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- November’s Lectures, 2025
- Ten Recent Questions for ChatGPT
- A Visit to the Israeli Quantum Computing Center (IQCC)
- Computational Complexity and Explanations in Physics
- Kazhdan Seminar fall 2025 – Starting Today Oct. 19, 2026.
- Explicit Lossless Vertex Expanders!
- Dror Bar-Natan and Roland Van der Veen – A Fast, Strong, and Fun knot invariant!
- Polynomial Bounds for Chowla’s Cosine Problem
Top Posts & Pages
- Ladies and Gentlemen, Stan Wagon: TYI 32 - A Cake Problem.
- Quantum Computers: A Brief Assessment of Progress in the Past Decade
- TYI 30: Expected number of Dice throws
- Elchanan Mossel's Amazing Dice Paradox (your answers to TYI 30)
- Answer to Test Your Intuition (3)
- Combinatorial Morning in Tel Aviv, Sunday 28/12/2025
- Beyond the g-conjecture - algebraic combinatorics of cellular spaces I
- Hong Wang and Joshua Zahl's Solution for the Kakeya Problem in Three Dimensions - Reflections and Links
- Robert Alicki, Michel Dyakonov, Leonid Levin, Oded Goldreich, and Others - A Summary of Some Skeptical Views On Quantum Computing.
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Tag Archives: Philosophy
Why is Mathematics Possible: Tim Gowers’s Take on the Matter
In a previous post I mentioned the question of why is mathematics possible. Among the interesting comments to the post, here is a comment by Tim Gowers: “Maybe the following would be a way of rephrasing your question. We know … Continue reading
Posted in Open discussion, Philosophy, What is Mathematics
Tagged Foundations of Mathematics, Open discussion, Philosophy, Tim Gowers
23 Comments
Randomness in Nature II
In a previous post we presented a MO question by Liza about randomness: What is the explanation of the apparent randomness of high-level phenomena in nature? 1. Is it accepted that these phenomena are not really random, meaning that given enough … Continue reading
Posted in Philosophy, Physics, Probability
Tagged foundation of probability, Philosophy, Physics, Randomness
18 Comments
Randomness in Nature
Here is an excellent question asked by Liza on “Mathoverflow“. What is the explanation of the apparent randomness of high-level phenomena in nature? For example the distribution of females vs. males in a population (I am referring to randomness in terms … Continue reading
Posted in Probability
Tagged foundation of probability, Mathoverflow, Philosophy, Physics, Randomness
23 Comments