Video presentation from 1963 at Cornell. Character of Physical Law #2 The Relation of Mathematics to Physics. This may be the best one of all the Feynman videos. He explains how physicists do mathematics and distinguishes how physicists do math from how mathematicians do math. He describes the two flavors...
In class number four of the online Artificial Intelligence course from Stanford, Peter Norvig explains "one of the most popular problems in the subject of probability theory, the Monty Hall problem". His presentation was exactly what I have always been taught, and I got the right answer on the quiz....
The Improbable Research folks have awarded an Ig Nobel prize to John Perry (previously on Less Wrong) for his work on how to procrastinate and still get things done. On their website. Also. (edited to fix the link)
I put this post up on my blog this morning (link) and some here might like to see it or discuss it. Meditations on first philosophy is the title of the first book ever written in contemporary western Philosophy, according to the university course I took. It was written by...
This is a (slightly revised) concatenation of three of my blog posts which I wrote after reading: Understanding vipassana meditation by Luke Grecki in October 2010. The originals may be seen here (part I), here (part II) and here (part III). I posted some comments myself in the original thread,...
I. Performance levels and age Human ambition for achievement in modest measure gives meaning to our lives, unless one is an existentialist pessimist like Schopenhauer who taught that life with all its suffering and cruelty simply should not be. Psychologists study our achievements under a number of different descriptions--testing for...