The question that everyone has been dying to know has been answered. Finally! What will scientists study next?

  • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️@yiffit.net
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    40 minutes ago

    Well you’re not supposed to just have one. It’s supposed to be a thousand monkies at a thousand typewriters.

    Now do the Mythbusters thing and figure out how many monkies and typewriters it would take for them to write Hamlet in just under a year. Don’t just solve the myth; put it to the test!

  • mlg@lemmy.world
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    1 hour ago

    That’s because they only considered one monkey.

    You need a thousand monkeys working at a thousand typewriters.

    • Kabaka@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      44 minutes ago

      They did not limit themselves to one monkey. From the article:

      As well as a single monkey, they also did the calculations using the current global population of around 200,000 chimpanzees.

  • 5in1k@lemm.ee
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    1 hour ago

    Seems to not understand the thought experiment which is a way to contemplate infinity.

  • humanspiral@lemmy.ca
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    2 hours ago

    There was a plank computer post here last couple of days. It showed an atomic sized computer performing one crack attempt every 10^-44 seconds would take a 95 character alphabet 100 years to crack a 121 character password.

    Monkeys take up 1m^3. 10^105 bigger than a plank length. Typing 120wpm is 10^43 slower. Ignoring punctuation and spaces and capitalization, a 26 character alphabet allows for about 52 more characters than a 95 character alphabet.

    Bottom line, monkeys can’t come anywhere close to being able to crack a 100 character password from a 26 character alphabet.

    • meep_launcher@lemm.ee
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      44 minutes ago

      Okay but here me out, what if we 10^43 more monkeys to balance out the speed?

      In fact, let’s push this to an extreme. We get enough monkeys that their mass turns them all into one black hole. Inside the black hole, the laws of physics get all fucked. Next we need to somehow dissolve the event horizon as explained in This Kurzgesagt video. Once that happens and we are left with a bare singularity, anything can pop out of it, including a copy of Hamlet.

      The monkeys, however, will very likely be dead.

  • nednobbins@lemm.ee
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    50 minutes ago

    In other news, exponents make things big.

    Any time you have an X>1 and a big n, X^n gets huge.

    X=26 (if we ignore punctuation, spaces, and capitalization).
    N=130,000

    • Yaysuz@lemm.ee
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      2 hours ago

      It’s not a “study”, it’s just 2 mathematicians having some fun. The paper is a good read, and as a math teacher I see a lot of pedagogical values in such publications.

  • Todd Bonzalez@lemm.ee
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    5 hours ago

    How is the infinite monkey theorum “misleading”. It’s got “infinite” in the name. If you’re applying constraints based on the size or age of the universe, you are fundamentally misunderstanding the thought experiment.

  • style99@lemm.ee
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    3 hours ago

    This sort of study shows you more how mathematicians think than how science or philosophy works.

  • shrugs@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    So, while the Infinite Monkey Theorem is true, it is also somewhat misleading.

    Is it though? The Monkey Theorem should make it understandable how long infinity really is. That the lifetime of the universe is not long enough is nothing unexpected IMHO, infinity is much (infinitely) longer. And that’s what the theorem is about, isn’t it?!

    • Todd Bonzalez@lemm.ee
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      5 hours ago

      And an infinite amount of time.

      This “rebuttal” is forced contrarianism. It’s embarrassing.

      A thought experiment has rules, you can’t just change them and say the experiment doesn’t make sense…

      • funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works
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        4 hours ago

        The other part of it is there’s not only one monkey who does Hamlet correct on the first attempt, there’s two, three four, guess what - an infinite amount of them.

        And another infinity that get it right after 5 minutes

        Another infinity that take exactly 10 years 3 months 2 days 3 hours 4 minutes and 17 seconds

        And another infinity that takes one second less than the life of the universe

        And another infinity that takes a googleplex of the lifetime of the universe to complete

        that’s the point of the thought experiment

      • Konstant@lemmy.world
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        3 hours ago

        How would monkeys type through infinite. Don’t they stop, are they not mortals like normal monkeys?

      • ozymandias117@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        For what it’s worth, it seems like it’s this “journalist” trying to make a sensational headline

        The researchers themselves very clearly just tried to see if it could happen in our reality

        “We decided to look at the probability of a given string of letters being typed by a finite number of monkeys within a finite time period consistent with estimates for the lifespan of our universe,”

  • samus12345@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    I always heard that it was an infinite number of monkeys, not just one. So one of them might get the job done in time.