
Hector Zenil
Bio [2005]
Hector Zenil graduated with his B.S. degree in mathematics from
the National University of Mexico (UNAM). He is currently accepted
with a full scholarship for a Ph.D. at Paris I University
(Pantheon-Sorbonne) in the theory of minds and machines. He has been
an official international books and papers reviewer for the IEEE
Computer Society and the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
since 2000, mainly in the theoretical computer science field. His
research interests in math are logic, foundations of mathematics,
complexity, and recursion function theory. He had been working in
alternative models of computation and trying to figure out what the
hyperarithmetical hierarchy looks like.
One of his research goals is to solve the question of finding the
computational power of the brain and what kind of artificial
intelligence is possible in terms of the computational universe. He
claims that another kind of life is arising from everyday computers,
which will become more and more complex in their behavior when their
rules (hardware and software) became more and more simple. He enjoys
thinking about philosophical and epistemological questions like what
reality is and what truth means. He likes to deal with great
scientific and philosophical questions even if he cannot figure out
the answers... yet.
Project Title
Enumerating Quantified Axiom Systems
Project

The main purpose of this project is to take a look at the beginning of
the universe of all possible mathematical theories. To achieve that
purpose it is necessary to enumerate all quantified axiom systems. It
was found that the number of axiomatic systems generated for each length
grows exponentially. However, most axiomatic systems generated are
inconsistent and contain axioms that are not all independent of each
other. This method could be of interest because when dealing with
mathematical theories as a whole, it is possible to ask some very
general questions about the foundations of mathematics and the way we
do mathematics based on axioms and trying to prove theorems.
Favorite Four-Color, Nearest-Neighbor, Totalistic Rule

Rule chosen: 452141
After a while symmetry emerges clearly (reflecting with an imaginary
horizontal axis). Just 400 steps after, fractal and nested patterns
emerge from both sides. This very rich structure of a cellular
automaton is full of different patterns. At the border there is a band
of fractal patterns. In the middle, there are also nested patterns
with other interesting red patterns that flow through the whole
structure.
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