Scott Aaronson | How Much Math Is Knowable?
Speaker: Scott Aaronson, Department of Computer Science, University of Texas, Austin Title: How Much Math Is Knowable? Abstract: Theoretical computer science has over the years sought more and more refined answers to the question of which mathematical truths are knowable by finite beings like ourselves, bounded in time and space and subject to physical laws. I’ll tell a story that starts with Gödel’s Incompleteness Theorem and Turing’s discovery of uncomputability. I’ll then introduce the spectacular Busy Beaver function, which grows faster than any computable function. Work by me and Yedidia, along with recent improvements by O’Rear and Riebel, has shown that the value of BB(745) is independent of the axioms of set theory; on the other end, an international collaboration proved last year that BB(5) = 47,176,870. I’ll speculate on whether BB(6) will ever be known, by us or our AI successors. I’ll next discuss the P!=NP conjecture and what it does and doesn’t mean for the limits of machine intelligence. As my own specialty is quantum computing, I’ll summarize what we know about how scalable quantum computers, assuming we get them, will expand the boundary of what’s mathematically knowable. I’ll end by talking about hypothetical models even beyond quantum computers, which might expand the boundary of knowability still further, if one is able (for example) to jump into a black hole, create a closed timelike curve, or project oneself onto the holographic boundary of the universe. The Yip Lecture takes place thanks to the support of Dr. Shing-Yiu Yip.

Computational Complexity and Explanations in Physics–Scott Aaronson (University of Texas at Austin)

The Hardest Questions in Physics | World Science Festival

Kevin Buzzard - Where is Mathematics Going? (September 24, 2025)

Scott Aaronson: The Greatest Unsolved Problem in Math

Emily Riehl, A New Paradigm for Mathematical Proof? | Natural Philosophy Symposium 2025

The Greatest Unsolved Problem In Mathematics

Harvard Scientist Rewrites the Rules of Quantum Mechanics | Scott Aaronson Λ Jacob Barandes

2025's Biggest Breakthroughs in Mathematics

A Tribute to Euler - William Dunham

Yann LeCun | Self-Supervised Learning, JEPA, World Models, and the future of AI

Biggest Puzzle in Computer Science: P vs. NP

Prof. Scott Aaronson: Why Philosophers Should Care About Computational Complexity @ UT Austin

Scott Aaronson: Computational Complexity and Consciousness | Lex Fridman Podcast #130

Nathan Seiberg: What Is Quantum Field Theory? (April 30, 2026)

Scott Aaronson "On the Nature of Proof"

Yann LeCun's $1B Bet Against LLMs

William Dunham, A tribute to Euler

The Langlands Program - Numberphile

The AI Math That Left Number Theorists Speechless

