Difference between revisions of "Book/Meta Math!"

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=Mathematics as an Experimental Science=
=Mathematics as an Experimental Science=
This book made reference to [[Tobias Dantzig]]'s book: [[Book/Number: the language of science]] and [[Stephen Wolfram]]'s [[New Kind of Science]]([[NKS]]). Both work explicitly showed that number theory and mathematics in general are in fact an experimental science. It literally requires the expense of energy and complex set up of instrumentation to make this science work in the physical world.
This book made reference to [[Tobias Dantzig]]'s book: [[Book/Number: The language of science|Number: The language of science]]<ref>{{:Book/Number: The language of science}}</ref> and [[Stephen Wolfram]]'s [[A New Kind of Science]]([[NKS]])<ref>{{:Book/A New Kind of Science}}</ref>. Both work explicitly showed that number theory and mathematics in general are in fact an experimental science. It literally requires the expense of energy and complex set up of instrumentation to make this science work in the physical world.
 
=References=
=References=
<references/>
<references/>

Revision as of 22:45, 29 March 2022

Chaitin, Gregory (2021). Meta Math! (PDF). local page: arXiv. 

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Mathematics as an Experimental Science

This book made reference to Tobias Dantzig's book: Number: The language of science[1] and Stephen Wolfram's A New Kind of Science(NKS)[2]. Both work explicitly showed that number theory and mathematics in general are in fact an experimental science. It literally requires the expense of energy and complex set up of instrumentation to make this science work in the physical world.

References

  1. Dantzig, Tobias (2005). Number: The language of science. local page: Pi Press. ISBN 0-13-185627-8. 
  2. Wolfram, Stephen (2002). A New Kind of Science. local page: Wolfram Science. 

Related Pages

arXiv Gregory Chaitin