A conversation between Lee Smolin and Stephen Wolfram

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Stephen Wolfram plays the role of Salonnière in this new, on-going series of intellectual explorations with special guests. Watch all of the conversations here: wolfr.am/youtube-sw-conversat...
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Пікірлер: 115

  • @zbig47
    @zbig472 жыл бұрын

    holy holy... get me some more popcorn... Smolin and Wolfram that is TOP NOTCH ! thanks for this !

  • @mitchellhayman381
    @mitchellhayman381 Жыл бұрын

    Best conversation I've ever heard with Smolin, and I've heard them all. Edit. This is one of the best conversations on KZread. Amazing conversation. Steven seems to understand things extremely quickly. Seems like an extremely brilliant man. Lee Smolin is a good physicist and a deep thinker. Seems like a great human. I was very sad to hear Lee has been having issues related to Parkinson's disease. Including pain and trouble moving his right side. I wish him all the best. It's terrible seeing a gentle soul suffering.

  • @glitchp
    @glitchp2 жыл бұрын

    This is incredible. These sorts of videos should be translated into every language and have 5 Billion views each. Maybe someday Humanity or its descendants will look back and be amazed.

  • @PetraKann

    @PetraKann

    2 жыл бұрын

    Amazed at what precisely?

  • @dlovedinero

    @dlovedinero

    2 жыл бұрын

    233222

  • @glitchp

    @glitchp

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@PetraKann your wonderful replies

  • @PetraKann

    @PetraKann

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@glitchp Apologise Mr glutchop

  • @akbarwicaksana5142
    @akbarwicaksana51422 жыл бұрын

    would be super awesome to have Sir Roger Penrose as a guest, perhaps to discuss Wolfram Physics Projects

  • @johndarrell264
    @johndarrell2642 жыл бұрын

    I've never seen one of these physics videos where they speak so technically very impressive.

  • @andrewk3210
    @andrewk32102 жыл бұрын

    This conversation is pure gold, a lot more people should see it

  • @ajabbi-tv
    @ajabbi-tv2 жыл бұрын

    Wonderful interviews Stephen. Please do a lot more.

  • @optimismodis4853
    @optimismodis48532 жыл бұрын

    What a pleasure to enjoy this chat. Thank you!

  • @jaydugger3291
    @jaydugger32912 жыл бұрын

    I enjoyed this very much. Thank you for posting it publicly.

  • @KaliFissure
    @KaliFissure2 жыл бұрын

    I’m also HS dropout, studied fluid dynamics making lighting effects, fractals using my Commodore 64. So lucky about meeting Bucky. Got into child education doing STEAM but always keeping up on things. Bucky had a genius vision that hasn’t been fully explored and the sticks and tension might be applicable in some way w your model @Wolfram

  • @epolanowskirn
    @epolanowskirn2 жыл бұрын

    I have a great deal of respect for Lee Smolin, as well as Dr Wolfram. A great meeting, great discussion, and it's good to see Lee is open to listening to Dr Wolfram's ideas

  • @LGcommaI
    @LGcommaI2 жыл бұрын

    Relevant detail: it is perhaps helpful to note that at position 19:32, the term mentioned is "Gurdjieff Work".

  • @surfinch
    @surfinch Жыл бұрын

    I'm impressed by how easily Wolfram picks up on everything Smolin is saying ...

  • @epwlod777
    @epwlod7772 жыл бұрын

    I don't understand much, if any of the physics talked about but I enjoy the talk with even my small grasp. Wish I could speak the language fluently.

  • @davidianmusic4869
    @davidianmusic48692 жыл бұрын

    Thanks you both. And thanks Lee for the work at Perimeter, I hope to encourage some youth to pursue education, enlightenment there.

  • @albab790
    @albab790 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much

  • @MrM970
    @MrM9706 ай бұрын

    Wonderful, thanks

  • @AmericanMoonOdysee_com
    @AmericanMoonOdysee_com2 жыл бұрын

    This is nice. Thank you! Wolfram has a great personable personality. And Smolin too, much depth of thought and insight. // Philosophy was mentioned. To me philosophy is emergent in the mind at a higher level of considering the interpretation of physical things below.

  • @Psnym
    @Psnym2 жыл бұрын

    I had no idea Smolin was a HS dropout, or that he was influenced by (and had even met!) Buckminster Fuller.

  • @pascaljosiah6866

    @pascaljosiah6866

    2 жыл бұрын

    Never heard of a Highschool dropout mathematician.

  • @gregoryallen0001

    @gregoryallen0001

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@pascaljosiah6866 did you know they didn't even have high schools until recently 😐

  • @das_it_mane
    @das_it_mane2 жыл бұрын

    Would love it if timestamps for long videos were included

  • @quantumbitz3473
    @quantumbitz3473 Жыл бұрын

    Hidden gems, thanks for the upload.

  • @madzubmetler
    @madzubmetler2 жыл бұрын

    I wish I'd have dropped out of high school so I could be a genius like Lee Smolin.

  • @johnchristophehurley7420
    @johnchristophehurley74202 жыл бұрын

    Good guy Stephen Wolfram.

  • @informationinformation647
    @informationinformation6472 жыл бұрын

    Steve: "Why is a geodesic dome a good pool cover?" Lee: "It's not"

  • @arbez101

    @arbez101

    8 ай бұрын

    Haha! Yep!

  • @nunomaroco583
    @nunomaroco5832 жыл бұрын

    Amazing. ....

  • @danielm5161
    @danielm51612 жыл бұрын

    Interesting chat

  • @gregoryallen0001
    @gregoryallen00012 жыл бұрын

    this was such a great conversation thank you

  • @kylegushue
    @kylegushue2 жыл бұрын

    Fun stuff!!!

  • @physiker-frank-haferkorn
    @physiker-frank-haferkorn2 жыл бұрын

    What a lovely exchange about PHYSIK. I will have to read some of Lee.Smolin's papers.

  • @starblue324
    @starblue3249 ай бұрын

    Aleay appreciate discussions on time. The "time isn't real" narrative in current academics seems too simple

  • @Achrononmaster
    @Achrononmaster2 жыл бұрын

    @45:00 the mathematicians are making the terminology obscure the physics (the geometry). When you "throw away" half the Lagrangian you are eliminating a redundancy, if it is a conjugation then physically that is always an inversion (or reversion) in the geometric algebra, so you are saying with things reversed nothing changes, so that is a redundancy and if it is simpler in form to throw half of it away (sacrificing the symmetry) to get simpler functional forms, then it is valid, provided if when you come to computing things you restore the symmetry (e.g., by taking scalar parts of the full geometric products or what-have-you).

  • @____uncompetative

    @____uncompetative

    2 жыл бұрын

    @GRUMMLER Chirality

  • @michelrogier5272
    @michelrogier52722 жыл бұрын

    John Denver wrote a song called "What One Man Can Do" about Buckminster Fuller.

  • @afrobear2310
    @afrobear23102 жыл бұрын

    Anyone know the name of Lee's best paper ? (The one he mentioned)

  • @swradios
    @swradios3 ай бұрын

    Humbling.....Dunning-Kruger realization here.

  • @DanielFBest
    @DanielFBest2 жыл бұрын

    Lee's Three Roads to Quantum Gravity is quite the read...

  • @theknowledge.6869
    @theknowledge.68692 жыл бұрын

    Is Gravity ? ~ Space-Time Extracting Space-Time from Matter to Further Expand Space-Time ?

  • @____uncompetative

    @____uncompetative

    2 жыл бұрын

    I don't know, but it sounds a lot like what they were talking about, and I like that. Question: do you think the Universe could exist without observers?

  • @theknowledge.6869

    @theknowledge.6869

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@____uncompetative Is every particle an Observer ? Is what ever can be as small as the Planc Length and as small as the Planc Time an Observer ? So ~ Is Everything an Observer = If it is, then the Universe cannot Exist with out Observers.

  • @____uncompetative

    @____uncompetative

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@theknowledge.6869 To clarify, I was asking if the Universe that we have, that we observe, is the way it is so that consciousnesses exist at some point in its history. Intuitively, evolution precedes entropic heat death, but one would assume that if evolution failed universally to produce life/consciousness/observers then the universe would still have existed without observers. However, my recent thinking has been that of the problem of bootstrapping reality being resolved by a more advanced form of life (which could be us in the far future, assuming we escape the great filter and don't nuke ourselves, we don't necessarily have to assume we are not special, and alien life evolves past our level of IQ), and as we may beget Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) at some point in the next 100 years, we may gain the IQ through them to resolve a Theory of Everything and the expertise and means to harness its insights into bootstrapping creation, if it turns out we need to travel back in time to set the initial conditions a particular way to ensure our own evolution and history are not only possible, but inevitable. Time may prove to be imaginary and something observers construct out of the patterns of the present hypergraph they see at any one moment. There could be a now, and no past, and no future, with an entropic arrow and our memories being what make us observers label something that was computed and no longer exists or can be accessed as "the past". I have heard Stephen Wolfram talk about the hypergraph being zero dimensional and without time, although he has constructed a meta-take on this substrate which involves causality and commonly refers to time like familiarities where they impinge on Einsteinian models of relativity. So, I don't know ultimately, but am open to the possibility of a Final Anthropic Principle: www.physics.sfsu.edu/~lwilliam/sota/anth/SAP_FAP.htm

  • @LeeLightfoot
    @LeeLightfoot Жыл бұрын

    The 14 minutes conversation, I know Philip Goff says Russellian Monism was "rediscovered" fairly recently.

  • @das_it_mane
    @das_it_mane2 жыл бұрын

    Stephen, do some heavy macro doses of psychedelics and you will see how to solve these

  • @Paul1239193
    @Paul12391932 жыл бұрын

    Wolfram: “where does the difference between past and future come in in that kind of interpretation?” 1:35:02 Smolin: “sometimes I get confused about it” 1:35:17 “I haven’t made that work the way I would want it to.” 1:35:31 Uh huh. A theory that *does* make it work had already been put forward in PhilSci and PhilPapers.

  • @zenmeister451
    @zenmeister4512 жыл бұрын

    Wish I could understand what they're talking about...

  • @Seekthetruth3000
    @Seekthetruth30002 жыл бұрын

    Who gave it one thumb down!?

  • @eugenbarbula9661
    @eugenbarbula9661 Жыл бұрын

    I must, admit, I'd love it a lot to actively participate at such events, but I'm quite shy, if I'm sober. xD

  • @adrianfeeger
    @adrianfeeger Жыл бұрын

    Two highly neuro-divergent individuals who understand the universes more than most of us, gods amongst men. I don't understand why in particular philosophy and psychology fails to update itself with the understanding that these men bring.

  • @timothylamattina3697
    @timothylamattina36972 жыл бұрын

    I’ve always thought Lee was one of the smartest guys in theoretical physics Watching this interview I couldn’t help but notice that Lee maybe in the early stages of Parkinson’s or some other similar neurological disorder All the twitching and squirming and awkward movements while speaking are early warning sides I’m not a doctor and I hope I’m wrong but my ex wife worked with the elderly suffering from alzheimer’s, parkinson’s, and similar disorders Very sad

  • @surfinch

    @surfinch

    Жыл бұрын

    Seems it's Parkinson's indeed.

  • @quantummotion

    @quantummotion

    Жыл бұрын

    He does. He actually underwent surgery in Aug 2022 for a deep brain stimulation implant to manage his symptoms. He was interviewed in his hospital room next day and you can see an improvement.

  • @timothylamattina3697

    @timothylamattina3697

    Жыл бұрын

    @@quantummotion Glad to hear that. Thanks for the info.

  • @Anon1696
    @Anon16962 жыл бұрын

    0:45 hello

  • @parker9163
    @parker91632 жыл бұрын

    When multiple geniuses come to the same conclusion in different terms and explains the underthehood explanation of known physics. This conclusion is very likely true.

  • @mz-dz2yn
    @mz-dz2yn2 жыл бұрын

    the first invention that will come from understanding gravity better and q.m. will be like the early bicycle airplane invention, it will use ideas and materials that exist and then be refined for decades then two bike mechanics will invent an airplane using these bike parts and ideas (metal spokes become wires to hold wings etc) the question then becomes ... what tech or materials or spins or energies now can be controlled or modelled that can lead to small inventions that perhaps cannot be seen at the time but will lead to anti gravity, or harnessing gravity, and i have been thinking about this for 40 years and i think it will be similar to the surf board, what made surfing take off was the lightness of the foam core fiberglass covered boards, did u know that the boards used in a competition are even thinner than normal boards, well at some point someone is going to invent a way to surf on gravity waves, and i have been thinking about this as i said for 40 years, somehow a material or a spin or a surface or flux state will lead to a invention like skipping a rock across a pond that will be the first step in gravity and time travel. big things start with simple innovation with what exists for example .. Inventor Karl von Drais is credited with developing the first bicycle. His machine, known as the "swiftwalker," hit the road in 1817. This early bicycle had no pedals, and its frame was a wooden beam. The device had two wooden wheels with iron rims and leather-covered tires.

  • @goldlinkproductions
    @goldlinkproductions Жыл бұрын

    Spyroe theory, a concept for quantum gravity. The concept is, a human is destined to perceive through a specific shape as a collective. This specific shape is the shape that is the framework for all QM and GR movements. Watch the video on KZread. “Spyroe theory explainer”

  • @govindagovindaji4662
    @govindagovindaji46622 жыл бұрын

    did Smolin warn the host that he had been drinking? because he is NOT Lee today!!

  • @millerfour2071
    @millerfour20712 жыл бұрын

    10:57

  • @adityakrishnaakula746
    @adityakrishnaakula7462 жыл бұрын

    Is lee suffering from a disease? Why is he twitching and closing his eyes?

  • @BRunoAWAY

    @BRunoAWAY

    2 жыл бұрын

    He always do that

  • @theknowledge.6869

    @theknowledge.6869

    2 жыл бұрын

    That’s just Lee Smolin.

  • @TheAjrclark

    @TheAjrclark

    2 жыл бұрын

    He's got a few tics: It's just mild Tourrettes Syndrome.

  • @TheAjrclark

    @TheAjrclark

    2 жыл бұрын

    Also, Check Slavoj Zizek ;)

  • @nolan412

    @nolan412

    2 жыл бұрын

    Side effects of genius...thoughts infuse your whole being.

  • @silberlinie
    @silberlinie2 жыл бұрын

    omg

  • @helloonceagain3813
    @helloonceagain38132 жыл бұрын

    Time, Godel Metric

  • @smileifyoudontexist6320
    @smileifyoudontexist63202 жыл бұрын

    Question at 38:00 min: I will Introduce a new axiom or reintroduce/redefine the Vacuum Floor to begin with. I will define faces in a field…… and so on

  • @1330m
    @1330m2 жыл бұрын

    very good Longitude 127 Seoul Okinawa Soul Axis -- Bahai Faith Rael Jesus Huh kyung young Great aletheia

  • @radwizard
    @radwizard2 жыл бұрын

    WARE UFO?

  • @BrettHar123
    @BrettHar1232 жыл бұрын

    On the issue of time, this rather dense lecture by David Albert, describes why the past is different from the future, based on a past hypothesis and the records we have about the past, wherein we have no such knowledge of the future. kzread.info/dash/bejne/pYyWwZZvnMepeJM.html I believe the epistemic view of time that Lee Smolin describes is a stronger version than the mere difference between microstates and macrostates, but as with Stephen's "observers" amounts to the same thing. The book by David Albert "Time and Chance", is one of the best descriptions of time, which respects our most deeply felt experience, and dispels the block universe without a present moment as an incomplete description of reality.

  • @KaliFissure
    @KaliFissure2 жыл бұрын

    I need to have lunch w Lee, virtually even. We are inches from the grand unification.

  • @nolan412
    @nolan4122 жыл бұрын

    "God can't do calculus."

  • @nolan412

    @nolan412

    2 жыл бұрын

    Lol. Matched funding doublers.

  • @ElwoodAndersonNV
    @ElwoodAndersonNV2 жыл бұрын

    Could dark matter be the microscopic remnants of evaporated black holes from previous aeons of the universe?

  • @Mrmistershesh

    @Mrmistershesh

    2 жыл бұрын

    I think probably not. The cosmic microwave background provides pretty good evidence that dark matter existed back when recombination occurred. That's only a few hundred thousand years after the big bang. I think it's unlikely that so many black holes could be born and evaporate into enough dark matter on that time scale. If that did happen, I would expect the CMB anisotropies to be much larger than they are.

  • @Mrmistershesh

    @Mrmistershesh

    2 жыл бұрын

    However, there's active research right now into whether or not so-called "primordial" black holes, which are black holes that formed in the very early universe and are still around today, could constitute some or all of the dark matter. The appeal of this hypothesis is that you don't need to suppose an entirely new class of matter that we haven't been able to detect.

  • @KaliFissure
    @KaliFissure2 жыл бұрын

    No progress will be made in large scale cosmology until they rethink this obsession w s3 manifold.

  • @danwebb7144

    @danwebb7144

    2 жыл бұрын

    Alright, could you elaborate please?

  • @d1psh1tc1ty

    @d1psh1tc1ty

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@danwebb7144 I don't think he could elaborate.

  • @KaliFissure

    @KaliFissure

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@danwebb7144 my issue w a simple spherical manifold is that if gravity is the metric of spacetime where is any variation of curve on sphere? And if black holes are indeed perforations of the manifold then shouldn't there be a perforation in manifold? That brings us to a toroid. Which seems more likely but we have yet to find a white hole.

  • @KaliFissure

    @KaliFissure

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@d1psh1tc1ty i hadn't seen the comment so didn't reply

  • @d1psh1tc1ty

    @d1psh1tc1ty

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@KaliFissure This is a pretty cool idea. If spacetime is the surface of a closed manifold, doesn't time go in a circle?

  • @RWin-fp5jn
    @RWin-fp5jn2 жыл бұрын

    A nice conversation. However the brilliance of these men is actually preventing them to see and accept that the origin of physical complexities and paradoxes is always and without exception, a (quite basic) error in a shared human assumption of made a long time ago and institutionalized as such . You can't solve complexity at the demand side with more complexity on the supply side . You need to eradicate the complexity in the demand side first. We are not doing that. It all hinges on the physical interpretation of Einstein's SR and we need to involve Dirac's spinor math representing (electro) spin as was so beautifully animate by PBS on youtube channel recently. So I am very sorry but neither men are even close to the correct solution. Go back in time and fix where we went wrong....

  • @NightmareCourtPictures

    @NightmareCourtPictures

    2 жыл бұрын

    Demand side? Supply side? Brah what are u even saying.

  • @mitchellhayman381
    @mitchellhayman381 Жыл бұрын

    I hope Lee is going well. He seems like his health might be declining.

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