Does AI have the potential to uncover the mysteries of reality, or does it lack the capacity for genuine discovery?
With the 2024 Nobel Prizes for physics and chemistry both awarded for AI-related science, claims that AI will soon make novel scientific breakthroughs on its own are growing louder.
Start-ups are already attempting to create “The AI Scientist,” and researchers at Imperial College argue AI will “usher in a new age of discovery to rival the golden age of the scientific method.” But critics argue the scientific capability of AI remains unknown.
Join computer scientist Roman Yampolskiy, philosopher Steve Fuller, and co-curator of “AI: More than Human” Suzanne Livingston to debate what AI can and can’t do for science.
Tap here to watch now.
The 2024 Nobel Prizes for physics and chemistry were both won for AI-related science, leading some to claim that AI will soon be making novel scientific discoveries on its own. Start-ups are already attempting to create “The AI Scientist,” which will one day “fully automate scientific discovery.” And researchers at Imperial College argue AI will.
In his doctoral thesis, Michael Roop develops numerical methods that allow finding physically reliable approximate solutions to nonlinear differential equations used to model turbulence.
Many processes in nature can be described by differential equations, but only a few of them can be solved explicitly with solutions in formulas. This is the motivation for developing numerical equations to find approximate solutions. The numerical equations developed in Roop’s thesis have a particular focus on geometric properties. Though the thesis is mathematical, the problems it addresses originate in physics and mainly have to do with magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence.
“It is difficult to define turbulence rigorously. Intuitively, you can think of the turbulent behavior when a fluid moves, but it is very hard to predict how it will behave in the future. It looks chaotic though there is no randomness in the models of motion.”
Cosmic strings may be ultra-thin defects in spacetime—relic “cracks” from the early universe. How we’d detect them, what they mean for physics, and how aliens might exploit them.
Get Nebula using my link for 50% off an annual subscription: https://go.nebula.tv/isaacarthur. Watch my exclusive video Settling Saturn’s Rings: https://nebula.tv/videos/isaacarthur–… SFIA Merchandise: https://isaac-arthur-shop.fourthwall… 🌐 Visit our Website: http://www.isaacarthur.net ❤️ Support us on Patreon: / isaacarthur ⭐ Support us on Subscribestar: https://www.subscribestar.com/isaac-a… 👥 Facebook Group: / 1,583,992,725,237,264 📣 Reddit Community: / isaacarthur 🐦 Follow on Twitter / X: / isaac_a_arthur 💬 SFIA Discord Server: / discord Credits: Cosmic Strings – Cracks in the Fabric of the Universe Written, Produced & Narrated by: Isaac Arthur Select imagery/video supplied by Getty Images Chapters 0:00 Intro — Cracks in the Fabric of the Universe 6:11 From Defects to Cosmic Strings 13:31 Civilizations and Cosmic Strings: Tools, Traps, and Temptations 19:43 Nebula 20:39 Cousins, Confusions, and What a Discovery Would Mean.
🛒 SFIA Merchandise: https://isaac-arthur-shop.fourthwall… 🌐 Visit our Website: http://www.isaacarthur.net. ❤️ Support us on Patreon: / isaacarthur. ⭐ Support us on Subscribestar: https://www.subscribestar.com/isaac-a… 👥 Facebook Group: / 1583992725237264 📣 Reddit Community: / isaacarthur. 🐦 Follow on Twitter / X: / isaac_a_arthur. 💬 SFIA Discord Server: / discord. Credits: Cosmic Strings – Cracks in the Fabric of the Universe. Written, Produced & Narrated by: Isaac Arthur. Select imagery/video supplied by Getty Images.
Chapters. 0:00 Intro — Cracks in the Fabric of the Universe. 6:11 From Defects to Cosmic Strings. 13:31 Civilizations and Cosmic Strings: Tools, Traps, and Temptations. 19:43 Nebula. 20:39 Cousins, Confusions, and What a Discovery Would Mean.
Is Earth’s core a solid or a liquid? Yes. The mysteries of our own planet’s interior have, in many ways, been harder to crack than those of the rest of the cosmos. We can send probes to the edge of the solar system, and the 42 billion light years to the cosmic horizon are largely transparent—a big enough telescope can see the most distant galaxy. But the 6400km to Earth’s center are both opaque to light and far beyond the reach of any conceivable drill. The best we can do for most of our planetary depths is to listen to the faint rumblings of distant earthquakes and then try to piece together how those seismic waves bounce around the interior.
Sign Up on Patreon to get access to the Space Time Discord! / pbsspacetime.
In this conversation, Rupert Sheldrake and David Bentley Hart delve into the concept of fields in physics, discussing their nature as non-material formative causes and their historical context in scientific thought. They explore the idea that fields, such as gravitational and electromagnetic, act as top-down causes, aligning with Aristotle’s formal and final causes, and argue for a re-evaluation of these ancient concepts in modern science.
Chapter List:
00:00 — Introduction. 01:14 — Exploring Fields as Causes in Nature. 02:08 — Magnetic Fields and Formative Processes. 04:19 — Gravitational Fields and Formative Effects. 06:10 — Aristotle’s Formal and Final Causes. 07:32 — Challenges in Understanding Fields. 09:09 — Fields as Top-Down Causes. 10:34 — Morphic Fields and Formative Causation. 12:23 — Information Theory vs. Form. 14:15 — Fields and Order in Physics. 17:15 — Semantic and Syntactic Information. 18:18 — Universal Gravitational Field. 19:44 — Strong and Weak Nuclear Fields. 21:18 — History of Field Theory and Ether. 23:14 — Gilbert’s Magnetic Theory. 24:46 — Mind-like Structure in Nature. 25:39 — Combination of Top-Down and Bottom-Up Theories. 27:07 — Mechanistic Models and Their Limitations. 28:52 — Recovering Aristotelian Causality. 31:39 — Conclusion and Reflection on Fields as Modern Souls.
— Dr Rupert Sheldrake, PhD, is a biologist and author best known for his hypothesis of morphic resonance. At Cambridge University, as a Fellow of Clare College, he was Director of Studies in biochemistry and cell biology. As the Rosenheim Research Fellow of the Royal Society, he carried out research on the development of plants and the ageing of cells, and together with Philip Rubery discovered the mechanism of polar auxin transport. In India, he was Principal Plant Physiologist at the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics, where he helped develop new cropping systems now widely used by farmers. He is the author of more than 100 papers in peer-reviewed journals and his research contributions have been widely recognized by the academic community, earning him a notable h-index for numerous citations. On ResearchGate his Research Interest Score puts him among the top 4% of scientists.
Gravity, as most people understand it, is the familiar force that pulls a falling apple toward Earth. But for astronomers and theoretical physicists, it is also a vexing invisible architect that guides the shape and evolution of the largest cosmic structures across the universe.
For decades, puzzling observations of unusually fast-moving galaxies have forced cosmologists like the University of Pennsylvania’s Patricio A. Gallardo to revisit the fundamentals of physics, exploring, for example, whether the laws of gravity as described by Isaac Newton and Albert Einstein truly apply everywhere.
“Astrophysics has been plagued by a massive discrepancy in the cosmic ledger,” says Gallardo. “When we look at how stars orbit within galaxies or how galaxies move within galaxy clusters, some appear to be traveling way too fast for the amount of visible matter they contain.”
Why do patterns emerge as surfaces grow, whether in crystals, flames, or living systems? Physicists have long turned to the Kardar–Parisi–Zhang (KPZ) equation, proposed in 1986, as a unifying description of these processes. This theory captures how randomness and nonlinear effects shape growth across vastly different systems, from spreading bacterial colonies to data-driven algorithms.
Now, researchers at the University of Würzburg have taken a major step toward confirming just how universal this idea really is. After earlier success in one dimension, they have demonstrated for the first time that KPZ behavior also governs growth in two-dimensional systems, a milestone that had remained experimentally out of reach.