Francis Nowak via nettime-l on Sun, 21 Apr 2024 14:30:51 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> alphabets and algorithms |
> Algorithms are expressed with alphabets People say the modern history of algorithms starts with this problem: eine diophantische gleichung mit irgend welchen unbekannten und mit ganzen rationalen zahlencoefficienten sei vorgelegt : *man soll ein verfahren angeben, nach welchen sich mittelst einer endlichen anzahl von operationen entscheiden läßt, ob die gleichung in ganzen rationalen zahlen lösbar ist.*" ( p. 276 nachrichten von der gesellschaft der wissenschaften zu göttingen, mattematisc-physicallische klasse, 1900) if you have a diophantine equation, with any number of unknown quantities and with rational integer coefficients, does a procedure exist that, with a finite set of operations, can decide if the equation is solvable in rational integers. This later turns into the entscheidungsproblem: The Entscheidungsproblem is solved once we know a procedure that allows us to decide, by means of finitely many operations, whether a given logical expression is universally valid or, alternatively, satisfiable. (Hilbert & Ackermann 1928: 73) And into Turing's reformulation: [Is there a] machine [Turing machine] which, supplied with any one A of these formulae, will eventually say whether A is provable. What ends up being important and useful about all this is that if a given question can be automatically decided, there are lots of questions that become economic to decide: for instance, what does a given enigma machine message say? What's the average of a million numbers? What did you have for breakfast, and what adds does that make you likely to click on? On the one hand, I think you can see that algorithms in this sense are about as fundamental as téchne -- on the other, you can see that a sophisticated mathematical treatment of algorithms, and their characteristics, is only really interesting if you have machines you can run them on, a society that is interested in automatic work, and so on. All the same, I feel a lot of people associate the algorithmic and programmatic with print, text, or media - while it's actually closer to something like an assembly-line: a formalized field of technical, social and theoretical practice. The alphabets or symbols you use to express these things are just for the benefit of the programmer: it's fully possible to make algorithms with solder blobs, and to keep all the words in your head. -- # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: https://www.nettime.org # contact: nettime-l-owner@lists.nettime.org