Difference between revisions of "Rosetta Stone"

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{{WikiEntry|key=Rosetta Stone|qCode=48584}} is an ancient Egyptian stele inscribed with three versions of the same text, which provided the key to deciphering the Egyptian scripts.
{{WikiEntry|key=Rosetta Stone|qCode=48584}} is an ancient Egyptian stele inscribed with three versions of the same text, which provided the key to deciphering the Egyptian scripts.


One should construct the Rosetta Stone table as follows:
Rosetta Stone is a solution to the problem of [[Tower of Babel]], this is a question that has been represented as a single diagram in Koo's Ph.D. thesis<ref>{{:Thesis/A Meta-language for Systems Architecting}}</ref>, and a related slide set<ref>{{:Slide/Algebra of Systems as a Meta Language for Model Synthesis and Analysis}}, p4</ref>:
[[File:AoS RosettaStone.png|900px|thumb|center]]


This is further confirmed by John Baez's paper<ref>{{:Paper/Physics, Topology, Logic and Computation: A Rosetta Stone}}</ref> on Rosetta Stone.
This is further confirmed by John Baez's paper<ref>{{:Paper/Physics, Topology, Logic and Computation: A Rosetta Stone}}</ref> on Rosetta Stone.

Latest revision as of 07:37, 21 February 2022

Rosetta Stone(Q48584) is an ancient Egyptian stele inscribed with three versions of the same text, which provided the key to deciphering the Egyptian scripts.

Rosetta Stone is a solution to the problem of Tower of Babel, this is a question that has been represented as a single diagram in Koo's Ph.D. thesis[1], and a related slide set[2]:

AoS RosettaStone.png

This is further confirmed by John Baez's paper[3] on Rosetta Stone.

Pages that Talks about Rosetta Stone

Content Link

References

  1. Koo, Hsueh-Yung Benjamin (31 Jan 2005). A Meta-language for Systems Architecting (PDF) (Ph.D.). local page: MIT. Retrieved July 18, 2021. 
  2. Koo, Hsueh-Yung Benjamin (May 2009). "Algebra of Systems: A Metalanguage for Model Synthesis and Evaluation". local page: The First Systems Engineering Conference at Huawei Central Research Lab.  , p4
  3. Baez, John; Stay, Mike (March 2, 2009). "Physics, Topology, Logic and Computation: A Rosetta Stone" (PDF). Physics, topology, logic and compIn New Structures for Physics (vol. 813 ed.). local page: Springer, Lecture Notes in Physics: 95-174.