Episode #472 from 1:47:45
Human mathematicians vs AI
So if we just explore this possible future, what is the thing that humans do that's most special in mathematics, that you could see AI not cracking for a while? So inventing new theories? Coming up with new conjectures versus proving the conjectures? Building new abstractions? New representations? Maybe an AI turnstile with seeing new connections between disparate fields? That's a good question. I think the nature of what mathematicians do over time has changed a lot. So a thousand years ago, mathematicians had to compute the date of Easter, and they really complicated calculations, but it is all automated, the order of centuries, we don't need that anymore. They used to navigate to do spherical navigation, circle trigonometry to navigate how to get from the Old World to the New or something, like very complicated calculation. Again, have been automated. Even a lot of undergraduate mathematics even before AI, like Wolfram Alpha for example. It's not a language model, but it can solve a lot of undergraduate-level math tasks. So on the computational side, verifying routine things, like having a problem and saying, " Here's a problem in partial differential equations, could you solve it using any of the 20 standard techniques?" And say, "Yes, I've tried all 20 and here are the 100 different permutations and my results."
Why this moment matters
So if we just explore this possible future, what is the thing that humans do that's most special in mathematics, that you could see AI not cracking for a while? So inventing new theories? Coming up with new conjectures versus proving the conjectures? Building new abstractions? New representations? Maybe an AI turnstile with seeing new connections between disparate fields? That's a good question. I think the nature of what mathematicians do over time has changed a lot. So a thousand years ago, mathematicians had to compute the date of Easter, and they really complicated calculations, but it is all automated, the order of centuries, we don't need that anymore. They used to navigate to do spherical navigation, circle trigonometry to navigate how to get from the Old World to the New or something, like very complicated calculation. Again, have been automated. Even a lot of undergraduate mathematics even before AI, like Wolfram Alpha for example. It's not a language model, but it can solve a lot of undergraduate-level math tasks. So on the computational side, verifying routine things, like having a problem and saying, " Here's a problem in partial differential equations, could you solve it using any of the 20 standard techniques?" And say, "Yes, I've tried all 20 and here are the 100 different permutations and my results."