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by taneq 302 days ago
An approximation, I’d imagine. I wouldn’t expect it to manifest in any real physical sense, any more than I’d expect an actual physical “unit circle” object to have a circumference of exactly two Pi.
2 comments

Real world has a measured 'pi' everywhere; from electromagnetics to probability.
It's as much an approx as any physical measurement is. As for "real world" implications, Hinton probably deserves the physics Nobel more than (the) Hofstadter who predicted this phenom (as a grad student)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hofstadter%27s_butterfly#:~:te...

> It's as much an approx as any physical measurement is.

This is exactly the point I was making, so I agree. :)

Fun fact: Douglas Hofstadter's father, Robert, actually did win the physics Nobel.