Difference between revisions of "Category:Theoretical foundations"

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m (Stressing, that the existence of self-replicating is not a trivial thing)
(removed the whole raven story bit bc 1. Esk*mo is a slur ,2. there are raven tales from some Indigenous Pacific NW cultures that are not intended to be used as just stories (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raven_Tales) , and 3. it was irrelevant anyway)
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Things (related to Haskell) that give us the feeling of surprize instead of design, the way natural sciences and mathematics do.
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Things (related to Haskell) that give us the feeling of surprise instead of design, the way natural sciences and mathematics do.
   
 
In <math>\lambda</math>-calculus and combinatory logic, the existence of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_encoding Church numerals] was a surprise, too. They were not anticipated, so not a mere design.
In an Eskimo tale, the Raven, after having created the world, does not recognize his own creatures. He creates a marrow, and after a while, a man steps out of the split marrow. -- Who are you and how do you get here? -- asks Raven his own creature. In another tale, a creature is creating himself, astonishing the god.
 
 
Other things can be astonishing too -- like the mere existence of [http://www.madore.org/~david/computers/quine.html self-replicating programs (quines)], a consequence of the fixed point theorem.
 
In <math>\lambda</math>-calculus and combinatory logic, the existence of Church numerals was a surprize, too. They were not anticipated, so not a mere design.
 
Other things can be astonishing too -- like the mere existence of self-replicating programs (quines), a consequence of the fixed point theorem.
 
   
 
Haskell is based on and related to powerful ideas, and learning Haskell can yield a feeling of exploring something out there, instead of watching a huge cathedral.
 
Haskell is based on and related to powerful ideas, and learning Haskell can yield a feeling of exploring something out there, instead of watching a huge cathedral.

Revision as of 01:22, 3 October 2020

Things (related to Haskell) that give us the feeling of surprise instead of design, the way natural sciences and mathematics do.

In -calculus and combinatory logic, the existence of Church numerals was a surprise, too. They were not anticipated, so not a mere design. Other things can be astonishing too -- like the mere existence of self-replicating programs (quines), a consequence of the fixed point theorem.

Haskell is based on and related to powerful ideas, and learning Haskell can yield a feeling of exploring something out there, instead of watching a huge cathedral.