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by phscguy
1741 days ago
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>not the sort of puerile irrationality that privileges Gene Roddenberry's ideas over those of John von Neumann. Ah yes, the von Neumann that helped developed both the fission bomb and the hydrogen bomb and aggressively promoted the use of them and tried to start nuclear war. I know von Neumann is held in high regard with respect to his role in computing, but he is hardly a guy worthy of respect for his views on the safety of technology. |
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This is like discussing whether Stephen Jay Gould or Jimmy Swaggart has a more credible opinion about evolution. I mean, punctuated equilibrium might or might not be correct, but you're being ridiculous.
https://whatever.scalzi.com/2009/10/13/teching-the-tech/ https://archive.is/khTlp
> when you admit that Star Trek has as much to do with plausibly extrapolated science as The A-Team has to do with a realistic look at the lives of military veterans, life gets easier. ... Meta to this is the discussion of why we have to accept that film/tv SF is riding the shortbus — there’s no actual reason it has to be that way — but let’s not get into that right at the moment.
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* As well as, as you point out, a significant contributor to the development of the fission bomb, the hydrogen bomb, and modern computation. He was also the guy who axiomatized quantum mechanics and the foundations of mathematics, discovered continuous geometry and quantum logic and Hilbert spaces, and solved the compact-groups case of Hilbert's fifth problem. I guess you don't know much about mathematics, so that won't mean much to you; suffice it to say that the "von Neumann machine" was among the least of his achievements. Not bad for a chemical engineer.