History of Science and Technology Q&A (May 1, 2024)

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  • čas přidán 30. 04. 2024
  • Stephen Wolfram hosts a live and unscripted Ask Me Anything about the history of science and technology for all ages. Find the playlist of Q&A's here: wolfr.am/youtube-sw-qa
    Originally livestreamed at: / stephen_wolfram
    If you missed the original livestream of this episode, feel free to submit a question you would like Stephen to answer in a future Q&A livestream here: wolfr.am/12cczmv5J
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    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/
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Komentáře • 8

  • @mntlblok
    @mntlblok Před 12 dny +1

    How cool would it be to get to hang with Stephen and pick his brain any time you felt the urge? Really appreciate his overview of history and how it meshes with the history of science, and especially how he's willing to share it. The Mendel story and how it could have been completely skipped over (had there been no "literature search") and how that has similarities with Turin is cool. Such great insights. Hadn't known of a second Sadi Carnot being president of France, but *had* known of Poincaré's cousin being president of France during WW1. Just wish I had his ease with math. That lack of country boundaries is under-appreciated for categorizing things. Recently tried to make sense of Germany and Prussia historically. . .

  • @duggydo
    @duggydo Před 13 dny

    I learn something new every time I listen to one of these videos. I had never known that the Cosmic Microwave Background defined a center of mass of the universe. I have heard many other people say there is no center. I’ve always had a hard time with that.

  • @mntlblok
    @mntlblok Před 12 dny

    So now I have to ponder caloric fluid's relation to the luminiferous aether. :-) Hadn't thought about them disappearing around the same era. :-)

  • @siddfinch6296
    @siddfinch6296 Před 7 dny

    forgive me if its my poor memory but was it not Robert Hooke responsible for the early experiments on air and everyone elses experiments at that time. the glass vacuum chamber created by hooke was the beginning of modern science.

  • @cloudstorage9026
    @cloudstorage9026 Před 13 dny +1

    Fuck yeah.

    • @Dessoxyn
      @Dessoxyn Před 13 dny

      Good! Now I can point out how fucking funny von Neumann would have found it that one of his "organs" comes in either floppy or hard types.

  • @kxqe
    @kxqe Před 14 dny

    I always thought that mathematics was built on numbers.

  • @Dessoxyn
    @Dessoxyn Před 13 dny

    1:05:32 Hey brainiac, if it was in Latin it wouldn't have been "Odysseyus" ;)
    I don't know what this might unleash, but screw it, here's how you combine about 3 millennia of unique geniuses. Quite a few. Here we go:
    Stephen "Dedalus" Wolfram