Wolfram Physics Project Launch

2024 ж. 1 Мам.
1 489 988 Рет қаралды

Stephen Wolfram publicly kicks off an ambitious new project to find the Fundamental Theory of Physics. Begins at 2:50
Originally livestreamed at: / stephen_wolfram
Stay up-to-date on this project by visiting our website: wolfr.am/physics
Check out the announcement post: wolfr.am/physics-intro
Find the tools to build a universe: wolfr.am/physics-tools
Find the technical documents: wolfr.am/physics-documents
Follow us on our official social media channels:
Twitter: / wolframresearch
Facebook: / wolframresearch
Instagram: / wolframresearch
LinkedIn: / wolfram-research
Stephen Wolfram's Twitter: / stephen_wolfram
Contribute to the official Wolfram Community: community.wolfram.com
Stay up-to-date on the latest interest at Wolfram Research through our blog: blog.wolfram.com
Follow Stephen Wolfram's life, interests, and what makes him tick on his blog: writings.stephenwolfram.com

Пікірлер
  • The sheer amount of people who've fallen asleep watching another video only to wake up and find this video playing is immense

    @staraffectus2651@staraffectus26518 ай бұрын
    • Uncanny isn't?

      @heyitsfp@heyitsfp2 ай бұрын
    • Same boat

      @Sorinian@SorinianАй бұрын
    • This is me.

      @MagnusRender@MagnusRenderАй бұрын
    • morning

      @lewisholmes2650@lewisholmes265023 күн бұрын
    • CTMU happens to be among my recent watches tho

      @ianinkster2261@ianinkster226121 күн бұрын
  • I fell asleep to a vid on the first metal lathe and woke up, several lengthy math and physics videos later. I can't wait to see what ads Google will be pitching me for the next couple of days.

    @Automedon2@Automedon23 жыл бұрын
    • My subconscious must be full of it I just woke up and see I am just ten minutes from the end!

      @agentx7138@agentx71383 жыл бұрын
    • Same

      @chrisjohnston8457@chrisjohnston8457 Жыл бұрын
    • same, last night

      @stas4323@stas4323 Жыл бұрын
    • Same just now😂

      @kynge5@kynge5 Жыл бұрын
    • Igxuuucucucuuuucu😅uu

      @tovaweerakkody5908@tovaweerakkody5908 Жыл бұрын
  • I fell asleep while watching KZhead and when I woke up this is what was playing.

    @onion2.076@onion2.07610 ай бұрын
    • Me too!

      @TEKENAable@TEKENAable8 ай бұрын
    • Same

      @maxhall3147@maxhall31477 ай бұрын
    • Same

      @therealpepsicat@therealpepsicat6 ай бұрын
    • Bro same

      @kio2gamer@kio2gamer6 ай бұрын
    • frr

      @jxmxqii@jxmxqii6 ай бұрын
  • I COULD FALL ASLEEP TO ANYTHING ON KZhead AND I ALWAYS SOMEHOW END UP WAKING UP TO A WOLFRAM VIDEO????

    @TitaniumLegRay@TitaniumLegRay6 ай бұрын
    • Stephen is waking people up.

      @SebastianGrignoli@SebastianGrignoli2 ай бұрын
    • My case exactly

      @silverlight3@silverlight3Ай бұрын
    • @silverlight3 I still wake up too it too this day, I feel like I wake up, have my coffee, smoke a dab and watch it for like 20 mins now, it's getting a bit odd aha

      @TitaniumLegRay@TitaniumLegRayАй бұрын
    • i know ! but why ? oh why ? please someone tell me why !!!!

      @mathieuklerckx836@mathieuklerckx836Ай бұрын
    • try steve hislop flying lap tt rc45 .... and watch for 15 mins .. i can guarantee you wont fall asleep

      @colinobrien3806@colinobrien3806Ай бұрын
  • Anyone else woke up to this on autoplay at 2AM?

    @thejohnjosh@thejohnjosh6 ай бұрын
  • So we are all waking up to this video. Woke up to the part about the universe being a simulation and stayed in bed until i finished it

    @dosskyyy@dosskyyy8 ай бұрын
    • Interesting. This is the 3rd time experiencing this and the first two times i woke to the same video: '2016 Isaac Asimov Memorial Debate: Is the Universe a Simulation?' kzhead.info/sun/qsuMiqVrhYKmdas/bejne.html

      @clutsta@clutsta19 күн бұрын
    • What's up with the sunglasses doe

      @clutsta@clutsta19 күн бұрын
  • I was dreaming I was exploring a planet while some dude was talking to me about quantum computing and hyper drives and I woke up to this video.

    @Calupp@Calupp6 ай бұрын
    • post me some of what your on please

      @colinobrien3806@colinobrien3806Ай бұрын
  • bro why the hell i wake up everytime with this video

    @abirhasan3937@abirhasan3937Ай бұрын
  • I fell asleep to a Vsauce video and woke up to this vid

    @abithadani9860@abithadani986010 ай бұрын
    • SAME! EVERY NIGHT

      @ham.burger.@ham.burger.8 ай бұрын
    • Hell no this is what I just did too

      @adityaadit2004@adityaadit2004Ай бұрын
  • hearing this in my sleep gave me trippy fuckin dreams... about a group of people going through a series of increasingly difficult challenges from escaping a tsunami to surviving in space. there was terror, suspense, puzzle solving, logic, death, tears. i'm already forgetting but it was my best dream in a while. no one cares but thought i'd share the experience.

    @sirhawkjames@sirhawkjames9 ай бұрын
    • Make a film!

      @mikevanelp5916@mikevanelp591626 күн бұрын
    • @@mikevanelp5916 kinky

      @clutsta@clutsta19 күн бұрын
  • Fell asleep watching yt and this is what I wake up to

    @patrickdonoghue4714@patrickdonoghue4714 Жыл бұрын
    • I just left a comment saying the same thing. I was on auto play and woke up in the middle of this :)

      @twocyclediesel1280@twocyclediesel1280 Жыл бұрын
    • @@twocyclediesel1280 me too :)

      @maximuschapman3852@maximuschapman385211 ай бұрын
  • This is what it would have been like if someone like Newton or Einstein would have held podcasts. I feel truly privileged to be able to take part in this. Thank you Stephen!

    @OlleMattsson@OlleMattsson4 жыл бұрын
    • They held lectures. Why you went to Princeton or Oxford.

      @nolan412@nolan4124 жыл бұрын
    • Exciting time in history...please be the fuel for a new era of prosperity.

      @rocknrolladube@rocknrolladube4 жыл бұрын
    • Internet, show you history in real time.

      @pedrog.formaldemocrata1934@pedrog.formaldemocrata19344 жыл бұрын
    • @@TheDavidlloydjones Isn't the magic of the internet that all ideas can be expressed and explored in whatever form one chose to? I think it's incredible to live in a world where free enterprise, and free exploration of ideas are allowed. I do thank you for publicly reminding / pointing towards Fredkin as he is one of the many unsung heroes of computer science. So to anyone who happens comes across this little rap: It's well worth reading anything Fredkin has ever written and listening to any lecture / interview possible to find. If you haven't had the opportunity to read Wolframs "A New Kind of Science" yet it's also an amazing work. At lest worth the read if you can find it at a library. Then one can decide for oneself wether it's worth the money (spoiler, I think it is def worth the 36 bucks i paid for it an adlibris). No other work I've come across captures the interesting nature of automatas quite like this book. Not to make too big of a joke about it, but I find it kind of silly to suggest that a fraudster would put that amount of time and effort behind anything of this magnitude. I mean - if, for example, money was the end game here - don't you think there'd be waaaaay easier ways to get rich than trying to find a solid ToE?

      @OlleMattsson@OlleMattsson4 жыл бұрын
    • @@nolan412 Yes, exactly Nolan! Imagine what it would be like if we had and audiovisual record of those lectures!

      @OlleMattsson@OlleMattsson4 жыл бұрын
  • Would absolutely recommend this to anyone who wants to fall asleep while listening to something that doesn’t make him feel alone, and doesn’t make him overthink in silence

    @Amms.connect@Amms.connect7 ай бұрын
    • What's crazy you say this, I legit fell asleep watching a different video and this was added into my autoplay loop and while asleep I was dreaming of what he was saying and making sense of it. It was actually so insane.

      @IzNebula@IzNebula6 ай бұрын
    • Profound!

      @NeverTalkToCops1@NeverTalkToCops15 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for writing your book ("A New Kind Of Science") Stephen, jumping right into reading it! (first time to learn about it but the last time to retroactively forget it haha peace out).

    @youtuberpatternlearning6263@youtuberpatternlearning62634 жыл бұрын
  • “Different points in Branchial Space, their natural distance Metric is expressible as something as Entanglement Entropy.” Fascinating!

    @benheideveld4617@benheideveld46174 жыл бұрын
  • I woke up to this playing on my phone….

    @baileymarion505@baileymarion505 Жыл бұрын
    • Your not the only 1... they r trying to push an agenda out thts clearly not part of what we usually watch.

      @Illphella@Illphella Жыл бұрын
  • Talking about intellectually demanding topics for almost 4 hours straight without a drop in energy levels... impressive. Even more considering Stephen's age.

    @rikelmens@rikelmens4 жыл бұрын
    • How old do you think he is?

      @rusmiller816@rusmiller8164 жыл бұрын
    • @@rusmiller816 - Quite older than me and I'm 52. Considering he was taught by Feynman... OK, I'll check Wikipedia but my guess is around 65. Let's see... OK, I was slightly wrong: he's 60 only, born on August 29th 1959.

      @LuisAldamiz@LuisAldamiz3 жыл бұрын
    • @Peter Lustig - I think the algorithm is the same as the graph, this is something he should explain better to non-initiates though. But my understanding is that the idea is that each "dot" carries the algorithm, such as {A > BBB, BB > A} in the character string example they sometimes use. It'd be nice if we could see better how that intrinsical algorithm relates to physical fundamentals anyhow, that's a part I still haven't grasped well, only very generically and intuitively, what is clearly not enough.

      @LuisAldamiz@LuisAldamiz3 жыл бұрын
    • @Peter Lustig - I don't understand enough to judge further but I think you don't either: you seem way too opinionated without sufficient knowledge.

      @LuisAldamiz@LuisAldamiz3 жыл бұрын
    • @Peter Lustig Feynman's diagrams were similarly "mostly" graphical in nature but they opened the doors to truly understanding atomic particle interactions.

      @DavidHansen1@DavidHansen13 жыл бұрын
  • I'm not a physicist by any means but my curiosity has led me here after reading the memo. I'm not sure if this is already covered in the broader materials but the two-slit experiment may be a great example of this for the average enthusiast : - develop a sample rule to build space - illustrate how light occupies that space in discrete time steps spreading out leading to the wave pattern - show how the impact of "quantum measurement" by an observer can "freeze time" in a quantum frame leading to the slit pattern

    @PrinceBorat@PrinceBorat4 жыл бұрын
    • How about first trying something "simple" like recreate spacetime with a single particle before going to such daring complex things as the two slits experiment?

      @jomen112@jomen1124 жыл бұрын
  • i like the way this sort of computational approach lends itself to a better understanding of entropy, you can see how it might be balanced with naturally occurring tendencies toward order and synchronisation

    @rebokfleetfoot@rebokfleetfoot4 жыл бұрын
  • Must say, I'm very impressed by humble Stephen Wolfram! What ever happens, if this project is leading to the unified theory or not, he is much more an inspiration than the typical physicist who is more concerned to appear as scientist, mostly by producing minor stuff which then gets blown big, who is mainly concerned of having a nice career, a nice pension, unearned reputation and not to bring physics to a new level. It's not only a waste of money also of creativity and a missed contributions to society which finances them. Think Wolfram is driven by a childlike interest, not mainly speculating to get a Nobel Prize some day. Being interested in physics since a long time, I started to detect an immense void inside the nothingness-loudspeakers in physics, who appeared ever more as emperors with no cloth, as uninspired pea counters, not having achieved much I'd say in the last 50 years, Krauss, Tyson, Carroll etc. Whereas ordinary people get impressed by some equations and complexity-talk, then putting these loudspeakers on high pedestals they don't deserve, I felt a rising skepticism towards such pretenders. We see lots of blinders in public with their nothing's. Shallow thinkers wanting to appear as new Einsteins. I think Wolfram is different here, smart, humble, interest driven, and if someone I know has the substance to expand Einsteins physics, its probably him and not the army of pea counters of orthodoxies.

    @j.h252@j.h2523 жыл бұрын
    • Yea. There is a difference between caring more for ones ego than caring for science. Same go's for politics by the way...

      @ronaldronald8819@ronaldronald88193 жыл бұрын
    • Wolfram humble? bahahaha

      @tomp2008@tomp20083 жыл бұрын
  • Love the project and am actively contributing. Please keep up with the Livestreams Stephen, we need these to develop our intuitive sense of how to build Universal models and experiment. Eager to see this develop further, I am optimistic this has big promise for physics and humankind hopefully as well :)

    @benxfuture@benxfuture4 жыл бұрын
    • same

      @level2.99@level2.999 ай бұрын
  • coming from lex :)

    @Dante3085@Dante30854 жыл бұрын
  • This idea has been cooking in your head all these years -- you have a very powerful subconscious mind sir!

    @Ke6wli@Ke6wli4 жыл бұрын
    • I think conscious too :D

      @ikoukas@ikoukas4 жыл бұрын
  • Yea i really got inspired like that i saw many people online playing with cellular automaton and various versions of those and you could really see complexity in it and recognize parts of the world in them and that is what really attracted me to them.

    @duality4y@duality4y4 жыл бұрын
  • Amazing work. Truly inspiring

    @dimomarkov8937@dimomarkov89374 жыл бұрын
  • So exciting to learn about! Thank you

    @aistarseed@aistarseed3 жыл бұрын
  • 3:38:10 @Wolfram wow, that is a once in a generation intellectual achievement. One comment. You don't have to bake the forward direction of the update rule into your assumptions. Causal edges can indicate that two states are causally consistent, but transitions can be bidirectional. That corresponds to the microscopic time symmetry in physics. The arrow of time arises statistically because the graph is tapered at one end and wide at the other. We are big subgraphs and we drift to what we call later time because there are more causal edges leading there. That also answers why the initial condition was simple: It doesn't need to be, the causal adjacency graph tapers at one end, that we call the past, and fans out the other end that we call the future, regardless where you start. The 2nd law of thermodynamics is derived from conservation of information. The simplest graph causally consistent in the past is the big bang and the irreducible information content of the universe. The 2nd law says that states become larger and larger by iterating the causal rule, but no new information is added. There's a bit more proof and formalism to add, so I'll join and express this fully.

    @PavlosPapageorgiou@PavlosPapageorgiou4 жыл бұрын
  • I fell asleep at "live stream will start shortly" Well done! Thx🎉

    @camielkotte@camielkotte7 ай бұрын
  • I have the best sleeps ever when this is on in the backround!!! no joke....thank you!!

    @soche2993@soche29936 ай бұрын
  • 50:30 this explanation of special relativity is truly amazing! Even as a professional physicist, I have not heard about this before. And it makes a lot of sense to me.

    @EverettYou@EverettYou4 жыл бұрын
    • what about it is new to you? This seems like basic stuff to me,.

      @LogosInsula@LogosInsula8 ай бұрын
  • 29:50 talks about - we haven't found particles in the more complicated rules - hope to do that in next few weeks

    @blakebaird119@blakebaird1194 жыл бұрын
    • Blake Baird ?

      @elck3@elck34 жыл бұрын
  • ELEGANCE IN YOUR TREMENDOUS EFFORT ALONE THANK YOU FOR SUCH VERY HARD WORK.

    @hankusage8105@hankusage81053 жыл бұрын
  • The low structure entropy in the beginning of the universe is compensated by the high information value of the starting bit of code that contains the 'plan' what comes. Here information entropy and thermodynamic entropy are really good in sync imo

    @ctcsys@ctcsys4 жыл бұрын
  • How I wish I'd found this at the beginning. So much catching up to do 😯

    @LuckyBoyNelson@LuckyBoyNelson3 жыл бұрын
  • Hello and thank you for doing this 💪👏❤️

    @newenglandbarbell4647@newenglandbarbell46474 жыл бұрын
  • Best idea, the beginning of the theory of everything. you make my day. History in real time. Awesome.

    @pedrog.formaldemocrata1934@pedrog.formaldemocrata19344 жыл бұрын
    • Tt

      @danielcamacho9085@danielcamacho90853 жыл бұрын
    • Peter Lustig even if these ideas don't tell us the specific rule of our universe, if they are mathematically sound and we complete their development it is possible to exactly simulate the universe provided the model is complete. Whether or not that completion is possible is unknown but this project is still very new and right now the goal is to develop tools that can be used over the next decade to develop the field.

      @MisterDoctorBaconman@MisterDoctorBaconman3 жыл бұрын
  • I saw you on lex’s show, what you said about special relativity explained by different update speeds for nodes has been keeping me up at night. I’m back for more!

    @Fliperflyer59@Fliperflyer593 жыл бұрын
  • Unlike other people in the comment section. I didn’t fell asleep. Just turned off phone and after few minutes KZhead started playing this by itself!

    @rydwan1233@rydwan12332 ай бұрын
  • This work is just pure, and revolutionary, so inspirational, dude 1:40:44 “ that means that the particles are not just there in space, and then curl, its the space that form the particles” 🤯

    @arnauruiznaldow@arnauruiznaldow3 жыл бұрын
    • See Coney Island Green Theory in the book "I Have Become Space".

      @douglaslipp3258@douglaslipp32582 жыл бұрын
    • there is a quote from Bohm OR Dirac (my best guess) somewhere saying the same in terms of particles being only the expressions of the folding of the regions of space with diferent potential. its all space. the ALLSPACE of what used to be called the synthetic geometry

      @ondrejstefik3066@ondrejstefik3066 Жыл бұрын
    • yes, everything is probably something like a very big lissajous curve that have an infinity of “time” to form each new state to its perfection

      @kilianlindberg@kilianlindberg9 ай бұрын
    • All of you literally sound like your describing God, and has just given it different names.

      @LogosInsula@LogosInsula8 ай бұрын
    • @@douglaslipp3258 there is no space

      @juliancav8933@juliancav89336 ай бұрын
  • Amazing! Tank you!

    @goranbergkrantz3177@goranbergkrantz31774 жыл бұрын
  • A WOLF with a lot of RAM memory. Thanks Wolfram ❤️

    @vanessadetodosloscielos.@vanessadetodosloscielos.4 жыл бұрын
    • Nigga

      @inakibolivar664@inakibolivar6644 жыл бұрын
    • @@inakibolivar664 stfu

      @fernandopadilla2074@fernandopadilla20744 жыл бұрын
  • This is so wild, I can't even process it.

    @bokchoiman@bokchoiman3 жыл бұрын
  • Do the graph transforms get a different result if the nodes are listed in a different order (permutate, transform, then permutate back)?

    @benrayfield2153@benrayfield21534 жыл бұрын
  • I have been listening to this for days. Something came to me 2:41:29. The hypergraph as a thing. Could dark energy be a byproduct of Time? Think of the nodes like a bit coin. When it gets updated there is a theoretical node between the two nodes. Which pops into existence after.

    @Giganfan2k1@Giganfan2k13 жыл бұрын
  • 54:30 causal invariance is what leads to the independence of reference frames... please, help me there a little, I dont get it...

    @Petrhrabal@Petrhrabal4 жыл бұрын
  • I am getting a feeling of Quasi-Crystals, Lie Groups, Garrett Lisi, mixed with Syntax analysis, State diagrams, and theory of abstract languages with Finite State Automata. Also add in Conway's game of life, with symmetry analysis and Sir Roger Penrose for fun. Very interesting.

    @danielmadison4451@danielmadison44513 жыл бұрын
  • AMAZING. I'm here because of Javier Santaolalla one of the best Physicist of all time! I'm even Flipating! ;)

    @TaylorBrad100@TaylorBrad1004 жыл бұрын
    • Pablo Carrizales Rocha physicist?

      @user-hk8yp7cw1v@user-hk8yp7cw1v4 жыл бұрын
    • @@user-hk8yp7cw1v y

      @rodrigofelix7095@rodrigofelix70954 жыл бұрын
    • @@user-hk8yp7cw1v physician lol

      @jaimeandresmillan8752@jaimeandresmillan87524 жыл бұрын
    • Y tendrías que usar el plural “physicists” pq dijiste “one of the best” antes...

      @user-hk8yp7cw1v@user-hk8yp7cw1v4 жыл бұрын
    • @@user-hk8yp7cw1v Correcto amigo.

      @TaylorBrad100@TaylorBrad1004 жыл бұрын
  • I see some similarities with Donald Hoffman's work. I would love to see the two projects converge into the same model.

    @rocknrolladube@rocknrolladube4 жыл бұрын
  • 50:55 Reminds of why exactly we created the new idea and application of pixels that are exactly that shape. The dimensional plane of your graph here incorporates another scope for what was supposed to be True Depth TV, an application used for future plasma based, large scale theater screens and virtualization environments..

    @noisyeyes4590@noisyeyes4590 Жыл бұрын
  • Oh God, this is like oxygen to a suffocating man! THANK you for providing a serious venue for speculative science from competent workers.

    @craigwall9536@craigwall95363 жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for everything Stephen. Never leaving a dream.

    @dstadtmiller@dstadtmiller5 ай бұрын
  • This is genius, and honestly the most logical explanation of the universe I have ever heard, combining the multiverse, the quantum, and the classical in a way that corresponds to the observer and attempts to explain the inherent branching of the universe, of which we are very minor but explicit segments within the orders of magnitude, but describable as an event beginning with simple principles, suggesting once again that the universe is being simulated by a very sophisticated computer running very specific generative code. If time is quantifiable at a specific smallest unit, then time might only appear to progress at a “slow" rate because we observe it, but in relative terms, a very sophisticated computer could compute the universe in “seconds" and make its conclusions in the blink of a higher dimensional being’s “eyes”. I wonder how the rules illustrated would appear if simulated holographically.

    @woodandwandco@woodandwandco4 жыл бұрын
  • I found this video on my phone when I woke up, now I’m gonna watch it all!

    @AdamArsenal888@AdamArsenal88818 күн бұрын
  • I've never felt so grateful to live in this universe and have a physical existence. Next time I go to the beach I'm going to let sand slip through my fingers and have the universe calculate an unimaginable amount of physics, without even calculating it at all. The universe is amazing. Even just being able to think about stuff like this is emotional. We could of all just been living in nothing and have none of these luxuries. Consciousness is a blessing, always remember that.

    @maximuschapman3852@maximuschapman385211 ай бұрын
  • 28:00 This thing looks VERY VERY similar to a human brain and its neural networks!!! Mr. Wolfram says its dimension is aprox. 2.7. It also happens that the dimension (fractal/Hausdorff dimension) of the surface of human brain is 2.79 OOOOOOOHH what a coincidence!!! Or is it...?

    @QuantumPeter@QuantumPeter4 жыл бұрын
    • @John Smith Yes,but its all worth it!!!

      @QuantumPeter@QuantumPeter4 жыл бұрын
  • it seems to suggest the existence of a new kind of quantum field variable which is neither local or non-local in nature, it would be more like a variable that defines its own locality through process

    @rebokfleetfoot@rebokfleetfoot4 жыл бұрын
  • Right click -> loop, Best music for your ears

    @kirilchi@kirilchi4 жыл бұрын
  • i watched this on accident but now i am a fan of this guy

    @dracula9321@dracula93219 ай бұрын
  • THANK YOU FOR TRYING TO SHOW USALL HOW THE"WHOLE FRAME" WORKS !

    @hankusage8105@hankusage81053 жыл бұрын
  • I like to go to sleep on auto play some nights. Woke up early in the middle of this, wth? I’m not a math guy but it’s still fascinating. I guess the algorithm sees something in me :)

    @twocyclediesel1280@twocyclediesel1280 Жыл бұрын
    • exact same thing. That's amazing.

      @maximuschapman3852@maximuschapman385211 ай бұрын
  • Easily the most fascinating video I have ever seen on KZhead. Steven Wolfram, next step: Explain Consciousness! Please go after it!

    @benheideveld4617@benheideveld46174 жыл бұрын
    • consciousness is self relection in kind of logical way (without feeling and emotions).

      @ematarkus4121@ematarkus41214 жыл бұрын
  • Also could the initial state of the graph be infinite in size? Seems not because otherwise the possible branches would be infinite as well and also the whole graph would never be defined (unless it were somehow countable?)

    @ikoukas@ikoukas4 жыл бұрын
  • 3:26:04 "We see it as a big intellectual adventure..can we climb the big mount everest of science", as long as you have a lot of fun doing it...its unimportant if you do end up at the top or not.

    @sheeteshaswal@sheeteshaswal4 жыл бұрын
  • Black holes can't be pieces that gets separeted from the main piece because that means they are no longer affecting the universe. If that would happen in real, this would just be desapearing matter and space, which is not the case. I think that the phenomena that would describe a black hole, in my current understanding of your theory, is a big set of nodes that begins to indefenitely attract every other nodes around them and begin to form an area with dimension converging to infinity so everything gets lost inside that big piece of space and matter and there are so many dimensions and so many dimensions begin to be immitated that nothing finds a way to get outside of that area. Too many directions will lead to the middle of that giant piece so everything moving randomly gets to the middle, but not kinda the middle at the same time.

    @charlesbenca5357@charlesbenca53574 жыл бұрын
  • 1:37:45 Re: Black holes and spaghettification, does this have bear on why, in exceptionally large black holes, spaghettification does/should not occur? In other words, is there a model using these edges that can account for the different effects the properties of the black holes(eg size, mass, etc) have on observersations of nearby objects (like freezing, spaghettification etc.)?

    @Fallingmonsters@Fallingmonsters4 жыл бұрын
  • As a PhD in Physics Im fascinated by his work. It seems to solve few of the burning questions we were having. Its seems to be able to work in big (high order corrections to Einsteins' field equations) and small scales (path integral formulation).

    @javierlopeira7446@javierlopeira74464 жыл бұрын
    • STOP THE CAP

      @washoywa@washoywa5 ай бұрын
  • (59:16) So, Wolfram are about to prove Einstein was right about quantum physics after all. Second note is that Wolfram might have secured work for the next generation of theoretical physicists with this. Many interesting ideas he put on the table.

    @jomen112@jomen1124 жыл бұрын
    • The only thing I am uncomfortable with is Theoretical Physics as a word, it is a n oxymoron. This discipline is very interesting from an applicative point of vie, but I would call it immaterial science, because physics is absolutely not involved at any level, it's quite the contrary, it's also a wild claim to attach those mathematical concept to an universe we cannot explore. He keeps losing me when he, or anyone else, extrapolates this intellectual exercise to the universe. As much as all this requires intelligence to develop, jumping to correlations with stuff we can't empirically prove would have been considered a wild claim in pre-Ensteininan science.

      @thewizardsofthezoo5376@thewizardsofthezoo5376 Жыл бұрын
  • Incredibly profound. Needs more views.

    @Inorganic-Inc@Inorganic-Inc10 ай бұрын
  • Absolutely fantastic! I knew Stephen Wolfram was a genius, but I couldn't have imagined to what extend. The ideas presented here are astonishing and Stephen's way of presenting them is outstanding in terms of clarity and coherence. As of Jonathan and Max, although I haven't heard about them until now, obviously they have to be in the same ball park of geniality in order to be part of the team. Right now I'm so impressed an also inspired by this project.

    @mau_lopez@mau_lopez4 жыл бұрын
  • Posting a comment to the video of the most important physics breakthrough of our life time. 🥂

    @r-gart@r-gart4 жыл бұрын
    • This too www.express.co.uk/news/science/1308437/dark-matter-news-scientist-moon-core-theory-newton-einstein

      @alanlowey2769@alanlowey27693 жыл бұрын
  • As far as anyone went ,no one could ever answer these questions yet we know there is an answer.

    @ordyhorizonrivieredunord712@ordyhorizonrivieredunord712 Жыл бұрын
  • Fascinating introduction! Was just the kick I needed.

    @ChrisContin@ChrisContin5 ай бұрын
  • In man's pursuit of understanding the universe, they, unwittingly, created a new one

    @TheDeltaniner@TheDeltaniner3 жыл бұрын
  • Can such a framework determine those universal constants eventually?

    @vicentefachina7373@vicentefachina73734 жыл бұрын
  • This is amazing. It's so beautiful and simple and complicated all at the same time. Thank you for sharing this with us.

    @ataraxia7439@ataraxia74394 жыл бұрын
  • 55:00 "energy is the flux of causal edges through space like hypersurfaces". Since we start with only 1 causal edge and as time passes me have more and more causal edges. Does this mean that the energy of the system continuously increase over time?

    @sheeteshaswal@sheeteshaswal4 жыл бұрын
    • This question leads to interesting considerations, thank you. My understanding is only rudimentary, but generally as the edges increase, this so-called "flux" may change both in quality and, as mentioned, in quantity, with respect to causal edge increase, the question being: though increasing in count number, are the properties of these causal edges such that this flux either: (A) stays the same, "on the whole"* (within the system); or, (B) does it, in fact, change? (Leading, of course, to interesting interactions with the known laws of Thermodynamics.) *This, of course, leads to a nice question of how this "system" should be defined/ Again, I am in the process of delving into the computational and even mathematical structure of these particularities and thank you for the framing of your question.

      @Fallingmonsters@Fallingmonsters4 жыл бұрын
    • It seems so, I would like to see how this doesn't violate the first law of thermodynamics

      @josy26@josy264 жыл бұрын
    • I would expect that for more evolved graphs, several subgraphs reach local stability as a frequent event

      @tho207@tho2074 жыл бұрын
    • From the website, chapter 8.8: "We should note that with our identification for energy and momentum, the conservation of energy becomes essentially the statement that the overall density of events in the causal network does not change as we progress through successive spacelike surfaces. And, as we will discuss later, if in effect the whole hypergraph is in some kind of dynamic equilibrium, then we can reasonably expect that this will be the case. Expansion (or, more specifically, non-uniform expansion) will lead to effective violations of energy conservation, much as it does for an expanding universe in the traditional formalism of general relativity [117][75]." So apparently the first causal edge will contain all the energy that will ever exist and it will subsequently be divided with each step along the causal graph.

      @josy26@josy264 жыл бұрын
    • yeah, i see issues with deriving the first law of thermodynamics here

      @WilliamBarksdale@WilliamBarksdale3 жыл бұрын
  • Super congrats super success. Thanks a million Dr. Wolfram and all contributors. Can we get a worldwide support for extra compute power from average people to seek simple rule of computational language of universe and harness its intelligence and computing capacity on simulations of universes?

    @Amerikan.kartali.turk.yilani.@Amerikan.kartali.turk.yilani.4 жыл бұрын
  • 1:01:36 If we cut off all relation with a dot then a black hole is generated, supposedly only gravity so far, is capable of cutting of such relations. Having say that, there is a need of some kind of relation since a black hole exist in this universe and has a relation with it, is this model capable of describe such relation?

    @yasucm@yasucm4 жыл бұрын
  • i stumbeld on this and just listened to it all. i have to say it just makes sense. the beauty of this graphc theory (is it called like that?) is that it starts with an beginning. it could be used to describe the universe. i love the way of thinking, which is deterministic. to find the "right" rules is probably impossible. and if there is our universe, there may be anything else too. but finding subsets of possible "universes" with some functional simularities could be enlightning. its something that will become bigger, as computer and ais evolve. you will need some sort of ais to search for interesting graphcs. crazy and fascinating

    @EudaderurScheiss@EudaderurScheiss3 жыл бұрын
    • one thing that may be wrong: the update step time itself is not our time. time itself must be part of the graphs theory (if i understood correctly). so space and time may be an expression of a graph, that described a graph. though that may be wrong

      @EudaderurScheiss@EudaderurScheiss3 жыл бұрын
  • outstanding mind, thank you

    @salahsedarous7616@salahsedarous76163 жыл бұрын
  • I am 3D artist and I am interested in learning mathematics and physics. Thank you for Wolfram.

    @pinklady7184@pinklady71842 жыл бұрын
    • lol L b

      @elijahcolon8933@elijahcolon8933 Жыл бұрын
  • I think this video is one of the most important things I will ever see in my life

    @soram7653@soram76533 жыл бұрын
  • 2:46:40 Wow. Physics unfolding before our very eyes. Thats a rare thing.

    @perjespersen4746@perjespersen47464 жыл бұрын
  • Have you tried extensively Pi dimensional space? Have you tried extensively any [physical constant] dimensional space? Like the speed of light, as a frame for dimensional space.

    @sardinhunt@sardinhunt3 жыл бұрын
  • 1:36:53 when try to make a qubit you are freezing it in order to prevent its relation from the surrounding universe. Got it. In a sense we are not capable yet, of cut off such relation, if we do so, then a black hole will be generated. My question is, if a we can’t prevent a qubit's relation from the surrounding universe then, quantum computing will always work with a particle in at least a two-state indeterminancy?

    @yasucm@yasucm4 жыл бұрын
  • Computational equivalence made me not care about specific rule, but rather, think how a UTM-equivalent simple rule can arise from nothingness. However, discovering the model of our particular universe would mean a lot for our predictive power, and mining the space of computational universes in general may result in useful models for the various phenomena in our own universe. It's exciting to imagine, that we eventually come to use experiences and ideas from alternate universes, to our own one.

    @mindeyi@mindeyi4 жыл бұрын
  • How was the first connection between two points? It is not needed a high high probability to have two points with the needed characteristics to create a third point and so on? So the question is: if you need two or more points to create complexs systems, how do you explain that from a unique point, that is unique unique, there comes a second point?

    @mariomiralbell178@mariomiralbell1784 жыл бұрын
  • Yup. Fell sleep and woke up to see this had been playing

    @chryckie@chryckie15 күн бұрын
  • Wow, this is sick. This is modeling at another level. Hyper graph travelers. I wonder what quarks, carbon and hydrogen look like? Why on earth the plank length is such a weird boundary.

    @joebrones@joebrones4 жыл бұрын
  • Are there rules that generate Lie groups? And how does the work of Mandelbrot relate to how these hyper graphs develop from the perspective of the distribution of observable patterns? I’m struck by how you see a lot of similarity to biological structures. Similarly, Fibonacci has emergent qualities where we see a proliferation of patterns in systems as diverse as shapes of galaxies and cross sections of snail shells. Is this simply a quality of naturally generated geometry?

    @ImNotHereEither@ImNotHereEither3 жыл бұрын
  • An Amateur approach at Undergraduate level is based primarily on basic experience, (a bit of Newtonian Agricultural experience), and Introductory Courses, so immediately, this endeavor is begun at higher, (Mezzanine?), levels of qualifications. Undergraduate preparations and Philosophical Orientation are usually asserted (by qualified Professors) in the manner in which it is intended to be completed, in the first few weeks of University, because the really effective Research and re-view of Science and Methodology begins at PhD levels. (Not Amateur except as it applies to relevant Commentary, ..of the kind Newton devised and developed and practiced, for himself, thinking for himself.., no KZhead, Google, or alternative psychological/medical sources etc) Newton had every reason to be ruled by fear of chaos, so the search for permanent reliability in a metastable environment and culture seems like enough motivation to explain his actions, if not the totality of his achievements. So if by communication/commentary, ..on the equivalence of temporal Superposition-point Singularity positioning, in relation to The Calculus, ..natural verisimilitude due to the sustained metastable sum-of-all-histories, ..wave-package probability in potential possibilities of e-Pi-i interference positioning resonance imaging function, ..cause-effect of holographic existence.., is at least a comprehensible orientation to conscious awareness of observable phenomena here-now-forever, ..and then the methodology of Math-Phys-Chem and Geometry in rational and reasonable statement of approach / position.., .. is placed in the related student-level, QM-TIMESPACE Principle In-form-ation Math-phys Chem format of Geometrically superimposed resonances, context. In other words, over to you..

    @davidwilkie9551@davidwilkie95514 жыл бұрын
  • I’m not the only one who fell asleep to a whole different video and woke up to this right???

    @adrianarredondo5568@adrianarredondo55688 ай бұрын
  • I think you might genuinely have completed physics Stephen! Final boss completed, credits rolled, entering name into the high scores as we speak... It's not often I'll watch anything on KZhead past an hour long, but this blew my mind almost all the way through. Honestly brilliant work! I hope this theory continues to hold true use you develop it further and hopefully my kids will be learning about this in their science lessons at school.

    @peterburgess9735@peterburgess97353 жыл бұрын
    • Tmu

      @sobek2000@sobek2000 Жыл бұрын
  • I keep waking up and the algorithm drives me to these videos

    @user-UNKNOWNUNKNOWN@user-UNKNOWNUNKNOWN4 ай бұрын
  • Surprising how far the project has come in 3 years!!!!!!!!!!!

    @tarkajedi3331@tarkajedi33316 ай бұрын
  • Can you determine speed of light from your theory ?

    @Stan_144@Stan_1444 жыл бұрын
    • Yes he can, i think he wrote it in his book or one of his other vids

      @joakinfrati7867@joakinfrati78674 жыл бұрын
  • I dreamt that I had a teacher in primary school and he just kept going on and on about this. I gave him obligatory nods like "oh yeah, I know what you're talking about - keep going..".

    @tonyrandall3146@tonyrandall314611 күн бұрын
  • 8:25 yes, I picked up thinking about and tinkering with things like this again due to the pandemic. Currently trying to answer the question "How can we tell if there is something or nothing in an image?".

    @jandroid33@jandroid333 жыл бұрын
    • I've been thinking about how to make a complexity classifying deep learning neural network, but I have no idea if it's possible given the nature of complexity and computational irreducibility.

      @MisterDoctorBaconman@MisterDoctorBaconman3 жыл бұрын
  • You had me until 1:16:00 . How does observing a quantum particle relate to freezing time? From the graph it seems that the effect of the observation propagates at the speed of light, which is true in a strict sense, but I don't see how it addresses the fact that observing entangled particles gives you information about the partner in a distant location. The only way I can make sense of this is if in fact the quantum particle is frozen in its starting state, then once it is forced into another state by observation, in that moment all the intermediate steps occur all at once. This would partially explain interference with causal invariance, but I don't see how it explains the seeming random distribution over all possible final states.

    @Double-Negative@Double-Negative4 жыл бұрын
    • You disconnect alternative computational paths. It's a bit like branching in MW but the other worlds do not happen, or at least not in any timeline you can communicate with. Until measurement all branches, all timelines were possible, after it they are not anymore.

      @LuisAldamiz@LuisAldamiz3 жыл бұрын
  • How does the hypergraph model explain quantum eraser

    @dimicdragan5922@dimicdragan59224 жыл бұрын
    • No idea, my own (tentative) explanation is pre-Wolfram and it implies that the QE and DCQE experiments would have different results for massive particles such as electrons (not done yet AFAIK) than for photons. This is because in GR photons "experience" no proper space-time (they are everywhere every time in their trajectory, also in the past), however massive particles do have some proper space-time and thus should collapse at some well-gauged time or distance for a properly designed experiment.

      @LuisAldamiz@LuisAldamiz3 жыл бұрын
KZhead