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Stephen Wolfram Radio Lecture

Stephen Wolfram, subject of much discussion here, once known solely as the creator of Mathematica, now also known as the author of A New Kind of Science (/. review here), gave a lecture at Boston University this past spring on that book's subject matter. The audio of the lecture was broadcast this evening on the program World of Ideas on WBUR-FM out of Boston. If you don't live in the Boston area, if you missed the program, or if like me you were listening in your car while driving and found that two activites incompatible, the hour-long recording is also available for download in RealMedia format.

3 of 33 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Archive it! by L3WKW4RM · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Can anyone provide a link to a Speex encoded copy (or .ogg, .mp3) for those of us who won't touch RealPlayer?

  2. Hell and damnation! The lecture is inaccessible! by TDDPirate · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There are several deaf persons in the world, who are interested in Stephen Wolfram's ideas.
    However, as long as the lecture exists only as audio stream, its gems of wisdom will remain forever out of reach of the deaf in the world.

    AARRRGGGGHHHHH!!!!!!

  3. Re:Been there done that by Crazy+Eight · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I don't mean to be disrepectful, but if you're only saying that "life.c" was written a long time ago you should read some reviews of this book. Even a cursory glance at the reader commentary on Amazon will show that Wolfram is not trying to say that cellular automata are neeto. He spent ten years on this thing with the intention of showing that (roughly) Nature is a cellular automaton. I think his desire is to point the way to a kind of Grand Unified Theory -- except instead of finding a simple formula beneath it all the way e=mc^2 summed up Relativity he would have us search for an algorithm that spawns the universe. My take on this could be all wet (and so could he), but he is too intellectually aware, ambitious, and arrogant to merely add an appendix to an old chapter in computer science.