Open-endedness

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Open-endedness is a trait of an entity, such as our universe, that continually increases in complexity.[1][2] Examples of open-endedness include biodiversity, hallucination, synthetic data, and epistemology.

we keep coming back to this answer of nature wants to increase information, but decrease entropy. So find order, but constantly increase the information scale. ... we’re constantly trying to fight against the dimensional mismatch between things made and things grown.

The extent to which time, evolution, emergence, information, or other ideas are necessary is unknown.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Stanley, Kenneth O. (July 28, 2022). "Open-Endedness: Continual Discovery and Complexity". YouTube. UCL DARK. Retrieved 2023-09-18. As interest in the field of open-endedness expands, ideas like continual discovery and increasingly complexity have gained significant attention...
  2. ^ Lehman, Joel (2022-06-16). "Evolution through Large Models". arXiv:2206.08896 [cs.NE].
  3. ^ Oxman. "Biology, Art, and Science of Design & Engineering with Nature". Lex Fridman Podcast #394 (interview). Interviewed by Lex Fridman. Retrieved September 18, 2023.