So, has anyone read Stephen Wolfram's book?:m:
If not, he mainly argued that Cellular Automata would revolutionize science.
Complexity from basic rules. Rambling? A mere empirical deduction? What are your comments on this book?
A group in my school will have an interview with him next week. The guy is a genious and even though many have criticized his books, he is still very able to answer to many questions, from mathematics, topology, AI, computers...etc. Any suggestions for a nice question?
****
A simple, elegant solution.
(Now what have I been bothering about so many years?) One does not see much need in getting up:
there is neither bed nor body.
Vladimir Nabokov
If not, he mainly argued that Cellular Automata would revolutionize science.
"Wolfram uses his approach to tackle a remarkable array of fundamental problems in science, from the origins of apparent randomness in physical systems, to the development of complexity in biology, the ultimate scope and limitations of mathematics, the possibility of a truly fundamental theory of physics, the interplay between free will and determinism, and the character of intelligence in the universe."
Complexity from basic rules. Rambling? A mere empirical deduction? What are your comments on this book?
A group in my school will have an interview with him next week. The guy is a genious and even though many have criticized his books, he is still very able to answer to many questions, from mathematics, topology, AI, computers...etc. Any suggestions for a nice question?
****
A simple, elegant solution.
(Now what have I been bothering about so many years?) One does not see much need in getting up:
there is neither bed nor body.
Vladimir Nabokov