The irreducible frontier of cosmological inquiry is defined not by our cognitive capacity to process information, but by the structure of physical law and the boundaries it places on the knowable.
IT revolution: Human started learning languages of computer called programming language.
ML revolution: Human trained computer about human language.
AI revolution: Computer is learning human language on its own.
AGI revolution: Computer will adopt human language.
Looking at the night sky wasn't enough so human invented telescope to gaze upon it. To gaze upon it isn't enough so rockets and modes of space travel are being invented.
The problem with modern science isn't that it has to fill all the gaps in our understanding, but it is that it hasn't found any new gaps in our understanding.
Stephen Hawking once had a party for testifying the existence of time travelers. Even if he hadn't done this, him not returning to erase the name in Epstein's File would have disproven the existence of Time Travel. This solves the paradox right there.
The lack of critical thinking will make our way of thinking so dull that we won't be able to grasp the nuances out of context maybe scientific, economic or political. Otherwise this dumbing down of Nepal will be evident that rising civilization can collapse without being matured.
We should make a world where intellects are understood with greater importance than we worship politicians as ideals and only we will push humanity forward.
@Saganismm Our mode of communication may very rudimentary in comparison to the intelligent species that lives millions of light year away. They, perhaps might be using quantum entanglement for communicating and decoherence in our Quantum Computers might be their interference. Who knows?
No one has ever explained space, in all its bewildering glory, as well as you did. You taught us to be citizens of the cosmos, to grasp the immensity and insignificance, to embrace the infinite, and to be kind.
Happy Birthday, Carl!
The universe is big. Humans are inherently bad at judging how big and far away things are in the cosmos because the distances and sizes involved are simply too vast to intuitively grasp, but scaling things down can help us visualize them.
Let’s shrink Earth to the size of a grain of sand and see just how mind-blowingly huge everything else is🧵1/9
Yesterday, I discovered something extraordinary while stuck in Kathmandu traffic.
Fastest speed in the Universe? Still the speed of light.
Slowest? The speed of that traffic jam I was in.
Einstein never accounted for this level of suffering in Space-Time.