Hello Twitter! Can you provide your favourite examples of people describing science as a form of play? (Interviews, quotes, etc.) There are many, but I'm curious about ones I have not heard. Thank you!
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Replying to @SimonDeDeo
Douglas Adams on Wodehousepic.twitter.com/JUbvD3mlhX
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Replying to @michael_nielsen
Love it. Michael I should have figured you have thoughts. One thing (in this article I'm working on)—trying to distinguish playfulness (Feynman-style) from play (which can be serious, e.g., Bobby Fischer).
1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes -
Replying to @SimonDeDeo
I guess you know Einstein's quote on combinatory play?
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Replying to @SimonDeDeo
https://www.brainpickings.org/2013/08/14/how-einstein-thought-combinatorial-creativity/ … (I thought you might have gotten the term from the letter, actually! But I guess not.)
1 reply 1 retweet 6 likes -
Replying to @michael_nielsen @SimonDeDeo
Point (A) bothered me a bit when I first read it (I guess I was 14 or 15). A decade later and I couldn't imagine doing physics any other way than how Einstein described it.
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Replying to @michael_nielsen @SimonDeDeo
Nicholas Metropolis's delightful account of the beginnings of the Monte Carlo method, complete with a couple Stan Ulam jokes and the FERMIAC (mechanical brownian motion machine) pdf file: https://web.archive.org/web/20181001062425/https://library.lanl.gov/cgi-bin/getfile?00326866.pdf …
1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
That's great!
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