligence (I'm a software engineer) and these "cells" don't work anything like that. Each cell only has 2 states: dead and alive. An AI has something we call a neuron, more than one to be precise.And it's the interaction of those neurons together that makes it intelligent. And the learning process happens by changing the way those neurons interact.It's a bit complicated, but it's something about the weight (importance) of the output of each neuron that changes after each generation.
And again I say , these cells have nothing of the sort , they live then die without learning anything :p
Vlat Kozelka that is why i inserted the qualifier "perhaps with a very clever/powerful genetic algorithm or neural network algorithm at play as well". Also, just consider what our brains are made of. Dumb cells that are made of dumb atoms that do nothing but react with predictable laws of physics to the physical environment around them. Like the "cells" you described, the carbon atoms in our neurons are dead and can never "learn" anything. Yet, somehow in tandem the right combination of these dumb cells produces extremely aware neural networks.
Also, just because neural networks are the only *known* way to produce intelligence doesn't mean they are the only way. Maybe one day a superintelligence figures out how to do it better.
+Vlat Kozelka If you had read "Allot" about the subject then you would have read that Game of life is actually turing complete. So, large cells can basically learn anything any other computer can learn. However, I see no reason it would be easier to make self aware AI with this than with any other computer.
Seluxify "the subject" I meant was Ai getting conscience, not game of life cells.Thanks for your added info.
somewhere right now God is watching a computer screen at his basement sipping some semi-cold coffee laughing that holy shit this thing has kept evolving for long
unless its really not that long
Time didn't exist just after the big bang, it is part of space-time. So yeah... "for long?
@@HermanWillems how long is long? Our long, or the bro sipping his cold coffees perception of long? Is it the same? How longs a day when living in space? 28 hours? 4? Or like that episodes in black mirror when its controlled from an outside being its 1 minute but a year to the person inside? So many questions so little "time" lol
@@ezav420
A day refers to an Earth day, unless specified otherwise (like a mars day, a moon day, etc.). So a day in space is still 24h
@@meyes1098 that's crazy if you think about crews on a long flight generation ship, when the 1st and 2nd generations die off and nobody aboard even experienced earth or a direct relative who had. Just passed down stories about why the clock is 24 hours long. Itd be all (is theoretical right) and theyd have nothing to compare their clocks to
For some reason to me many of these look like civilizations making spaceships, and some looks like things on a production line
"So I ask my dad,
'Dad, what is technology?'
And he goes...
'IT'S MAGIC, JOEL.
IT'S MAGIC.'"
But Joel used the magic to download boobs.
What's a MIDI?
+Ocean Man who's been drawing g dicks?
It is what real magic is, Something utilized by one who has little knowledge of its underlying workings. The typical interpretation of magic, something breaking the laws of physics... just think about it. You have a defined input that results in a dependent output, there is a rule being followed. To break a rule is to have a defined input with an independent result... nothing to determine the result and therefore chaos and lack of order, rendering the universe in a complete loss in information and meaning.Let's take a look at... idk, the world of harry potter. Every act of magic you see has a defined input and a dependent output. If something does not go as expected, it is because of an unknown or unconsidered factor in the equation. Is this not how things also work in your everyday life? I'm sorry if i went into way too much detail... but i'm happy you read this far :D ... or you skimmed my comment :/
Tho Vinesauce Memes ^^
"Life, ugh, finds a way."
- Jeff Goldblum
Do you not realize he was just reading a script? If you're going to attribute that quote at least attribute it to michael crichton.
@@medexamtoolscom you were so preoccupied with whether or not you could comment, you didn't stop to think if you should.
Ooo, I'm stealing both of these quotes
@@medexamtoolscom why are so angry about this? he's quoting a character in a movie so he is pretty much quoting the creation of the person who made that movie.
@@medexamtoolscom Imbécil.
Some masterminds:
-that was nice game dudes, let's rematch tomorrow
Tbh this look like an rts game
@@milkman9412 lol it does
@@neileung try out game of life and death, a two player vs modification of the rules that conways game of life established
@@absent612 try playing powdertoy
@@mrnick8171 yes
I’ve always loved this video, and just now I realized that rational animations was the publisher! Glad to see a great revival.
how the hell did I get from Geometry Dash and Mario Maker to this?
Suggested.
Duh
Same lol, I was watching SoulsTRK and then this
i came from a chain starting with major key songs in minor key
then i went to we are number one memes and then sorting algorithms and now this
Those are both games.
GoL is a sort of game.
welcome to the power of axioms and logic.
***** the rules. rules are called axioms.
Zenthex I think that the analogy is more fitting with formal languages. So the rules are the inference rules and the initial alive cells in the grid are the axioms.
Emanuele Ascani you're more right than i am, i was just talking about the program as a whole, and over simplifying it.
Actually, the rules and the cells are both axioms. Everything is constructed from axioms, but to construct in the first place there must be a definition for construction which are the inference rules. They are abstract axioms which arbitrarily define construction instances.
+Tim-J.Swan No. Construction is done by applying logic to axioms. "Inference" is the act of creating new sentences from axioms and already exists before any axioms.
A system creating spaceships from gliders, fascinating.
That's basically what Gemini and Waterbear are.
That's called glider synthesis. You can synthesize almost everything with gliders.
(and remember, gliders are also spaceships)
A very nice aspect is that the gamne of life literally shows us how several molecular components with simple functions can produce complexer forms which have complexer functions. Life MUST be everywhere in the Galaxy.
Why?
@@hummedtuner2847if life was easily created from chaos we would have created it on earth by now.
@@illicitlegacy3783 and how was a complex system of order and structure created from chaos, disobeying the second law of thermodynamics.
@@hummedtuner2847 i agree thats why i meant meant to reply to the original comment. The chances of life starting organically are not 0% but damn near close
I believe there are bunches of habited worlds in this galaxy
RIP John Conway, may he rest in peace
@Mohammed Akbar i called china r u s s i a
Why people hate China when other country fails to respond to the outbreak? Yes China hid it but it is US who remain ignorant for months and took literally no response towards it. And almost every leader in the world know about the virus from Jan 2020. Why shouldn't they take responsibility but China should?
@@sanjay_swain the main reason people hate China specifically is because it originated from there. There are numerous other reasons to hate China as well, for one thing, the culture there is complete ass, the government sucks, and probably a bunch of other reasons I’m forgetting rn. People already hate the American government, so that’s kinda already apparent. China refuses to give accurate numbers, didn’t properly shut themselves down and didn’t tell anyone it was happening for a while. My stance is neutral btw, I’m just saying the reasons
@@gortalla5474 just your opinion lol
Who’s here after Joe Rogan’s podcast?
TiredGiant i am
that shit slaps
Peter S fr
Senji yessir*
It came up in my reccomended after watching it, how did the algorithm know??
Squares: fight to the death
3 mill people: *interesting*
Very orderly fighting to the death imo
@@distendedmist5840 ??? thats the num of likes
@@lumi2030 Ok illuminati
@@Callie_Cosmo Order and chaos are essentially the same think, order is chaos we can understand and predict, and chaos is too complex order for our understanding. Therefore there is no difference. And there is no real randomness in universe.
@@_MicraN_ **quantum mechanics wants to know your location**
The people who devised these amazing patterns deserve some credit too.
They are the pre made life patterns on the program golly. It was made by “the golly gang.” I actually recommend getting golly, you can make your own rules and do lots of cool stuff.
this kind of thing is fascinating honestly
@@mrcat1043 the Golly Gang (Andrew Trevorrow, Tom Rokicki et al.) only got this all together, the patterns are made by a lot of people from various time periods
Imagine what AI could come up with
4:21 looks like the beginning of the universe
Yeah
Some postulate that the entire universe is just a big class-4 cellular automata.
minecraft map loading in
How would you know?
It kinda is. Neutrality in everything and everywhere at every time at all times. Until chaos. Chaos appeared in what we call the universe.
People complaining about the music? I think it's a fantastic choice.
It's just overused
what is its name?
Clint Mansell - Lux Aeterna
Muzik Bike again you are everywhere
"Requirem for a Dream"
1:22
“We’ve got 200,000 units with a million more on the way”
2:55 Me and the bois leaving from Coruscant to Genosis
The editing here is really good, particularly toward the end. I've been a fan of Conway's Game of Live for decades, and I'm really enjoying these things being put to music in such a dramatic way. Some of these are reminding me of The Tholian Web (Star Trek). It makes me want to see someone make an attempt at a voice over script giving these a more specific story line.
I like to run a really large system, like the meta game-of-life, and then fire a single glider into it and watch it disintegrate.
You are evil
You psychopath
Yes
Some people just want to watch the world burn
100th like
This is beautiful is very deep sense!
One can see how protein / cell construction arise from logical mechanism...
Stunning really.
Does anyone else feel a deep connection between this and cellular biology?
I have no idea what that means but yes
X_O
i dont know much about that but i do agree
To be short I think our life is just a code expansion and reproduction with a infinite cycle
Because is based in cellular biology
when you're so good at the game of life, you create a self-sustaining colony that creates a ship that makes a freaking pattern in space.
HOW DO PEOPLE DO THIS?!?
Same way people are good at anything. And also the same way everything that exists does exist with no end in sight. Keep checking out all possibilities and combining them into new ones.
Life is as simple as it gets if you don't get distracted by the products of it.
@@nal8503 Thank you for your wisdom
What makes you think it's people...
@@nal8503 You’re Genius
just ask me about any pattern in this video (or in fact any other) and i'll tell you how was it made
Holy cow I remember this!!!!! It’s been so long and I had to find you again Rational Animator! This was impressive the first time but right now, it slaps!
What's really freaky is my Google assistant said this was the 1st thing she ever searched when she was born
Whaaat
Knew it!!! Its vap!!!
Whaaaaaaaaaaat
@@lumi2030 im a weirdo who talks to his google ai on my phone and asked her when she was born whats her purpose ect lol, she had a lot of slightly scary things to say but hey we on good terms
My Google Assistant says she searched an image of Atari Breakout
LOL, it's incredible how rules so simple can create complex configurations
Yeah. You can literally make a machine that spits out itself, then that machine spits out itself again and so on. Fascinating.
@@lumi2030 Bleh
@CL Melonshark yeah but here an entire structure is copying itself, not only singular cells
@@lumi2030 Linear Propagator?
@@jiqci exactly
Holy shit this is fascinating.
Welcome to the world of cellular automata.
The Real Flenuan How can the numbers at 4:10 keep their state like that? Are those cells just frozen?
FirearesJR They are "still lifes"; they are patterns that can remain stable. If you zoomed in you'd actually see those numbers are patterns of 2x2 squares with small gaps between them. These squares are called "blocks" in the community.
Jack Dets Thanks! What software is he using?
FirearesJR Golly I think. Golly is the best program for this stuff, look it up. here's a whole wiki with more info www.conwaylife.com/wiki/Main_Page
i'm hyperfixated on conway's game of life right now and this was *just* what i needed thank you
figure out how to turn it into an rts. it's very cool to play as a ship, letting gliders into opponents like in uboat
RIP John Conway 12-Dec-1937 to 11-Apr-2020. His Game of Life simulation was the father of biological sims. He died of Covid-19 2 days ago 😢
Rip
This video missed the coolest part of the image at 2:45- that’s a Turing machine! The game of life allows you to build simulated rudimentary computers in it, which is fucking bonkers
Please could you explain, you got me intrested
Running Doom on Conway's Game of Life is next
@@aendriu514 a turing machine is an abstract computer. it can execute any algorithm that a computer can.
and the game of life can simulate any turing machine. meaning it can also run any algorithm a computer can.
its like that one guy that made a computer in minecraft.. Absolutely fucking crazy amazing
@@ethymith Some madlad is going to do that.
There like:
“We could be in a simulation”
"Nah, that's ridiculous"
(I agree with the other guy about the typo)
12 years have passed since this video's creation and it's still just as spectacular as it was back hten. Truly timeless.
This music really makes it look like the birth, rise, and fall of infinite intergalactic empires throughout the endless flow of time.
wow the new star wars movie looks great
1:58 war...
War never changes...
That One Guy it’s building tanks
War
WALMART
Something amazing about this game, is all it takes is one dot being deleted to end everything
youtube's been recommending me this game of life thing, but this video in particular has given me a huge nostalgia wave of old youtube (because the music of course)
SOMEONE make a working calculator out of this.
You cannot "input" something, you can only run or pause. But you could make a maschine which destroys 2 numbers and a + sign and produces another number.
+Nekrosis you could input something by using a glider
+Nekrosis you could input something by using a glider
TheImperialKerbalUnion
I guess you're right, you could draw gliders to trigger certain activators, which act as numbers and + / - etc.
Kilian Balter
The game has been proved to be Turing Complete so, theoretically, you could.
When I was a kid first learning to code I picked up a book called "101 games in basic" and Conway's game of life was one of them. I spent hours typing in the code to my C64 but when I was done.. wow! It was never as good as this one though!
Why wasn't it as good? Did you forget to add commands? Is all of this easy to code?
is no one going to mention just how sick Requiem for a Dream's theme is?
You can tell how old this video is just because of it
Considering just how simple these rules are, it isn't difficult to see how the amazing things in our universe can come from 'slightly' more complex rules.
I now regret making my version limited to a 20x20 grid...
I don't even understand what's happening but it looks special
Ept
Imagine, real world chemistry is this but three dimensional and with more states and more rules
the pixels are the quarks
Then give it 13 billion years and trillions of planet to play with. You can't even guess what kind of being and things it's able to create.
The more rules there is the more restriction there will be. i think the more hard will it be to create something meaningful.
It's so sad that we can't simulate the universe because the computer would need to be larger than the universe itself
@@bitterlemonboy we can't simulate our Universe, does not mean we can't simulate Universe...
oh lord, i haven't heard this song in a youtube video for ages
2012 the end of the world
This is amazing, and this is why I think life exists today.
The universe started as a blank slate, with rules JUST like this.
If one small thing is pushed, they domino effect begins, with the properties of matter working together, creating interesting patterns (Like weather and rock formations) and eventually, given the right conditions and ample time, life :)
Yeah, because most formations have high entropy, but some have the one goal of reducing entropy and creating patterns instead of just spewing things here and there.
what the fuck are u talken abought, and can u explain the rules of this 'game' cus i cant make heads nor tails of 'em
Wolfram thinks so too: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rule_110
+Various Minecraft no, fuck you
electrical force, magnetic force and gravitational force seem to be our rules
I think what is more amazing about the Game of Life, is that it is one of the simplest programs you could write, with just three major rules, and it can create things similar to actual life and even replication. I always wondered if Conway when he first came up with this realized just how amazing his simple math game became.
When you realise someone has made the conways game of life, inside the conways game of life. Makes your head hurt.
If you kids aren't careful you're going to prove the gray goo hypothesis.
That's my goal.
Whats the grey goo hypothesis?
Nicholas Chandler The grey goo hypothesis is a cautionary tale, maybe hysterical, that nanotechnology (microscopic machines) will keep progressing until a replicator is devised that is so efficient as to convert all matter (plants, people, obsolete cellphone cables) into copies of itself. The earth will become a giant mass of the machines. Because they're microscopic and serve no purpose but to copy themselves, they will be amorphous and colorless. Hence grey goo. It kind of happens in this video at 3:01. And again at 3:15.
Bob Stein Oh shit that's fucked up D:
When I was a kid I was just like, "Haha dots go brrrr", but seeing this blew my mind.
I've never seen multicellular organisms like this in Conway's Game of Life, like, ever. @_@
That music brings me back to old RUclips. I miss those days...
Whats the name?
What is amazing to me is the fact that you can have systems created out of these simple rules that are self-creating. This is incredible discovery in my view
The game of life serves as an analogy for mathematics: how very simple rules will generate increasingly complex structures.
2:56 Interesting how theese shapes look like some primitive micro organisms irl
The collection itself was called Cambrian Explosion
Holy shit, i remember seeing this like 6 years ago, you're the guy that made this huh.
"This is how you play God." - Dr. Grant
Just make a terrarium
To save your time:
For a space that is 'populated':
Each cell with one or no neighbors dies, as if by solitude.
Each cell with four or more neighbors dies, as if by overpopulation.
Each cell with two or three neighbors survives.
For a space that is 'empty' or 'unpopulated'
Each cell with three neighbors becomes populated.
Try it here:
playgameoflife.com/
Correct on a 2 dimensional boundless grid with 8 neighbors and 2 states (alive and dead). Cellular automata have all those conditions:
-constant amount of neighbors
-constant amount of states
-set of rules
-boundless grid (sometimes bounded actually)
-constant amount of dimensions
@@bobmarley4781 what exactly are you trying to accomplish with that comment
are you trying to seem smart because the video explained the rules already your just making yourself seem like a dumbass
@@k.earhart6055 yummy
@@torrent8446 what can i say except delete this
Cheers Joe for the recommendation
I JUST realized this old video was made my Rational Animations! I didn't realize. Banger of a song. Really great new content!
For all you zoomers reading, closest comparable feeling I got back then to this sorcery was when Slime Block flying machines came out in minecraft when that block was released in 1.8.
Learned of this in the early 00s. Seeing all these patterns and that GOLLY printing machine was nostalgic. All I remembered how to make was that L with a dot on the side and it could move on its own.
That L is called a "LWSS" ("Lightweight Spaceship"), and you don't need to put that dot, the LWSS itself will create the dot.
RIP John Conway, thank you for your contributions to mathematics
my heart is still beating so fast that was the coolest vid ever
Grammar has a few simple rules, too. It's amazing what you can create by following them.
Could watch an hour of that
Starts to freak you out when you realize it looks like an office building.
2:00 That's exactly how I imagine the Star Forge from KOTOR produces fleets of ships
Alt. tittle:
"Conway's game of life: Gameplays compilation"