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Did a friend forward this? Sign up here Together with Hello Nautilus readers, and thanks for being here. Did you know that the kind of math we use to describe reality happens to be the kind of math our brains find especially pleasing? Itâs true, and lends weight to the idea that the story of our universe just might be written in the language of mathematics. That article, plus how we can grasp the totality of reality. Also, in the news, the forces bringing our bridges down, satellite navigation on the moon, and more. And enjoy your free story on soccer-playing robots, below. Have a great day!
â Liz Greene The latest from Nautilus Why Physics Is Unreasonably Good at Creating New Math The secret sauce is the real world. [Continue Readingâ]( The Reality Ouroboros Toward a new understanding of the nature of reality. [Continue Readingâ]( Donât limit your curiosity.
Enjoy unlimited ad-free Nautilus stories every month for less than $5/month. [Join now]( Tired of Battling Spam Calls on Your Phone? Here's How to Make Them Disappear. Every day, your personal data, including phone number, is sold to the highest bidder by data brokers. This leads to annoying robocalls from random companies and, worse, makes you vulnerable to scammers. Meet [Incogni](: your solution against robocalls. It actively removes your personal data from the web, fighting data brokers and protecting your privacy. Unlike other services, [Incogni]( targets all data brokers, including those elusive People Search Sites. Put an end to those never-ending robocalls and email spam on your iPhone now. Use the code NAUTILUS55 to get [55% off]( an annual plan. [Buy Now]( *Thank you for supporting our sponsors. The top science news this week ⢠Extreme heat and flooding are causing Americaâs bridgesâ25 percent of which were built before 1960âto deteriorate much more quickly than weâd expected. [Read on The New York Timesâ](
⢠A nuclear clock prototype, which would keep super-precise time by measuring the energy levels of atomic nuclei, has been developed by a team of scientific clockmakers. [Read on Science Newsâ](
⢠Jupiterâs largest moon, Ganymede was likely hit by an ancient asteroid so large, the moon (which is bigger than Mercury) flipped nearly 180 degrees 4 billion years ago. [Read on The Guardianâ](
⢠By the end of the 2020s, we might have satellite navigation on the moon. [Read on Wiredâ](
⢠AI is helping to untangle the incredibly complex biology of odors. [Read on Natureâ]( *Indicates sponsor/partner content. Thank you for supporting our sponsors. âReality shifting is a very strange experience. Itâs like an extremely vivid dream, yet itâs more real than any dream Iâve ever had.â Kristen French takes us into the minds of people who routinely shift their minds into alternate realitiesâand who are proud of that feat. [Read on Nautilusâ]( Fungi Can Be High Fashion Show off your love of mushrooms with this [handcrafted glass ring]( created by artist and designer Bella Lalonde in collaboration with Nautilus. [Buy now]( Today’s unlocked free story TECHNOLOGY
The Unexpected Humanity of Robot Soccer
Robots competing in open, physical environments produce familiar behaviors.
BY SETH FREY & PATRICK HOUSE When Googleâs AlphaGo computer program triumphed over a Go expert earlier this year, a human member of the Google team had to physically move the pieces. [Continue reading]( P.S. The German film director Werner Herzog was born on this day in 1942. In his documentary Lo and Behold, Reveries of a Connected World, a small soccer league of robots has a favorite player: Number 8. â[We all love robot Number 8](,â says Manuela Veloso of Carnegie Mellon University. "The reason, simply, is that, for some reason, the robot is really good," wrote scientists Seth Frey and Patrick House. Number 8 "is uniquely better at scoring than the other robots on the team, even though they all have the same code. âAll these robots are manufactured manually, so maybe with Number 8, the parts are better polished,â [Veloso] says, half-jokingly. âWho knows? I donât know. Iâm just telling you, Number 8 is better.ââ Thanks for reading! What did you think of today's note? Inspire a friend to [sign up for the Nautilus newsletter](. Copyright © 2024 NautilusNext, All rights reserved.
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