Games Between Programs: The Ruliology of Competition
Posted by andromaton 4 days ago
Comments
Comment by lioeters 21 hours ago
I love that he's using his own programming language and environment for exploring mathematical spaces, and his articles are written as computational notebooks. The diagrams and graphs are actual running code, as fundamental and natural part of his writing and thinking process.
His work is rich, multifaceted, intellectually interesting and often novel. And fun! Not only entertaining for the reader, but there's a joy of a brilliant mind at play, which is a valuable motivating aspect of doing philosophy, science, art.
Comment by vessenes 23 hours ago
Probably most interesting is just throwing down a bunch of strategies that are provably better than tit for tat in rule constrained environments, and showing that some more complicated form of tit for tat doesn’t win as you get more space than your opponents - better is to manipulate simpler opponents into predictable behavior.
Anwyay, this particular Wolfram essay was devoid of name dropping, and full of interesting (if occasionally hard to parse) dense infographics, I enjoyed it and learned something.
Comment by drdeca 1 day ago
What’s the point if you aren’t even going to try to prove a theorem? Or, heck, even really test a hypothesis?
Comment by bitwize 1 day ago
When The Big Bang Theory came out, I thought the character of Sheldon Cooper was intended, specifically, to be a parody of Wolfram himself. That's how off the rails he's become due to sheer hubris.