Recent Comments
mathematicalsilence on The Ramanujan Challenge for… Gil Kalai on Polymath Plus AI Vijay Vazirani on Matching in NC and Local … Gil Kalai on Matching in NC and Local … Gil Kalai on Matching in NC and Local … rohitgurjar0 on Matching in NC and Local … Vijay Vazirani on Matching in NC and Local … Gil Kalai on Matching in NC and Local … Gil Kalai on Matching in NC and Local … Vijay Vazirani on Matching in NC and Local … Gil Kalai on Matching in NC and Local … Matching in NC and L… on Open problem session of HUJI-C… -
Recent Posts
- The Ramanujan Challenge for AI
- Matching in NC and Local Events
- A sensational Ramsey breakthrough by Domagoj Bradač (reblogged from Sam Mattheus’ blog)
- Three Interviews
- Amazing: Erdős’ Unit Distance Problem was Disproved! It was achieved by AI!
- Polymath Plus AI
- Starting Today: Kazhdan Sunday seminar: “Boolean Functions, Hypercontractivity, and Applications”
- Scott Aaronson’s View of my View About Quantum Computing
- The Fully Depolarizing Noise Conjecture for Physical Cat States is Twenty Years Old!
Top Posts & Pages
- The Ramanujan Challenge for AI
- יופיה של המתמטיקה
- The Polynomial Hirsch Conjecture: Discussion Thread
- Polymath 3: Polynomial Hirsch Conjecture
- A Few Slides and a Few Comments From My MIT Lecture on Quantum Computers
- Polymath10: The Erdos Rado Delta System Conjecture
- Polymath 3: The Polynomial Hirsch Conjecture 2
- Elchanan Mossel's Amazing Dice Paradox (your answers to TYI 30)
- Why Quantum Computers Cannot Work: The Movie!
RSS
Monthly Archives: March 2020
Game Theory – on-line Course at IDC, Herzliya
Game theory, a graduate course at IDC, Herzliya; Lecturer: Gil Kalai; TA: Einat Wigderson, ZOOM mentor: Ethan. Starting Tuesday March 31, I am giving an on-line course (in Hebrew) on Game theory at IDC, Herzliya (IDC English site; IDC Chinese … Continue reading
Posted in Combinatorics, Computer Science and Optimization, Economics, Games, Rationality, Teaching
Tagged Game theory, Games
2 Comments
TYI44: “What Then, To Raise an Old Question, is Mathematics?”
“The argument is carried out not in mathematical symbols but in ordinary English, there is no obscure or technical terms. Knowledge of calculus is not presupposed. In fact, one hardly need to know how to count. Yet any mathematician will … Continue reading
Posted in Test your intuition, What is Mathematics
Tagged Test your intuition, What is Mathematics
14 Comments
Kelman, Kindler, Lifshitz, Minzer, and Safra: Towards the Entropy-Influence Conjecture
Let me briefly report on a remarkable new paper by Esty Kelman, Guy Kindler, Noam Lifshitz, Dor Minzer, and Muli Safra, Revisiting Bourgain-Kalai and Fourier Entropies. The paper describes substantial progress towards the Entropy-Influence conjecture, posed by Ehud Friedgut and … Continue reading
Posted in Combinatorics, Computer Science and Optimization, Open problems
Tagged Dor Minzer, Esty Kelman, Guy Kindler, Muli Safra, Noam Lifshitz
2 Comments
To cheer you up in complicated times – A book proof by Rom Pinchasi and Alexandr Polyanskii for a 1978 Conjecture by Erdős and Purdy!
Things do not look that good, and these are difficult times. But here on the blog we have plenty of things to cheer you up and assure you. And today we point to two book proofs — two book proofs … Continue reading
Posted in Combinatorics, Geometry, What is Mathematics
Tagged Alexandr Polyanskii, Rom Pinchasi
9 Comments
A new PolyTCS blog!
A new PolyTCS blog The PolyTCS Project is a new blog to run collaborative Theoretical Computer Science projects. The initiative is by two graduate students Rupei Xu and Chloe Yang. The logo was designed by Grigory Yaroslavtsev. At this stage … Continue reading