Episode #472 from 44:26

Nature of reality

You've mentioned the Plato's cave allegory. In case people don't know, it's where people are observing shadows of reality, not reality itself, and they believe what they're observing to be reality. Is that, in some sense, what mathematicians and maybe all humans are doing, is looking at shadows of reality? Is it possible for us to truly access reality? Well, there are these three ontological things. There's actual reality, there's observations and our models, and technically they are distinct, and I think they will always be distinct, but they can get closer over time, and the process of getting closer often means that you have to discard your initial intuitions. So astronomy provides great examples, like an initial model of the world is flat because it looks flat and it's big, and the rest of the universe, the skies, is not. The sun, for example, looks really tiny.

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You've mentioned the Plato's cave allegory. In case people don't know, it's where people are observing shadows of reality, not reality itself, and they believe what they're observing to be reality. Is that, in some sense, what mathematicians and maybe all humans are doing, is looking at shadows of reality? Is it possible for us to truly access reality? Well, there are these three ontological things. There's actual reality, there's observations and our models, and technically they are distinct, and I think they will always be distinct, but they can get closer over time, and the process of getting closer often means that you have to discard your initial intuitions. So astronomy provides great examples, like an initial model of the world is flat because it looks flat and it's big, and the rest of the universe, the skies, is not. The sun, for example, looks really tiny.

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Nature of reality chapter timestamp | Terence Tao: Hardest Problems in Mathematics, Physics & the Future of AI | EpisodeIndex