Does John Conway hate his Game of Life?

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  • Опубликовано: 2 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 776

  • @또깨비-g8c
    @또깨비-g8c 4 года назад +532

    R.I.P Conway. The cells in the game you made is living forever.

    • @alexisyn2
      @alexisyn2 4 года назад +3

      What if the cells die off. What happens then?

    • @golkralifal
      @golkralifal 4 года назад +5

      Damn covid:/

    • @sankang9425
      @sankang9425 4 года назад +5

      Oscillators never die.

    • @jamesgiuffre9793
      @jamesgiuffre9793 4 года назад +4

      @@sankang9425 they dont, but they can be intercepted by other groups of cells, and this new set of cells can shape in a pattern in which they die out

    • @sby60118
      @sby60118 3 года назад +2

      F

  • @alexshi9320
    @alexshi9320 4 года назад +814

    Sad that he passed. I hope when Google decides to make a Doodle in remembrance of him, they watch this video and highlight some of the other great things he did in the Google Doodle.

    • @greenblood2313
      @greenblood2313 4 года назад +19

      You gotta send 500 emails to Google to remind them that jon would not like to just be remembered because of his game of life in the brains of the majority of ppl
      Sry for bad english

    • @nataliexists
      @nataliexists 4 года назад +5

      @@greenblood2313 google (kind of) did that. Search Conway's game of life and on the side you should see a game of Conway's game of life!

    • @agentg5233
      @agentg5233 4 года назад +3

      Actually if you go into a google doc and press ctrl+alt+shift+e followed by ctrl+alt+shift+c and you will be able to play

    • @agentg5233
      @agentg5233 4 года назад +2

      Huxley VAP also if you go into a google doc and press ctrl+alt+shift+e followed by ctrl+alt+shift+c and you will be able to play

    • @diophantine1598
      @diophantine1598 3 года назад

      @@agentg5233 did not work...

  • @AdeonWriter
    @AdeonWriter 10 лет назад +749

    Mr. Conway, at the age of 7 (20 years ago), I played with a Game of Life simulation written in TI-BASIC, and it is what sparked my interested in programming. I can't thank you enough for it. It will always be very special to me.

    • @michaelbauers8800
      @michaelbauers8800 7 лет назад +30

      I think you are far from alone in being inspired by this

    • @lichansan1750
      @lichansan1750 6 лет назад +26

      Mr. Conway may be right that the Game of Life is not the most genius thing he did with math, but for sure it is one of the most important things done for young people looking for something to study. I think, that this drew many people to math and especially computer science.
      And to make it a little more clear: i did not say "the most important thing done by him".

    • @soundsouler8477
      @soundsouler8477 4 года назад

      32 years

    • @RockBrentwood
      @RockBrentwood 4 года назад +3

      Actually, this falls in the class of what one would call an Incomplete Discovery. That's a partial discovery of something that *still* has (or had) not yet been fully discovered. In this case, the complete discovery is Life With Color! A second rule to determine how a cell is colored. That leads from Life to Competition/War/Conquest/Colonization/etc. Without fully realizing it (until now), you missed out on the *real* fun. I devised and implemented that long ago. I'll have to reverse-compile the source code, I only have the executable now. There are no other copies (yet).

    • @axemenace6637
      @axemenace6637 4 года назад

      @@RockBrentwood can you please elaborate?

  • @alcesmir
    @alcesmir 10 лет назад +354

    Wow, I didn't expect John Conway to be on numberphile. That's mighty impressive!

    • @BC1ZM3
      @BC1ZM3 10 лет назад +37

      Me either, and the game of life wasn't all that amazing on it's own, but it made a great point about complexity rising from simplicity. Some of the most basic math turned into things that appeared to be alive

    • @vandorb12
      @vandorb12 10 лет назад

      brandon carter This reminds me of music based on pi and phi...

    • @THB192
      @THB192 7 лет назад +1

      Alcesmire Well, they got BWK on Computerphile. Which is also pretty damn impressive.

    • @casualbeluga2724
      @casualbeluga2724 4 года назад

      @@THB192 They also got John Graham on numberphile which is cool

  • @weylin6
    @weylin6 9 лет назад +711

    You guys should have asked what his other achievements were, the ones that he felt were overshadowed by GOL.

    • @alexschrijnemaekers8067
      @alexschrijnemaekers8067 8 лет назад +37

      His opinion towards GOL reminds me of Anthony Burgess' towards A Clockwork Orange.

    • @shmosel_
      @shmosel_ 8 лет назад +36

      Reminds me of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and Sherlock Holmes.

    • @WailFin
      @WailFin 8 лет назад +67

      Yeah, like his contributions to number theory, group theory, topology, and theoretical physics. Also, the Doomsday rule is pretty cool.

    • @marioprawirosudiro7301
      @marioprawirosudiro7301 7 лет назад +48

      Also reminds me of Tolkien. Poor guy just wanted some story to showcase the languages he created (and to be fair, those are still some of the most well-made languages in fiction to date).
      I also don't understand why Mr. Conway would say that his Game of Life is "not interesting". Given the very generic rules:
      1. Cells die if less than X neighbors
      2. Cells die if more than Y neighbors
      3. Cells are created if Z neighbors
      If you tweak the variables a bit, you could even use it to generate a rather nice cave system - if you're making a roguelike.

    • @felipevasconcelos6736
      @felipevasconcelos6736 4 года назад +9

      Mario Prawirosudiro, Tolkien was also very passionate about his legendarium. He did create it as a place where his languages would have life, but he spent most of his life writing thousands of years of history in that world.

  • @StuffByDavid
    @StuffByDavid 10 лет назад +1355

    1. Make a Conway's Game of Life (perhaps in 3D.)
    2. Find the perfect set of rules and a computer with enough RAM and CPU to simulate 14 billion years of the Game of Life.
    3. Intelligent beings evolve in the game, eventually inventing their own computers.
    4. They make their own Games of life.
    5. Repeat from step 2

    • @novellmusicmedia6895
      @novellmusicmedia6895 8 лет назад +32

      Rinse and repeat and you have the entire cosmos, implicit and explicit. See, the truth is that life started highly technogically advanced, then de evolved to simple planetary systems and their simple organisms. Ofcourse they did not truly de evolve but it appears that way to us because we are watching the Earth life simulation unfold, real time. Then those planetary systems and their simple organism evolved into more complex psychologically and technologically "self aware" systems sort of speak. The only reason we were not taught this is because hitherto we haven't been able to prove that the Universe is a simulation. There were advanced races long before Earth evolved creating and evolving our Earth, technologically. We just didnt have the awareness that we had highly scientifically advanced creators. But if you look at the pace of evolution of human tech, then you can begin to see how simple systems evolve and make other systems that evolve. But the lower systems loose their connection or awareness about their creators. Thus the state of human affairs on this planet.

    • @KrunchymanTheBold
      @KrunchymanTheBold 8 лет назад +50

      Novell Music Media-Novell Allen How do you know this? Did the aliens tell you this?

    • @novellmusicmedia6895
      @novellmusicmedia6895 8 лет назад +2

      Ha. Why do you ask?

    • @lLenn2
      @lLenn2 7 лет назад +17

      How else are you saying all this with such certainty?

    • @williamho1879
      @williamho1879 7 лет назад +29

      42

  • @Xeno426
    @Xeno426 10 лет назад +226

    The thing that's cool about the Game of Life is that it shows how complexity can emerge from a very simple set of rules.

    • @TheTechBite
      @TheTechBite 9 лет назад +4

      I picture chess being like game of life.

    • @acruzp
      @acruzp 9 лет назад +10

      neiio
      not exactly.
      While chess, having simple rules, gives rise to complexity, it doesn't do so like this game. The complexity in chess is due to the sheer number of possible games. At every step you can make many sensible moves. The game of life has a specific move for every step. You set innitial conditions and wait for it to evolve... no decision making here, it just interacts and follows rules.
      By chess' logic then anything can give rise to complexity (even something as simple as a dice).

    • @gfetco
      @gfetco 9 лет назад

      +Xeno426 You should try to play the Game of Go (Jap: igo, Korean: baduk). A board game that is about a couple of thousand years old, reminds me a bit of the Game of Life to be honest.

    • @12clesio
      @12clesio 7 лет назад

      thats what girlfriends use

    • @DavyCDiamondback
      @DavyCDiamondback 4 года назад

      Does the complexity emerge from the rules, or the concept of time?

  • @paramoreguate
    @paramoreguate 9 лет назад +426

    "who would've thought? well I thought but..." haha best line in the video.

    • @BankruptGreek
      @BankruptGreek 7 лет назад +39

      "who would've though? well I though but typically one doesn't think.."

    • @eifbkcn
      @eifbkcn 3 года назад +2

      Steve Wolfram has done a much better and more thorough job analyzing that sort of phenomenon

  • @stapler942
    @stapler942 4 года назад +72

    Just found out Conway had passed away and I was literally watching a PBS Spacetime video where they had a Game of Life animation when I read it.

    • @masterdementer
      @masterdementer 4 года назад

      WHAT really the last time I was here he was still alive, RiP.

  • @djsyntic
    @djsyntic 10 лет назад +27

    I had never heard that John Conway hated the game of life. Personally in response to him thinking that it wasn't that interesting and that it was overshadowing more important things, I would just say the following: The game of life was the perfect thing you could have in your mathematical portfolio. It's something that a young adult can understand, and it might spark an interest in this young adult to learn more about math, programming, biology, or any number of other things. When someone creates something new and important, it's going to either be something everyone can use or it's going to be something that specialists use. Conway's game of life is absolutely for the first type of person, but it inspires people to become the second.

  • @TheSLK66
    @TheSLK66 9 лет назад +245

    Am I the only one who actually likes his voice for some reason?

    • @51SErVER
      @51SErVER 9 лет назад +11

      TheSLK66 I love his voice!

    • @pedrodemello3666
      @pedrodemello3666 9 лет назад +27

      +TheSLK66 I particularly like the way he looks to the left dreamily when he needs to think. This man is the British Morgan Freeman, I feel.

    • @DarkAvatar1313
      @DarkAvatar1313 8 лет назад

      +TheSLK66 He sounds like Liam Neeson to me (probably a similar regional accent.)

    • @JafarChou
      @JafarChou 7 лет назад +22

      No you're not, and a lot of kids say this these days. "Am I the only one...". No one said they dislike Conway's voice. You cant make stuff up like that.

    • @BlinkinFirefly
      @BlinkinFirefly 3 года назад +2

      LOVE his voice!

  • @verdatum
    @verdatum 10 лет назад +154

    RUclips keeps bringing me back to this channel. I give up. You win. Subscribed. You guys are fantastic.

  • @MrInsideEye
    @MrInsideEye 4 года назад +14

    I just heard about his passing. He was an amazing person, I hope he's remembered

  • @numberphile
    @numberphile  10 лет назад +214

    Does John Conway hate his Game of Life?

    • @MM-tn9cf
      @MM-tn9cf 8 лет назад +1

      Yes?

    • @memejest
      @memejest 8 лет назад +1

      Tuấn Đạt Nguyễn yes

    • @fofolp1213
      @fofolp1213 8 лет назад +2

      PUT LINKS IN THE DESCRIPTION

    • @andrewsauer2729
      @andrewsauer2729 8 лет назад +17

      Ryan Carelse LOL, the graphics literally could not be improved

    • @inwencja2009
      @inwencja2009 8 лет назад

      zzz

  • @kokopelli314
    @kokopelli314 9 лет назад +46

    For those of us programmers who cut out teeth, coding LIFE, we owe Conway a debt of gratitude. Thanks John!

  • @AlanKey86
    @AlanKey86 10 лет назад +1256

    I want someone to make a T-shirt that says:
    GET A LIFE
    with a picture of some squares arranged in the shape of a glider or something on the front
    That would be the very definition of *cool*

  • @kurtilein3
    @kurtilein3 10 лет назад +35

    i used to play around with this for quite a bit. for example, there is "gilberts hotel" in game of life, where you have an infinite incoming stream of gliders, and a structure that can store all of them. people also did a programmable turing machine. or a machine that will calculate all prime numbers. one thing that really impressed me is that people managed to program conways game of life inside conways game of life.
    thats one elegant way to prove its mathematical structure. if you can put together a programmable turing machine in game of life, and it actually works, that pretty much proves that its turing-complete.

    • @eifbkcn
      @eifbkcn 3 года назад +1

      Of course there are still "simpler" automata than Life that are turing complete, such as rule 110

  • @ShadowHunter120
    @ShadowHunter120 8 лет назад +145

    I wonder how rich John Conway would be if he had a quarter for everytime someone had him explain the game of life when people seek him out.

    • @carl8790
      @carl8790 7 лет назад +10

      ShadowHunter120
      Probably richer than Bill Gates, I assumed.

    • @corpsiecorpsie_the_original
      @corpsiecorpsie_the_original 5 лет назад +3

      Not very. Banks rarely convert foreign coins into local legal tender

  • @Rochardzorz
    @Rochardzorz 10 лет назад +27

    I have no idea why I find this so fascinating but I literally cannot stop watching animations of GoL in action.

  • @raxo6513
    @raxo6513 10 лет назад +134

    He just made up the game as an excuse to eat nuts.

  • @Destro7000
    @Destro7000 10 лет назад +92

    "Might as well eat them" xD haha...dunno why that made me laugh @2:40

  • @Punk4kids
    @Punk4kids 9 лет назад +56

    Someone mentioned that "he is like a musical artist sick of playing his biggest hit at every concert". Extremely wrong, I consider him a skilled artist, sick of his one "pop song" overshadowing his great work. Heck he has like 10 books, and besides a small touch on symmetries, you (and probably 99% of people) only ask him about the game of life, that's why he hates it (and you didn't really asked about symmetries, he started talking about the monster himself)... And since I'm going all 'leave britney alone' here, a lot of people who do research on almost anything, will have a time when they will be depressed about the certainty of knowing that you will never have the chance to see a certain thing finished or explained, but he looks like he is in the process of going over that, although some never do. Don't get me wrong here, I love the 'phile channels, but people like John need to be asked about their other stuff as well.

    • @metacustomcomputers3426
      @metacustomcomputers3426 8 лет назад +6

      +T Razvan That happens a lot and I can really understand being upset about that. It was the same with Christopher Eccleston and his role as the 9th Doctor in the series "Doctor Who". He started to hate that role because nobody cared about his other work.
      Kind regards,
      Meta Custom Computers

    • @ll8096
      @ll8096 4 года назад +6

      why do you say extremely wrong about him being a musical artist sick of playing his biggest hit - then go on to essentially agree with that same statement?! haha

  • @spiderous
    @spiderous 8 лет назад +416

    He just wanted to eat some nuts. xD

    • @JafarChou
      @JafarChou 7 лет назад +59

      I'm convinced conway devised his game of life by a combination of boredom and a desire to eat his almonds back in 1970.

    • @marekss
      @marekss 7 лет назад

      Interferencyjny lol

  • @lexingtonbrython1897
    @lexingtonbrython1897 4 года назад +4

    RIP Professor Conway. You and your work will be remembered most fondly - not just the Game of Life but stuff like the Collatz Conjecture.

  • @symbolxchannel
    @symbolxchannel 10 лет назад +185

    What else did this guy do? I would like to learn more about his work…

    • @spybio
      @spybio 7 лет назад +10

      You have Google

    • @MuzikBike
      @MuzikBike 7 лет назад +7

      Ever heard of 4D shapes?

    • @theflaggeddragon9472
      @theflaggeddragon9472 6 лет назад +9

      Sphere packing, differential geometry and topology, group theory (finite simple groups and the monster group), elliptic modular functions, and much much more.

    • @MrTwhispers
      @MrTwhispers 6 лет назад +3

      His discoveries in mathematics have contributed to the programming world that would allow the use of arrays. We all thank him.

  • @williampeters4040
    @williampeters4040 4 года назад +6

    So sad to hear of John Conway's passing. "Life" was one of the first games I programmed back in the 80's on my family's TRS-80, and I came across several other things he has done in the subsequent years, both through Martin Gardner and in my work in computer science. A great man, and will be dearly missed.

  • @numberphile
    @numberphile  10 лет назад +62

    A few more videos with John Conwy will be coming soon - stay tuned.

  • @dushkin_will_explain
    @dushkin_will_explain 4 года назад +14

    R.I.P. Mr. Conway. Your GoL was the thing, which forced me to study mathematics at the age of 8 more than 35 years ago :(

    • @yvesnyfelerph.d.8297
      @yvesnyfelerph.d.8297 4 года назад +1

      He should have stayed home! Seriously, it's exactly bc of these old fcukers that the whole society is in lockdown. Yet, they still can't help it and get infected. The world would be much better off if we wouldn't hide from the flu like coward little pussies and let nature cleanse the population of these octogenarians and other weaklings

  • @edincanada
    @edincanada 4 года назад +2

    This is my favourite numberphile video and will always be. John Conway has left us due to Covid19 but forever all of us will be able to listen to his very own explanation of the game of life

  • @cookielover9237
    @cookielover9237 3 года назад +4

    i would like a simulation of cells of two types
    1. Villagers
    2. Witchs
    Rules:
    1: Bring supplies
    2. If someone is following you by themselves go towards groups of 4 or more
    3: Move in groups of 3 or more
    4: Vote for someone suspicious to be executed

  • @adsilcott
    @adsilcott 10 лет назад +9

    A few years ago (thirty years after the game was invented) someone created a self-replicating machine in Conway's game of life, a very complicated construction called Gemini that basically created a clone of itself while disassembling the original. It uses a very long sequence of gliders as a sort of DNA to carry instructions for the whole process! It was huge news in the community, and I'd love for numberphile to do a piece on it.

  • @Nordzumu
    @Nordzumu 10 лет назад +13

    This guy has an amazing voice.

  • @JeisonJunqueira
    @JeisonJunqueira 10 лет назад +3

    The game of life was opening the door to my interest in computer science. I could not be a computer scientist, the game of life had not inspired me so much. For me, the game of life was one of the more interesting at that time. Thank you so much, mr. Conway.

  • @kattenelvis1778
    @kattenelvis1778 4 года назад +6

    Rest in peace to this amazing person 😢

  • @TrasherBiner
    @TrasherBiner 10 лет назад +2

    Very nice of you to have brought Conway to Numberphile (despite he hates talking about Life so much).

  • @MrDavidCrane
    @MrDavidCrane 10 лет назад +1

    I love that you interviewed Mr. Conway. Thanks.

  • @RulerOfCakes
    @RulerOfCakes 8 лет назад +7

    wish I could meet him irl, such an awesome guy

  • @BricksOfAwesome
    @BricksOfAwesome 10 лет назад +24

    Ken Ham needs to play this game.

  • @jacderida
    @jacderida 10 лет назад +1

    Well, this was certainly something awesome to come home to! Can't wait to see more stuff from him!

  • @LegalmenteParlando
    @LegalmenteParlando 10 лет назад +26

    Do you notice like me that all these truly wonderfull minds often do not have coins in their pockets, and wear simple shirts? I'm sad :(

    • @artv.9989
      @artv.9989 6 лет назад

      Not all, some of them are the extremely rich powerful people that run this world, and a strong mind doesnt always = a nice person

  • @michaelbauers8800
    @michaelbauers8800 7 лет назад +1

    He could realize how many young people he's captivated with it. People who might have gone on to more useful math by being hooked by the game of life. As a young person, the game of life was very inspiring to me as dynamic and visible view into a an algorithm, that's simple in rules, but more complex in operation

  • @kwstaskartas9488
    @kwstaskartas9488 10 лет назад

    Wow , mr.Conway on numberphile. I am pretty impressed you managed to interview him ,he is like a legend of last century's mathematics !

  • @unslaadkrosis9435
    @unslaadkrosis9435 2 года назад

    This is the best concept I've ever been introduced to in the last few years and I'm obsessed already

  • @thecassman
    @thecassman 10 лет назад +7

    Studied the Game Of Life at Uni and did actually produce a programmed simulator to study. Loved it.
    Can we have some videos on Particle Swarm Optimisation? My dissertation was based on it and it'll be nice to see how it can be used from the eyes of professionals in the field (I no longer work in AI).
    Great vid as ever!

  • @hillyparkins7395
    @hillyparkins7395 9 лет назад +111

    I have to say i am proud that this man is my Uncle...

  • @tabularasa0606
    @tabularasa0606 10 лет назад +45

    How about a 3d version?

  • @JordanBeagle
    @JordanBeagle 4 года назад +1

    We lossed a legend, may his work live on in the hearts of many!

  • @MohamedAtia
    @MohamedAtia 10 лет назад +1

    You guys are currently the best thing on RUclips

  • @IdgaradLyracant
    @IdgaradLyracant 10 лет назад +6

    Conway's "Game of Life" and cellular automata (not to diminish Ulam and Neumann's contributions) has such profound impact on the theory on evolution it's contribution is sadly not noticed. It clearly shows how complex structures can be formed from apparently unrelated behaviors.

  • @BigDBrian
    @BigDBrian 10 лет назад +6

    It took me 30 seconds to realize that's actually John H Conway, but that's awesome. Took me by surprise, really.

  • @ijabbott63
    @ijabbott63 4 года назад +4

    R.I.P. John Horton Conway, born 26 December 1937, died of COVID-19 on 11 April 2020 (aged 82).

  • @Fasteroid
    @Fasteroid 4 года назад +5

    I’m gonna miss this mathematical madlad

  • @karelsukup1973
    @karelsukup1973 9 лет назад +2

    That moment when you realize that math is beautiful and you have a tear on the edge of your eye thinkin' about all these things. I'm just amazed how computer science and math can go hand and hand and make these awesome things for biology and other subjects of human knowledge. Sorry for my english if im not correct in something but i just had to write how good i feel about stuffs like this. Thanks for an inspiration for my math studying!

  • @TopShelfization
    @TopShelfization 10 лет назад +2

    I love the game of life, so very interesting when run on a computer, i thank this man for that game..

  • @aaronsmith6632
    @aaronsmith6632 3 года назад +2

    Legend has it Conway's ghost is busy working on the Game of Death.

  • @JontyLevine
    @JontyLevine 10 лет назад +15

    I never much liked the metaphor of 'living' and 'dead' cells. That description is far too emotive. I tried to explain it to my brother once, and he was like "So is the aim of the game to get all the cells to be alive?"
    No, it's not a game. And (in my opinion at least) it has nothing to do with life. It's more like a fire. An isolated spark will just cool down, but a flame surrounded by other flames will be extinguished due to lack of oxygen.
    Fire is simple, fire is powerful. Fire is not alive, yet it is at the heart of more complex processes like respiration. And to me the chaotic/unstable patterns in the 'Game of Life' were like out-of-control blazes compared to the controlled burning of a glider gun.

    • @jakx2ob
      @jakx2ob 10 лет назад +10

      Well it does feels a little bit like loosing if your setup dies after a few turns.

  • @REDBULLHEADiphone
    @REDBULLHEADiphone 6 лет назад

    I can safely say that in several years of watching Numberphile videos that showed up as recommended in my feed, this one is the most interesting.

  • @holymanlogin
    @holymanlogin 9 лет назад +24

    "This guy gonna die"... [eating it]
    )))

  • @CommandoTactics
    @CommandoTactics 10 лет назад

    Was just at an event for maths and Matt was there. He talked about the Game of life, and so on. It was really good, Matt hosted like a boss, Thanks Matt :)

  • @gabes7729
    @gabes7729 10 лет назад

    Loved this video so much. It's great that you got Mr Conway on your show.

  • @SquirrelASMR
    @SquirrelASMR 2 года назад +2

    I'm really liking this game of nuts version

  • @himynameisjpo
    @himynameisjpo 10 лет назад

    Perfect timing with this video, I have a Game of Life lab coming up in Comp Sci this week.

  • @cpt_nordbart
    @cpt_nordbart 4 года назад +4

    We keep on playing John. Rip

  • @peAkTalkies
    @peAkTalkies 4 года назад +1

    I'm gonna make a cellular automation today to honor Professor Conway. His contributions to us/the scientific community will help us create a better future :) Rest in Peace

  • @daedra40
    @daedra40 10 лет назад

    MORE Conway!! Awesome stuff thus far

  • @AlexanderEVtrainer
    @AlexanderEVtrainer 10 лет назад

    Such a cool video, and thanks for putting the simulator link in the description. I was just about to ask for one when I got done watching.

  • @bobtheduck
    @bobtheduck 10 лет назад +12

    I wonder if Milton Bradley and Reuben Klamer ever hated THEIR Game of Life.

    • @GRAHAMAUS
      @GRAHAMAUS 10 лет назад +4

      Dunno, but I sure did, the one time I had the misfortune to be made to play it.

  • @SalixAlba256
    @SalixAlba256 10 лет назад +2

    I would really liked to have looked at some of the other things Conway did: the ATLAS of Finite Groups, work on four dimensional polyhedra, the Look-and-say sequence. All fascinating topics which he might had discussed with some enthusiasm.

  • @peon17
    @peon17 10 лет назад +1

    I remember 15 or 20 years ago receiving a computer disk with a variety of games on it. Most of them were clones of previous games or variants of one another. One game that stuck out to me was a game called Life. It wasn't really a game, but I couldn't stop trying out different configurations. To my then pre-teen mind this was all mind boggling. All these years later I still find myself occasionally going back to that game called Life and wasting away hours. I credit it as one of the main reasons I have pursued a life in mathematics.
    Thank you, John Conway. While Life isn't your greatest accomplishment, it has done wonders for numerous others in sparking their imaginations. Without it I likely wouldn't be where I am today just two months away from finally receiving my Ph.D. in mathematics.

  • @Sid-vz8rm
    @Sid-vz8rm 4 года назад +3

    14 April 2020. Rest In Peace

  • @KangHyunChu
    @KangHyunChu 4 года назад +1

    RIP Conway. Everyone remembers your brilliance

  • @jacobgolden9482
    @jacobgolden9482 10 лет назад

    Thanks for the video, Brady.

  • @InuXela
    @InuXela 6 лет назад

    This man made me spend tons of school grid notebooks back in 90's

  • @ShamelessHorse
    @ShamelessHorse 10 лет назад +1

    I love Conway's Game of Life! It is what got me interested in programming, especially procedural generation. I recommend to anyone interested in programming to make a version for yourself. It is very rewarding and fun to play around with the rule set. All you need to make your own version is an understanding of how to use arrays/matrices. There can be issues with performance, so if your coding isn't efficient or you have a slow machine you might need to keep the board fairly small.

  • @readyplayersid
    @readyplayersid 4 года назад +4

    He finally won the Game of Life! RIP John Conway

  • @Т1000-м1и
    @Т1000-м1и 3 года назад +2

    Nostalgia for 2020 summer, reading Wikipedia page and GOLAD

    • @Т1000-м1и
      @Т1000-м1и 3 года назад +1

      Here from epic conway game of life where I came from GOLAD is now on apple store vid

  • @Aefire1
    @Aefire1 10 лет назад +7

    Two days ago I decide I was going to begin coding on my own Game of Life. This video's timing is amazing.

  • @leo848
    @leo848 4 года назад +3

    R.I.P John Conway (1937 - 2020)

  • @muktiguchhait2730
    @muktiguchhait2730 4 года назад +3

    May his soul rest in peace...

  • @Inderastein
    @Inderastein 4 года назад +5

    3:00 "The condition for giving birth is that you have exactly need 3 parents"
    *"Its really not that imitating"*

  • @softbabymonkey
    @softbabymonkey 4 года назад +3

    RIP you brilliant man

  • @chris-hayes
    @chris-hayes 4 года назад +5

    RIP John Conway

  • @Dr.HazharGhaderi
    @Dr.HazharGhaderi 10 лет назад +3

    6:20 "You know, who would've thought...well I thought..." haha.

  • @richardxu7251
    @richardxu7251 10 лет назад +7

    Once when Conway is trying to say that in MathPath camp, he accidentally said "I hate life" :)

  • @420xHustlerxB0SS
    @420xHustlerxB0SS 10 лет назад +9

    You can actually have a working Universal Turing machine in game of life.

  • @Maatteessuff
    @Maatteessuff 4 года назад +2

    Rest in peace John, you will be remembered

  • @shrimpbisque
    @shrimpbisque 4 года назад +2

    Rest in peace, sweet prince.

  • @SuperStingray
    @SuperStingray 10 лет назад

    John Conway is awesome. I took a course in Combinatorial Game Theory a few years ago, which he wrote the seminal book about, and I think it was the most interesting math class I ever had.

  • @gulllars4620
    @gulllars4620 10 лет назад +1

    I recently saw a talk by Stephen Wolfram on "A New Kind of Science" (i had seen it before), and in it he references these kinds of things described in the Game of Life as cellular automatons.
    For people who want to dive a bit deeper into the more general stuff this game has lead to, there are a couple of one hour long talks by him that are worth watching, where he argues for iterative computation by simple rules as a new kind of science with very powerful applications.

  • @acuteioa
    @acuteioa 4 года назад +1

    Thank you John Conway, RIP

  • @Frommerman
    @Frommerman 10 лет назад

    I think the game of life is very interesting. The fact that such simple rules can create a world of immense complexity is truly astounding from both mathematical and philosophical standpoints.

  • @Kevo216666
    @Kevo216666 9 лет назад +17

    My career was ruined when I invented Kerplunk. Nobody wants to talk about Buckaroo!!

    • @lpsp442
      @lpsp442 9 лет назад +4

      K Russell Rare youtube kek

    • @Gnurklesquimp
      @Gnurklesquimp 9 лет назад

      This is all like code to me

  • @Njald
    @Njald 4 года назад +2

    Rest in Peace Professor Conway.

  • @Cerise4697
    @Cerise4697 7 лет назад

    His voice is amazing. He could narrate documentaries.

  • @JimCullen
    @JimCullen 10 лет назад +7

    So I'm guessing that Betteridge's law of headlines works here?

  • @powertube5671
    @powertube5671 4 года назад

    I first saw it while working for Bell Laboratories around 1980.

  • @christiansfd
    @christiansfd 7 лет назад

    I like the Conway arrow notation :)

  • @emibulls
    @emibulls 10 лет назад

    Ha, I had to program this game in Java in college. It's nice to actually put a face to Mr Conway.

  • @joekkim
    @joekkim 10 лет назад

    Oh my, I was fortunate enough to meet him in person a few months ago. He was in US for a sometime, teaching in city universities (Queens, NY). He was a guest speaker in some computer science classes, and I had chance to talk to him for a while, asking some intriguing math questions that I had. You can tell right away that teaching is his passion. He has lots of excellent stories that are both fun and historical (mathematically, that is).
    (Unfortunately, I did notice that his thinking speed was not as "crisp" as it would have been in his younger years. I suppose is natural part of life; nevertheless, it does sadden many. He has been and still is a great man.)

  • @itisALWAYSR.A.
    @itisALWAYSR.A. 4 года назад +1

    One of the great maths rockstars. Thanks, Dr Conway. I hope your final months in the nursing home were as comfortable as you were engaging. :)