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Jonathan Gorard
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Jonathan Gorard
@getjonwithit
Applied mathematician, computational physicist @Princeton Previously @Cambridge_Uni Making the universe computable.
Princeton, NJ
Joined November 2012
18
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46.1K
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  • user avatar
    Jonathan Gorard
    @getjonwithit
    May 31, 2025
    Calling c the "speed of light" completely misses the point. Rather, c is the "spacetime exchange rate": how many units of space you can exchange for one unit of time. In actuality, everything travels at the "speed of light", just not necessarily through space alone... (1/4)
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    1.7M
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    Jonathan Gorard
    @getjonwithit
    Dec 8, 2024
    The apparent "philosophical problems" of quantum mechanics are not unique to QM at all: they are in fact the same problems that arise whenever one attempts to construct an abstract model of reality. We can see these problems already in high school-level mechanics. (1/14)
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    768K
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    Jonathan Gorard
    @getjonwithit
    Nov 4, 2024
    Much more work is needed before this is really a robust result (paper forthcoming, hopefully by the end of the year), but the initial findings are clear: Spacetime discreteness may be observationally detectable in things like quasar luminosities. (1/6)
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    Jonathan Gorard
    @getjonwithit
    Jul 14, 2024
    "Quantum mechanics is just thermodynamics in imaginary time." It sounds like a hand-wavy, quasi-philosophical statement. But with a brief dive into the relationship(s) between hyperbolic and parabolic PDEs, it becomes possible to formalize it mathematically. (1/16)
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    Jonathan Gorard
    @getjonwithit
    Jul 28, 2024
    Moths are attracted to lights because of the same mathematics that underlies twistor theory and compactification in theoretical physics: projective geometry. It all starts from a simple observation: translations are just rotations whose center is located "at infinity". (1/11)
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    623K
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    Jonathan Gorard
    @getjonwithit
    May 31, 2025
    Replying to @getjonwithit
    Light is distinctive only insomuch as it (like any massless particle) experiences no time, so all of its velocity vector points in the space directions, and therefore it moves with a purely *spatial* speed of c. c is merely the conversion factor between space and time. (4/4)
    115K
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    Jonathan Gorard
    @getjonwithit
    May 11, 2024
    I distinctly recall a time back in 2022 when various people tried to convince me that this guy was an intellectual heavyweight.
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    Tsarathustra
    @tsarnick
    May 11, 2024
    Sam Altman says we have stumbled on a new fact of nature: that intelligence is an emergent property of matter
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    Jonathan Gorard
    @getjonwithit
    Nov 4, 2023
    The Rabin-Scott theorem is one of the (philosophically) deepest mathematical results I know. When properly understood, I claim that it can't help but alter your view of reality in a fairly foundational way. Yet its typical textbook presentation obscures much of this depth. (1/8)
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    774K
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    Jonathan Gorard
    @getjonwithit
    Aug 10, 2024
    Gödel's first incompleteness theorem is commonly proved by means of a diagonal argument. But, in retrospect, we can see that what Gödel was really doing was proving that Peano arithmetic is Turing-complete, and then applying an argument from computational irreducibility... (1/15)
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    Jonathan Gorard
    @getjonwithit
    Feb 4, 2025
    Energy, momentum, pressure, stress, etc. are all just different ways of quantifying the same basic thing: how our perceptions of space and time get distorted over time. And once you internalize this, it allows you to think about these concepts in a much more general way. (1/12)
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    Jonathan Gorard
    @getjonwithit
    Dec 30, 2024
    One of the curious things about von Neumann was his ability to do extremely impressive technical work while seemingly missing all the big insights. He did much work on mathematical foundations in the 20s, but completely missed the incompleteness/undefinability theorems... (1/3)
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    Amjad Masad
    Replit ⠕
    @amasad
    Dec 28, 2024
    As great as Einstein is, he comes no where close to the brilliance of von Neumann. It’s an error of history that he’s not the most eminent scientist.
    832K
  • user avatar
    Jonathan Gorard
    @getjonwithit
    May 31, 2025
    Replying to @getjonwithit
    Rather, everything travels through both space *and* time, simultaneously, with a speed of c. If you're standing still, then all of your velocity is focused in the time direction (with none in the space directions), so you move through time with a speed of c. (2/4)
    121K
  • user avatar
    Jonathan Gorard
    @getjonwithit
    Jul 10, 2024
    In physics, one often thinks of space and time as being fundamental, pre-existing concepts, and proceeds to define everything else (energy, momentum, forces, etc.) in terms of them. But it doesn't need to be so - symplectic geometry shows us how to go the other way. (1/16)
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  • user avatar
    Jonathan Gorard
    @getjonwithit
    Jan 4, 2025
    I use computers for mathematics so much that sometimes I opt to do a really nasty piece of tensor calculus by hand just to convince myself I've still got it. Just calculated the covariant divergence of a rank-4 tensor density correctly in one shot. Took 3 pages. I feel *alive*.
    204K

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