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    ted chiang

    Explore " ted chiang" with insightful episodes like "Ep 71 - Arrival", "Complex Conceptions of Time with David Krakauer, Ted Chiang, David Wolpert, & James Gleick", "Arrival", "Arrival" and "Arrival" from podcasts like ""Chapter One: Take Two", "COMPLEXITY", "UC Santa Barbara (Video)", "UC Santa Barbara (Audio)" and "Film and Television (Audio)"" and more!

    Episodes (13)

    Ep 71 - Arrival

    Ep 71 - Arrival

    Arrival is a 2016 American science fiction drama film directed by Denis Villeneuve and adapted by Eric Heisserer, who conceived the project as a spec script based on the 1998 short story "Story of Your Life" by Ted Chiang. The film stars Amy Adams as Louise Banks, a linguist enlisted by the United States Army to discover how to communicate with extraterrestrials who have arrived on Earth, before tensions lead to war. Jeremy Renner, Forest Whitaker, Michael Stuhlbarg, and Tzi Ma appear in supporting roles.

    Complex Conceptions of Time with David Krakauer, Ted Chiang, David Wolpert, & James Gleick

    Complex Conceptions of Time with David Krakauer, Ted Chiang, David Wolpert, & James Gleick

    And now for something completely different!  Last October, The Santa Fe Institute held its third InterPlanetary Festival at SITE Santa Fe, celebrating the immensely long time horizon, deep scientific and philosophical questions, psychological challenges, and engineering problems involved in humankind’s Great Work to extend its understanding and presence into outer space. For our third edition, we turned our attention to visionary projects living generations will likely not live to see completed — interstellar travel, off-world cities, radical new ways of understanding spacetime — as an invitation to engage in science as not merely interesting but deeply fun. For our first panel, we decided to inquire: What is time, really? How has science fiction changed  the way we track and measure, speak about, and live in time? And how do physics and complex systems science pose and answer these most fundamental questions?

    Welcome to COMPLEXITY, the official podcast of the Santa Fe Institute. I’m your host, Michael Garfield, and every other week we’ll bring you with us for far-ranging conversations with our worldwide network of rigorous researchers developing new frameworks to explain the deepest mysteries of the universe.

    In this week’s episode, we share the Complex Conceptions of Time panel from InterPlanetary Festival 2022, moderated by SFI President David Krakauer and featuring an all-star trinity of panelists: science journalist James Gleick, sci-fi author and SFI Miller Scholar Ted Chiang, and physicist and SFI Professor David Wolpert. In this hour, we play with and dissect some favorite metaphors for time, unroll the history of time’s mathematization, review time travel in science fiction, and examine the arguments between free will and determinism.

    Be sure to check out our extensive show notes with links to all our references at complexity.simplecast.com — as well as the extensive, interactive web-based “Voyager Golden Record Liner Notes” with links to not only all of the panels from IPFest 2022 but also copious additional resources, including contributor bios, peer-reviewed publications, science fiction and nonfiction science writing, and more…

    If you value our research and communication efforts, please subscribe, rate and review us at Apple Podcasts or Spotify, and consider making a donation — or finding other ways to engage with us — at santafe.edu/engage.

    If you’d like some HD virtual backgrounds of the SFI campus to use on video calls and a chance to win a signed copy of one of our books from the SFI Press, help us improve our science communication by completing a survey about our various scicomm channels. Thanks for your time!

    Lastly, we have a bevy of summer programs coming up! Join us June 19-23 for Collective Intelligence: Foundations + Radical Ideas, a first-ever event open to both academics and professionals, with sessions on adaptive matter, animal groups, brains, AI, teams, and more.  Space is limited!  The application deadline has been extended to March 1st.

    OR apply to the Graduate Workshop on Complexity in Social Science.

    OR the Complexity GAINS UK program for PhD students.

    (OR check our open listings for a staff or research job!)

    Join our Facebook discussion group to meet like minds and talk about each episode.

    Podcast theme music by Mitch Mignano.

    Episode cover art by Michael Garfield with the help of Midjourney.

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    (SOME) Mentioned & Related Links:

    David Krakauer
    Mathematical languages shape our understanding of time in physics
    by Nicolas Gisin
    Does Time Really Flow? New Clues Come From a Century-Old Approach to Math
    by Natalie Wolchover
    The Principle of Least Action
    Path Integral Formulation
    Closed Timelike Curve
    The Time Machine
    by H. G. Wells
    Kip Thorne

    James Gleick
    Genius: The Life and Science of Richard Feynman
    The Physicist and The Philosopher
    by Jimena Canales

    Ted Chiang
    “Story of Your Life”
    Arrival
    Exhalation
    Russian Doll (TV series)
    “The Merchant and the Alchemist's Gate”

    David Wolpert
    Complexity 94 - David Wolpert & Farita Tasnim on The Thermodynamics of Communication
    Complexity 45 - David Wolpert on The No Free Lunch Theorems and Why They Undermine The Scientific Method
    A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court by Mark Twain
    Intuitionist Mathematics

    Arrival

    Arrival
    Adapted from the 1998 short story “Story of Your Life” by acclaimed science fiction author Ted Chiang, “Arrival” (2016) centers on communicating with tentacular alien visitors, whose language changes one’s experience of time. Introspective and immersive, “Arrival” imagines a fantastical calligraphy alongside questions of alienation, race, and motherhood. Professor Jennifer Rhee joins Melody Jue to discuss the film and explore the dynamics of free will, determinism, disorientation, communication, language, and temporal nonlinearity, as well as the similarities and differences between the film and the original short story. Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Humanities] [Show ID: 38161]

    Arrival

    Arrival
    Adapted from the 1998 short story “Story of Your Life” by acclaimed science fiction author Ted Chiang, “Arrival” (2016) centers on communicating with tentacular alien visitors, whose language changes one’s experience of time. Introspective and immersive, “Arrival” imagines a fantastical calligraphy alongside questions of alienation, race, and motherhood. Professor Jennifer Rhee joins Melody Jue to discuss the film and explore the dynamics of free will, determinism, disorientation, communication, language, and temporal nonlinearity, as well as the similarities and differences between the film and the original short story. Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Humanities] [Show ID: 38161]

    Arrival

    Arrival
    Adapted from the 1998 short story “Story of Your Life” by acclaimed science fiction author Ted Chiang, “Arrival” (2016) centers on communicating with tentacular alien visitors, whose language changes one’s experience of time. Introspective and immersive, “Arrival” imagines a fantastical calligraphy alongside questions of alienation, race, and motherhood. Professor Jennifer Rhee joins Melody Jue to discuss the film and explore the dynamics of free will, determinism, disorientation, communication, language, and temporal nonlinearity, as well as the similarities and differences between the film and the original short story. Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Humanities] [Show ID: 38161]

    Arrival

    Arrival
    Adapted from the 1998 short story “Story of Your Life” by acclaimed science fiction author Ted Chiang, “Arrival” (2016) centers on communicating with tentacular alien visitors, whose language changes one’s experience of time. Introspective and immersive, “Arrival” imagines a fantastical calligraphy alongside questions of alienation, race, and motherhood. Professor Jennifer Rhee joins Melody Jue to discuss the film and explore the dynamics of free will, determinism, disorientation, communication, language, and temporal nonlinearity, as well as the similarities and differences between the film and the original short story. Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Humanities] [Show ID: 38161]

    Three stories by Ted Chiang

    #1 Ted Chiang - Stories of Your Life and Others

    #1 Ted Chiang - Stories of Your Life and Others
    In this episode, we discussed Ted Chaing's short story collection: Stories of Your Life and Others. Mr. Chiang is, to put it lightly, a rare breed of science fiction author. Perhaps this is because, before becoming a novelist, was a technical writer in during the American software boom. He is one of the only sci-fi authors either of us have read who manages to successfully balance a rigorous understanding of science and technology with authorial emotional depth. We spent most of our time on two of the stories in the collection: Tower of Babylon and Story of Your Life. Babylon is a science fiction, fantasy novelette and Chiang's first (and towering) published work. As you might expect, the story examines the Tower of Babel myth from the Old Testament and this story won the 1991 Nebula Award for Best novelette. Story of Your Life is perhaps Chiang's best known work, mostly because of the popularity of its film adaptation arrival, starring Amy Adams and Jeremy Renner. For the Story of Your Life portion of the podcast, we focus our attention on the written version, and its major themes like language and free will. Enjoy ✌️Website TikTok Instagram YouTube Newsletter Jeremy's Website Dan's Website

    Ted Chiang's short stories - Like the optimistic version of black mirror episodes!

    Ted Chiang's short stories - Like the optimistic version of black mirror episodes!

    In this episode we review and discuss Exhalation and Stories of Your Life and Others, Ted Chiang's two short story collections. 

    These seventeen stories are full of novel scientific ideas, wonderful characters, and thoughtful takes on the morality of future technologies and how they will change society. We certainly aren't alone in thinking they're wonderful - Ted Chiang has won four Hugos, four Nebulas, and four Locus awards for his stories. 

    As always, we also recommend and discuss some similar books if you're looking for more great sci fi short story collections to read. This week, we recommend The Paper Menagerie and other Stories by Ken Liu, The Hidden Girl and Other Stories by Ken Liu, I, Robot by Isaac Asimov, and Welcome to the Monkey House by Kurt Vonnegut.

    If you'd prefer to watch the video version, you can watch it here.

    Episode 50: Ted Chiang

    Episode 50: Ted Chiang

    Define science fiction in five words. Go. What do you mean that's too broad a question? Soon you'll be saying that people have strong opinions on the definition of all genres.

    Come listen to us talk about Ted Chiang ask more broad questions such as:

    • Would you observe a parallel version of yourself?
    • Does science fiction need to be optimistic to have value?
    • Is being sent to hell for looking at an angel inherently terrifying, or is Sophie overreacting?

    Give us your science fiction recommendations!

    Ted Chiang on Free Will, Time Travel, Many Worlds, Genetic Engineering, and Hard Science Fiction – #19

    Ted Chiang on Free Will, Time Travel, Many Worlds, Genetic Engineering, and Hard Science Fiction – #19

    Steve and Corey speak with Ted Chiang about his recent story collection “Exhalation” and his inaugural essay for the New York Times series, Op-Eds from the Future. Chiang has won Nebula and Hugo awards for his widely influential science fiction writing. His short story “Story of Your Life,” was the basis of the film Arrival (2016). Their discussion explores the scientific and philosophical ideas in Ted’s work, including whether free will is possible, and implications of AI, neuroscience, and time travel. Ted explains why his skepticism about whether the US is truly a meritocracy leads him to believe that the government-funded genetic modification he envisages in his Op-Ed would not solve the problem of inequality.


    Resources

    Episode 4 - Arrival

    Episode 4 - Arrival
    映画メッセージ(Arrival) + 原作のあなたの人生の物語のネタバレしまくりな感想回です。映画よりもテッド・チャンの原作をおすすめ!と原作厨なことを言っております。2017/6/24 に収録してます。

    Starring

    Memo

    かなり久しぶりな更新になってしまった。収録はしてたんだけど、音声の編集が面倒で更新まで2年も経ってしまった。。。

    やっぱり原作だよね〜って依り代と榊がくだをまいています。 これにはれっきとした理由があるのでぜひ本編をお聞きください。いつも通り長いですけれど。 というかすごい久しぶりな更新になってしまって、どうやって jeykyll で html 生成してデバッグしてたっけ?ってなってました。

    Contents

    • テッド・チャンいいよって話と依り代のめんどくさい自意識語り 0:00 - 2:42
    • 映画メッセージ見てどうだったか、原作と比べる。映画にはミスリードな描写が多々あるって話 2:42 - 6:38
    • 映画のあらすじ + 原作のあらすじ + 言いたいことをパラパラと 6:39 - 19:35
    • 登場人物について 19:35 - 23:10
    • 各論 23:10 - 1:26:41
    • 尻切れトンボでおわる 1:26:41

    Excuse

    • サピアウォースって滑舌悪いですが、サピアウォーフって言ってるつもりです。
    • 変分原理について速度がもっとも速いと言っていますが、速度ではなく、到達時間です。

    他にもおかしなところありそう…

    Show notes

    http://yorisilo.github.io/podcast/ep4/

    Review: Arrival

    Review: Arrival

    Arrival is the latest film by Canadian director Denis Villeneuve, written by Eric Heisserer and adapted from a short story by Ted Chiang. It’s a science-fiction film in which aliens arrive on Earth and Dr Louise Banks, a linguist, played by Amy Adams, is asked to help decipher their language in order to find out their purpose on Earth. Over the course of the film we join Dr Banks in solving this curious puzzle, as she races against the worldwide chaos caused by the presence of these creatures. Interspersed with the plot of Dr Banks and the aliens is another storyline involving her daughter, which not only adds emotional weight but also ends up being quite a central element in understanding the film itself.

    There’s an absolutely brilliant confluence of visual, emotional and intellectual elements that keep you engrossed and awed throughout the film’s duration. Everything just comes together so well.

    First, let’s talk about the visuals. In particular, all the things to do with the aliens are immaculately designed. The aliens are these kinds of seven-limbed knuckle squids which in the film they call “heptapods”, and they land in twelve identical ships which seem like particularly aerodynamic skimming pebbles. You might have seen them on the poster. Inside the pods is a long rectangular room with a groovy gravitational shift, and the first time we experience this gravitational shift is one of the coolest things I’ve seen in a film this year. In the room there’s a glass screen behind which the heptapods themselves appear enshrouded in a white mist. Finally, there’s the language that the heptapods use to communicate, the language that our protagonist, the linguist Dr Banks, has been hired to decode. Emanating from a tentacular orifice of one of the limbs of the heptapods, the language is basically a black smoky ink which forms circular symbols or logograms that on first glance look like Rorschach tests made from coffee mug stains but really is a set of unique elements that in each circle create an entire phrase or sentence.

    Now, I might be biased in my enjoyment of the film due to being a linguist myself, but if anything I feel like a film that involves one’s specialist subject gets put under even closer scrutiny, and the fact that there’s so much actual linguistic basis for what goes on, which I won’t go into, definitely increased how much I got into the film.

    This is not even touching the intriguing way the film deals with the passage of time. Towards the middle of the film, we find out a certain piece of information that changes the way conceptualise everything we’ve seen so far and everything we see thenceforth. I’m hesitant in labelling it a twist, because it feels less like a twist per se and more like another piece of the puzzle that the film represents. Though it’s still totally a spoiler, so I’m not going to say what it is. But it comes at the point where Dr Banks unlocks the secret to the heptapods’ language and in doing so is able to look at time in a completely different way. So essentially, by solving the problem of their language and learning this new way of experiencing time, Dr Banks passes on to us, the audience, the ability to see the film differently. It’s really quite a clever narrative technique.

    And what the revelation has to do with involves Dr Banks’ daughter, Hannah, who we see in the first few minutes of the film being born, growing up and then dying. Scenes from Hannah’s life are constantly being intercut with the plot of the heptapods, and this really adds a delicate and grounded aspect to the film. There are definitely moments when the film threatens to move into rather oversentimental territory, but its sentimentality always feels earned, or else it pulls back just before getting too sappy. And regardless, the story of Hannah, without giving anything away, is absolutely essential to our grasp of the story of the entire film.

    Overall what impressed me was the scale of this film, the way it tied together a worldwide phenomenon to a personal tale, the attention to detail with giant alien ships and tiny wisps of smoke alike, and above all the flagrant optimism for humanity amidst all the flurry of panic and division going on across the world.

    Arrival has captivated my imagination the way very few recent films have, and it relays a message of communication and unity that is always relevant, especially today.

    Arrival is out in cinemas now.

     

    Written by Ben Volchok

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