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Stephen Wolfram answers questions from his viewers about the history of science and technology as part of an unscripted livestream series, also available on YouTube here: https://wolfr.am/youtube-sw-qa
Questions include: Are there languages or logic systems we haven't yet discovered from the past? - Can smart keyboards help with this process of language discovery? - Do you view mathematics as a subset of language, or the other way around? - How did different languages come to develop? Will we slowly move toward a universal language? - "Ona, also known as Selk'nam (Shelknam), is a language spoken by the Selk'nam people in Isla Grande de Tierra del Fuego in southernmost South America." Spoken by only one person. - The distinction is the unique role of mathematics expressing and formalizing ideas in ways that transcend linguistic and cultural boundaries. - Language came before humans, e.g. dolphins and whales; we just scaled it up and complexified it. - Was Shakespeare's style unique to him? Would there have been a possibility for people to speak in a more poetic language? - I think language is closer to 1.5–dimensional, considering we have relative pronouns and other constructions that link up with previous statements, such that a 2D diagram of it can be made. - If I want to write a short statement, I prefer English. For a detailed style, I would prefer German... which is usually longer and not as nice to read as short English text. - Bulgarian is pronounced exactly as it is written. One of its quirks. - If LLMs are hallucinating all the time and good ones are just hallucinating correctly/accurately most of the time, does that explain how Ramanujan might have arrived at his formulas without proofs?