The Theory of Anything
A podcast by Bruce Nielson and Peter Johansen - Martedì
107 Episodio
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Episode 46: Narcissism and Other Mental Disorders
Pubblicato: 13/06/2022 -
Episode 45: Adapting the The Wheel of Time for Television
Pubblicato: 30/05/2022 -
Episode 44: Clarifying David Deutsch's Views of "Knowledge"
Pubblicato: 09/05/2022 -
Episode 43: Deep Reinforcement Learning
Pubblicato: 18/04/2022 -
Episode 42: Popper without Refutation & Resolving the Problems of Refutation (part 2)
Pubblicato: 28/03/2022 -
Episode 41: The Problems of Refutation & Popper Without Refutation (part 1)
Pubblicato: 13/03/2022 -
Episode 40: Byrne vs Deutsch on Animal Intelligence
Pubblicato: 14/02/2022 -
Episode 39: Byrne's Methodology for Discovering Animal Insight (part 3)
Pubblicato: 24/01/2022 -
Episode 38: Animal Learning and Popper's Epistemology (part 2)
Pubblicato: 03/01/2022 -
Episode 37: Animal Intelligence and Knowledge Creation (part 1)
Pubblicato: 13/12/2021 -
Episode 36: Failure is an Option!
Pubblicato: 29/11/2021 -
Episode 35: Physics and Relationalism: An Interview with Julian Barbour
Pubblicato: 15/11/2021 -
Episode 34: Alpha Go and Creativity
Pubblicato: 01/11/2021 -
Episode 33: Unsolved Problems in Physics Part 4 - Possible Solutions and Criticisms
Pubblicato: 18/10/2021 -
Episode 32: Unsolved Problems in Physics Part 3 - Symmetry and Novelty
Pubblicato: 04/10/2021 -
Episode 31: Unsolved Problems in Physics Part 2 - Clocks, Blocks, and Eternalism
Pubblicato: 20/09/2021 -
Episode 30: Unsolved Problems in Physics Part 1 - The Mystery of Time
Pubblicato: 06/09/2021 -
Episode 29: The Marvel[ous] TV Shows
Pubblicato: 23/08/2021 -
Episode 28: Reinforcement Learning and Q-Learning
Pubblicato: 09/08/2021 -
Episode 27: Chiara Marletto and Constructor Theory
Pubblicato: 26/07/2021
A podcast that explores the unseen and surprising connections between nearly everything, with special emphasis on intelligence and the search for Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) through the lens of Karl Popper's Theory of Knowledge. David Deutsch argued that Quantum Mechanics, Darwinian Evolution, Karl Popper's Theory of Knowledge, and Computational Theory (aka "The Four Strands") represent an early 'theory of everything' be it science, philosophy, computation, religion, politics, or art. So we explore everything. Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/brucenielson/membership
