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Dear Russel and Kim,I remember fondly when the translation of Bruno's thesis was being discussed. I am very happy to see the results of your hard work. Thank you for doing this! I will be buying a copy of it asap. :-)
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> Then I have been lucky to discover the little book by Nagel and Newman, on Gödel's proof,
UNlucky, in fact.
The Nagel & Newman book is a popularization from the 60's,
that is horribly out of date, misleading, crucially imprecise,
and altogether bad, (though readably written).
Readers beware! This book will rot your brain.
-- Badmouthing Bill
** Dog-ma is a bitch!
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Many thanks, Russell. Many thanks, Kim.
Best,
Bruno
Dear Bruno,It is sometimes said that adversity is necessary in life, as it motivates innovation and evolution. :-)
On Thursday, March 6, 2014 10:36:15 AM UTC+13, Liz R wrote:> "That which does not kill us makes us stronger" or words to that effect.Tell that to the (formerly) rock-climbing tetraplegic!
Dear Bruno,It is sometimes said that adversity is necessary in life, as it motivates innovation and evolution. :-)
My children complain that my forcing them to go to school is torture... LOL...
Congratulations Bruno, and thank you Russell and Kim!I am anxious to get my hands on the hard copy.
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Hi BrunoI'm reading your fascinating work right now on Kindle and finding it very enlightening on many fronts. Many thanks also for the fine work of the translators! It's appalling that you had to suffer such discouragement and interference and it does you credit that you have persisted and prevailed despite this. Max Tegmark (whose book I'm also reading) also tells how he was explicitly warned by a senior colleague that publishing (or even talking openly) about foundational topics not currently in the mainstream was very likely to harm his career.
He says he had to develop two distinct professional faces, which he actually calls Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, and be very wary about who he let see one or the other. He also had to find cunning ways to conceal more speculative topics in the context of more conventional-seeming papers.
As he points out in his section on Everett, one of the most insightful minds in physics was in effect blocked from the possibility of a career in the field as a consequence of those very insights.
There are, alas, too many other cases. It's sad that academia and research, with their supposedly higher standards of objectivity, seems no less subject to the wiles of politics and human perversity than most other fields. I became familiar with such machinations in the business world, but I used to fondly imagine, perhaps influenced my early reading of Karl Popper, that science was a field in which pure rationality must surely prevail over obfuscation and outright misrepresentation. Popper said that humans are unique in being able to "let our ideas die in our stead". That's as may be, but nonetheless there seem to be not a few who are willing to perish themselves sooner than change their minds.
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Hi BrunoI'm reading your fascinating work right now on Kindle and finding it very enlightening on many fronts. Many thanks also for the fine work of the translators! It's appalling that you had to suffer such discouragement and interference and it does you credit that you have persisted and prevailed despite this. Max Tegmark (whose book I'm also reading) also tells how he was explicitly warned by a senior colleague that publishing (or even talking openly) about foundational topics not currently in the mainstream was very likely to harm his career. He says he had to develop two distinct professional faces, which he actually calls Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, and be very wary about who he let see one or the other. He also had to find cunning ways to conceal more speculative topics in the context of more conventional-seeming papers.
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On Friday, March 7, 2014 3:59:06 PM UTC, David Nyman wrote:Hi BrunoI'm reading your fascinating work right now on Kindle and finding it very enlightening on many fronts. Many thanks also for the fine work of the translators! It's appalling that you had to suffer such discouragement and interference and it does you credit that you have persisted and prevailed despite this. Max Tegmark (whose book I'm also reading) also tells how he was explicitly warned by a senior colleague that publishing (or even talking openly) about foundational topics not currently in the mainstream was very likely to harm his career. He says he had to develop two distinct professional faces, which he actually calls Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, and be very wary about who he let see one or the other. He also had to find cunning ways to conceal more speculative topics in the context of more conventional-seeming papers.But Everett's idea wasn't scientific, none of the 'interpretations' were - the whole interpretation paradigm was a panicky rush job and was fundamentally flawed. Because the core proposition was that something can be explained purely in terms of itself, resulting in more objective knowledge about it than there was to begin with. That's pure magical thinking because it's saying objective knowledge comes out of thin air.
Everett's idea wasn't (isn't?) scientific because of the "interpretation paradigm"?But Everett's idea wasn't scientific, none of the 'interpretations' were - the whole interpretation paradigm was a panicky rush job and was fundamentally flawed. Because the core proposition was that something can be explained purely in terms of itself, resulting in more objective knowledge about it than there was to begin with. That's pure magical thinking because it's saying objective knowledge comes out of thin air.
Hi everyone,
Just want to let everyone know that the English translation of Buno
Marchal's "The Amoeba's Secret" is now available from Amazon's Kindle
store. See http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00IRLEKPA
The Amoeba's Secret was written when Bruno received the
prestigious Prix Le Monde de la Recherche Universitaire for his PhD
thesis, only for the prize to be mysteriously revoked, and the book
not published. The original French version exists only as a manuscript
available from Bruno's website.
The Amoeba's Secret remains one of clearest explanations of Bruno's
UDA and AUDA arguments, and provides a lot of historical background
motivating him to formulate and study these issues in this way. Now,
after about 4 years of effort, Kim Jones and I have finally finished
the translation of this book into English.
For those of you who prefer their books hard, the paperback version
will probably be available towards the end of March. I need to see a
physical copy of what Amazon produces before approving it for
general sale. I have jigged things so that hard copy purchases are
entitled to a free Kindle version fo the book, so you can have the
best of both worlds.
Cheers
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Prof Russell Standish Phone 0425 253119 (mobile)
Principal, High Performance Coders
Visiting Professor of Mathematics hpc...@hpcoders.com.au
University of New South Wales http://www.hpcoders.com.au
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On Friday, March 7, 2014 3:59:06 PM UTC, David Nyman wrote:Hi BrunoI'm reading your fascinating work right now on Kindle and finding it very enlightening on many fronts. Many thanks also for the fine work of the translators! It's appalling that you had to suffer such discouragement and interference and it does you credit that you have persisted and prevailed despite this. Max Tegmark (whose book I'm also reading) also tells how he was explicitly warned by a senior colleague that publishing (or even talking openly) about foundational topics not currently in the mainstream was very likely to harm his career. He says he had to develop two distinct professional faces, which he actually calls Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, and be very wary about who he let see one or the other. He also had to find cunning ways to conceal more speculative topics in the context of more conventional-seeming papers.But Everett's idea wasn't scientific,
none of the 'interpretations' were - the whole interpretation paradigm was a panicky rush job and was fundamentally flawed. Because the core proposition was that something can be explained purely in terms of itself, resulting in more objective knowledge about it than there was to begin with. That's pure magical thinking because it's saying objective knowledge comes out of thin air.Put differently it's a method justifiable in philosophy only. Because philosophy define anything true it likes.
The MWI simply removed the metaphysical assumptions that had been added by earlier interpretations (Copenhagen etc). It didn't add any, all it said was, essentially, assume that the existing equations are correct..