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How do simple programs behave
Authors:Stephen Wolfram
Abstract:Whereas once the world view of the ancient world was shifted by Pythagorean mathematics, scientific knowledge and human perception has been contested in the 21st century by developments in computation. In his ground-breaking book Stephen Wolfram, the British physicist and creator of the Mathematica program, asserted that the complexity of the universe could be clearly understood in terms of simple programs. Here in an exclusive extract, Wolfram describes how one of the most straightforward programs, cellular automata, despite adhering to simple rules, yields some surprisingly complex results. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Keywords:A New Kind of Science  cellular automata  planetary automata  Kevin Sipes  Karl Chu  biomachinic mutation  algorithm  Gregory Chaitin  biogenetics  Universal Turing Machine  Internet  Adjacent Possible  Stuart Kauffman  Richard Feynman  John Wheeler  information-theoretic conception  Principle of Computational Equivalence  Church-Turing Thesis  Alfonso Church  Alan Turing  DNA code  Human Genome Project  Craig Venter  Celera Corporation  xenoarchitecture  morphodynamical and morphogenetic systems  Post-Human Era  Ray Kurzweil  monadology  Gottfried W Leibniz  Monadology  William Bateson  Wilhelm Johannsen  John von Neumann  Universal Computer  Universal Constructor
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