Menu

Leibniz, Complexity and Incompleteness

calendar icon Oct 15, 2008 25744 views
video thumbnail
Pause
Mute
speed icon
speed icon
0.25
0.5
0.75
1
1.25
1.5
1.75
2

I will discuss Leibniz's ideas on complexity (Discours de metaphysique, 1686), leading to modern work on program-size complexity, the halting probability and incompleteness. Leibniz's principle of sufficient reason asserts that if anything is true it is true for a reason. But the bits of the numerical value of the halting probability are mathematical truths that are true for no reason. More precisely, as I will explain, they are irreducible mathematical truths, that is, true for no reason simpler than themselves.

RELATED CATEGORIES

MORE VIDEOS FROM THE EVENT

MORE VIDEOS FROM THE SAME CATEGORIES

Except where otherwise noted, content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International license.