The
Next Newton?
Recluse, maverick physicist
and Mathematica developer Stephen Wolfram claims to have revolutionized
science with his new, computer-based theories.
by David Appell
Stephen Wolfram wants to bring science into the age of the computer.
A boy genius turned multimillionaire scientist, Wolfram has been
a veritable recluse for the last decade while developing his new
approach to fundamental physics. He runs his software company, Wolfram
Research, largely by videoconference calls from his home, allowing
himself the latitude to pursue his research on the subject of complexity.
He views the future of science as one dominated by the computer,
one where scientists run experiments via the keyboard, unraveling
the vast complexities of the natural world through relatively simple
rules of programming.
Wolfram is a maestro of this
new world, a Moby of a scientist who has looked deep into the standard
way of doing science and who sees the sparkling of a new dawn. His
just-published magnum opus, "A New Kind of Science," is
his Principia, a response to the deterministic mathematics that
Isaac Newton used to render science into a tidy picture of elliptical
orbits and parabolic arcs, predictable to as many decimal points
as you please.
If Einstein was the long-haired rocker whose theory
of relativity overturned the staid, boring establishment, and Heisenberg
a jazz fusionist who composed new tunes from discordant notes, Wolfram
is a techno-pop artist who programs his machine to the new sounds
he hears in his head. With this book he is inviting the rest of
the world to move along to the beat.
Twenty years ago,
Wolfram writes, the unexpected output of a computer program made
him realize he had seen "the beginning of a crack in the very
foundations of existing science, and a first clue towards a whole
new kind of science." Although barely out of his teens at the
time, he was already recognized as a genius -- he had published
his first scientific paper at the age of 15, a study in particle
physics titled "Hadronic Electrons?" He received his Ph.D.
in theoretical physics from Caltech at the age of 20, and a year
later became the youngest person ever to receive a fellowship from
the MacArthur Foundation (these are informally called "genius"
grants).
"He's extremely smart, impressively smart," says Andrew
Odlyzko, a friend of Wolfram's who worked with him 20 years ago
on cellular automata. And Wolfram knew it. "He was certainly
in his early days more than a little arrogant, which rubbed people
the wrong way," Odlyzko says.
Marriage and children have smoothed
Wolfram's rough spots over the years, and a big pile of money probably
didn't hurt: He made millions off his development of the Mathematica
software program, a versatile program that is used by millions,
most of them scientists and engineers who use it to do symbolic
and numerical mathematics.
With continued development,
Wolfram expanded Mathematica into a programming language in its
own right. "It's one of the most complete packages I've ever
seen," says Flip Phillips, a professor of cognitive psychology
at Skidmore College and editor of the Mathematica Journal. Wolfram
initially developed Mathematica to evaluate complex equations in
particle physics called Feynman diagrams, then turned the usual
academic tables by founding a corporation to sell the product to
his fellow academics.
His program and his company's
success afforded him the opportunity to pursue his scientific interests
unbeholden to the usual demands of academia -- the need for grants
and the publish-or-perish treadmill. Wolfram writes that he resolved
"just to keep working quietly until I had finished and was
ready to present everything in a single coherent way."
But computer technology allows
more than programming languages; to Wolfram, it makes a fundamentally
new kind of science possible, just as the development of telescope
technology made astronomy possible and microscope technology took
biology beyond mere taxonomy. "Computers are not just limited
to working out the consequences of mathematical equations,"
he says, whether they be Feynman diagrams or your checking account
statements. Rather, studying the behavior of even the simplest programs
reveals extremely complex behavior, as anyone who's tried to debug
a piece of software knows.
Wolfram began his work, and begins his book, by analyzing cellular
automata, a conceptual device invented by the Hungarian physicist
John von Neumann for representing a complex system using an array
of simple elements, such as squares on graph paper that can be colored
either black or white. Starting with one initial black square, decide
on a rule for how each of its neighbors will be colored in each
step forward in time. Repeat the process indefinitely, moving forward
one time frame after another. (John Conway's "Game of Life"
is a famous example of a cellular automaton.)
Wolfram spent several years analyzing the results of such cellular
automata setups, computer work that involved more than a million
billion logical operations and the equivalent of tens of thousands
of pages of output. Most of the output is relatively simple, repetitive
patterns that remind one of a distinctive braid, or sometimes a
snowflake, or occasionally a fractal pattern. But a few of the pictures
seemed to demonstrate arbitrarily complicated patterns, long, random
chains that seemed to take on a life of their own, reminiscent of
the turbulence of a fluid or the curl of rising smoke.
You or I might have seen a pretty pattern
and moved on, but Wolfram says using them he has seen into the clear
blue depth of a new paradigm of thought. For such pictures can be
seen even in cellular automata whose rules are extremely complex
-- those in multiple dimensions, or based on number systems, or
in a Turing machine, a very simple machine that has, logically speaking,
all the power of any digital computer.
No matter how elaborate the rule, the behavior that emerges is remarkably
similar to that of the simplest cellular automata, according to
Wolfram. And what that means is "there are general principles
that govern the behavior of a wide range of systems," Wolfram
writes. "Even if we do not know all the details of what is
inside some specific system in nature, we can still potentially
make fundamental statements about its overall behavior."
All well and good, but Wolfram's conclusions
have taken him to far greater heights of thought. The problem with
traditional mathematics and physics is that it has of necessity
restricted itself to simple cases that are "computationally
reducible," systems such as a planet orbiting a star where
mathematical analysis provides a simple equation describing the
motion. But in other domains, such as predicting the weather, it
has failed miserably.
Wolfram's new science -- a science largely devoid of equations --
demonstrates, he says, that there are many common systems whose
behavior cannot be described except by explicit simulation on a
computer. Most of the world, he asserts, is in fact computationally
irreducible. The mathematical emperor does have clothes, but not
much more than cotton skivvies and an undershirt with an unseemly
spaghetti stain on the front.
Wolfram proceeds to attack the bulwarks
of science head-on. The famous Second Law of Thermodynamics, stating
that any energy associated with organized motions of microscopic
particles tends to degrade inevitably into heat -- that order tends
to disorder -- is "is an important and quite general principle,"
he writes, but his simple programs show that "it is not universally
valid."
How can humans have apparent free will
in a universe governed by deterministic rules? Because, Wolfram
says, though our brain works by definite rules of chemistry, "our
overall behavior corresponds to an irreducible computation whose
outcome can never in effect be found by reasonable laws." Darwinian
evolution? Wolfram believes that his methods can generate essentially
any degree of complexity exhibited by life, and they have nothing
to do with natural selection.
In fact, Wolfram sees no end to the possibilities
of his ideas -- or his own place in scientific history. "In
time," he writes in his preface, "I expect that the ideas
of this book will come to pervade not only science and technology
but also many areas of general thinking. And with this its methods
will eventually become a standard part of education -- much as mathematics
is today."
It remains to be seen how the scientific
community at-large will react to Wolfram's work. (IBM computer scientist
Gregory Chaikincalls Wolfram's work "a monument to experimental
mathematics and the convergence of theoretical physics with computer
science.") Wolfram has purposely declined to publish in the
usual scientific journals, and his book is surprisingly devoid of
footnoted references to the work of those who came before him (though
a full third of the two-volume set consists of an appendix chock-full
of general notes).
Wolfram has sought to control
all aspects of the work, from establishing his own publishing house
to hiring a publicist and placing an embargo on discussion of the
book until its exact release date. The book has been anticipated
for years, and the hype has apparently paid off: It was already
ranked No. 1 on the Amazon.com bestseller list several days before
its release. "Never lose a holy curiosity," said Einstein.
Whether or not Wolfram's ideas launch science in a new direction
-- and the great success of traditional science in explaining and
shaping nearly every aspect of our world sets a very high bar indeed
-- like other great scientists he has followed his instincts and
blazed a new trail. One's impression is that Stephen Wolfram has
never expected any less of himself.
Editor's Note: It's January and outside
the temperature is dropping. I'm sitting in the garage workshop
of my armourer-historian friend, Travis Conn. The butane heater
is warming our legs, but there are clouds of frosty air clouding
my breath. For the past half hour Travis has been expounding on
Stephen Wolfram's book and its influence on his way of thinking.
He is spreading colored toothpicks on a table to illustrate one
of Wolfram's theories. I'm listening, but am also thinking that
there must be something profoundly true to Wolfram's book to evoke
this kind of discipleship zeal. By the time I leave the hill above
Olympia and drive back into the Nisqually basin, I'm more than intrigued.
The heater in the Mercury is thawing my bones, and I'm heading to
Orca books to see if they have a copy of A New Kind of Science.
But wait, there's more! (click here)
Steven Levy (Wired Magazine) further investigates the man behind
A New Kind of Science.
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