Colin McLarty / Angus MacIntyre / John L Bell Rencontres, Fougeres 2005
← All recordings

Recorded at Rencontres, Fougeres (2005), featuring Colin McLarty, Angus MacIntyre, John L Bell. From the Michael Wright Collection, held by the Archive Trust for Research in Mathematical Sciences & Philosophy.

Identifier
mw0000852-cc-a_p
Format
Audio recording
Collection
Michael Wright Collection
Repository
Archive Trust for Research in Mathematical Sciences & Philosophy
Rights
Made available for personal scholarly use. Rights in recordings are generally held by the speakers or their estates. If you believe this recording infringes your rights, please contact [email protected].
Transcript
Read the automatically generated transcript

This transcript was generated by speech-recognition software from an archival recording and has not been hand-corrected. It will contain recognition errors — particularly for proper names and technical terminology — so please verify against the audio before quoting. Timestamps play the recording from that moment.

0:00 Thank you for your attention. I'd like to give a special thanks to the faculty and students who have supported me throughout the course of my studies. Thank you for your attention. Thank you for your attention. Thank you for your attention.

2:30 Thank you for your attention. Thank you for your attention. Thank you for your attention. Thank you for your attention. Thank you for your attention.

5:00 Now, here's the one that people start with. So, you know, like, you're running, and he gets that one, and it's, you know, theory. Did I extract that? And then, like, second, let's get, like, I was well about this one before we went away, but, you know, I don't know how to say it. I've read it. It's nice to read it. I don't know how to say it. I've read it two or three times, but I have read it three times. I've read it three times. I've read it three times. I've read it three times. I've read it three times. I've read it three times. I've read it three times. I've read it three times. I've read it three times. Thank you for your attention. Thank you for your attention.

7:30 Thank you for your attention. Thank you for your attention. And sometimes that's not what we know about mathematics, but I know a lot. I know a lot of stuff, but it's very interesting to know how much these shifts in mathematics affect each other in principle. Math is a very interesting source of new mathematics. I'm not going to joke around with Timothy or his students, but I've got a medical workup that just brings me in lower interest, and I understand you wouldn't have no idea what you were actually doing, or that you had some vague conception.

10:00 I think what I learned from you, I learned it from Robinson, and I think you got this from him, it was from his colleague, who was the Robinson of Robinson Walker. Yeah, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, Thank you for your attention. Thank you for your attention. Thank you for your attention.

12:30 Thank you for your attention. Thank you for your attention. Mathematics is the same as every other theory of quantum gravity.

15:00 I wonder what the compilers don't really understand, what a web is, isn't it just that? I don't understand quite enough, I'm not good at understanding myself. We've got a whole different aesthetic of what we want to ask. Do you trust in what Byers was talking about? I don't think you're on the street yourself, doing this talk. You forgive Bill, of course. Right back to the beginning, I was getting, you know, you know, you know, you know, you know, you know, you know, you know, When you showed me the first version of the Bethlehem Caster, it was really bad. It was stupid. I can't do that. It did have some kind of spectrum. No, it's exactly the opposite of what I meant. I just think it's nice.

17:30 I think it really matters. I mean, it's nice. Yeah. That's exactly what I meant. This was not a great topic for this conference. You're going to have to write it to my name. The problem is you meet them directly and then check them on email on this. Bias always speaks about many abstractions of the idea of identity. It's not instead of an absolute quality in Bias. It's meant to be instead in Mackay. But Mackay hasn't produced it yet. People sent Bias. Thank you for your attention. Thank you for your attention.

20:00 Thank you for your attention.