The smell of subjectivity clings to the mechanical definition of complexity as — Hans Christian von Baeyer
Claude Shannon, the founder of information theory, invented a way to measure — Hans Christian von Baeyer
Paradox is the sharpest scalpel in the satchel of science. Nothing concentrates — Hans Christian von Baeyer
Both induction and deduction, reasoning from the particular and the general, and — Hans Christian von Baeyer
Entropy is not about speeds or positions of particles, the way temperature — Hans Christian von Baeyer
If quantum communication and quantum computation are to flourish, a new information — Hans Christian von Baeyer
Underneath the shifting appearances of the world as perceived by our unreliable — Hans Christian von Baeyer
The switch from ‘steam engines’ to ‘heat engines’ signals the transition from — Hans Christian von Baeyer
For generations, field guides to plants and animals have sharpened the pleasure — Hans Christian von Baeyer
Science has taught us that what we see and touch is not what is really there. — Hans Christian von Baeyer
Information gently but relentlessly drizzles down on us in an invisible, impalpable — Hans Christian von Baeyer