Thanks for replying. I think I can see where our disagreement is. I’m afraid the way science has worked so far may not be the case in the future. Somehow we have arrived at *almost right laws only from pure thought. Reality may be way more complicated which we may only be able to figure out by acquiring more data.
The progress in fundamental physics has always been towards increasing simplicity and this is not going to change. The universe is an incredibly constrained system and it is almost impossible to come up with a consistent unifying model (we are still looking for it). We already have more than enough data for a sufficiently intelligent entity to figure out “the theory of everything”, it is only a lack of imagination.
You are entitled to your opinion but I’m a tenured theoretical physicist and the view I expressed is not controversial and shared by most people in the field. Most theoretical physicists are really scared or excited by AI. I believe it is an almost consensus in the community that AI will eventually “solve physics”, and many believe that this could happen fairly soon.
Thanks for replying. I think I can see where our disagreement is. I’m afraid the way science has worked so far may not be the case in the future. Somehow we have arrived at *almost right laws only from pure thought. Reality may be way more complicated which we may only be able to figure out by acquiring more data.
The progress in fundamental physics has always been towards increasing simplicity and this is not going to change. The universe is an incredibly constrained system and it is almost impossible to come up with a consistent unifying model (we are still looking for it). We already have more than enough data for a sufficiently intelligent entity to figure out “the theory of everything”, it is only a lack of imagination.
I would be *very surprised if it turned out to be true, but I grant that you could be correct, although I would assign a very low probability to it.
You are entitled to your opinion but I’m a tenured theoretical physicist and the view I expressed is not controversial and shared by most people in the field. Most theoretical physicists are really scared or excited by AI. I believe it is an almost consensus in the community that AI will eventually “solve physics”, and many believe that this could happen fairly soon.