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Interest Math Breakthough: All elementary functions from a single operator

Joined
Nov 29, 2025
Messages
515
In computer science, every digital circuit--and, by extension, every intricate algorithm--can be decomposed into a cascade of NAND gates, the elemental primitive underpinning all Boolean logic and thus the edifice of digital computation. Yet in the realms of continuous mathematics, physics, engineering, and machine learning, it was long presumed that an expansive repertoire of operations was indispensable: addition and subtraction, trigonometric functions, logarithms, and their myriad derivatives. Every scientific computing environment and neural architecture appeared obliged to orchestrate this heterogeneous ensemble.

That paradigm has now been upended.

A recent paper demonstrates that the entire corpus of elementary functions can be synthesized from a solitary, enigmatic binary operator: eml(x, y) = exp(x) - ln(y), paired exclusively with the constant 1. From this austere foundation emerge π, the square root, sine and cosine, the arithmetic operations, exponentiation, and virtually every transcendental or algebraic primitive required for scientific computation.

All such expressions reduce to iterative applications of this identical operator, structured as a uniform binary tree. No one had foreseen the existence of such a universal primitive, yet it surfaced through methodical, exhaustive enumeration rather than deliberate invention. Its ramifications for artificial intelligence, however, are profound.

Rather than compelling a model to harmonize disparate mathematical rules in pursuit of novel scientific laws, one may now deploy a singular, homogeneous architecture: a solitary trainable circuit composed of a repeatable node. What we once regarded as the labyrinthine lexicon of the cosmos now reveals itself as the ceaseless recursion of one deceptively simple equation--echoing through the void.

1776148279370243


 
𝕶𝖓𝖔𝖜 𝖄𝖔𝖚𝖗𝖘𝖊𝖑𝖋
Joined
Oct 7, 2024
Messages
858
In computer science, every digital circuit--and, by extension, every intricate algorithm--can be decomposed into a cascade of NAND gates, the elemental primitive underpinning all Boolean logic and thus the edifice of digital computation. Yet in the realms of continuous mathematics, physics, engineering, and machine learning, it was long presumed that an expansive repertoire of operations was indispensable: addition and subtraction, trigonometric functions, logarithms, and their myriad derivatives. Every scientific computing environment and neural architecture appeared obliged to orchestrate this heterogeneous ensemble.

That paradigm has now been upended.

A recent paper demonstrates that the entire corpus of elementary functions can be synthesized from a solitary, enigmatic binary operator: eml(x, y) = exp(x) - ln(y), paired exclusively with the constant 1. From this austere foundation emerge π, the square root, sine and cosine, the arithmetic operations, exponentiation, and virtually every transcendental or algebraic primitive required for scientific computation.

All such expressions reduce to iterative applications of this identical operator, structured as a uniform binary tree. No one had foreseen the existence of such a universal primitive, yet it surfaced through methodical, exhaustive enumeration rather than deliberate invention. Its ramifications for artificial intelligence, however, are profound.

Rather than compelling a model to harmonize disparate mathematical rules in pursuit of novel scientific laws, one may now deploy a singular, homogeneous architecture: a solitary trainable circuit composed of a repeatable node. What we once regarded as the labyrinthine lexicon of the cosmos now reveals itself as the ceaseless recursion of one deceptively simple equation--echoing through the void.

View attachment 15055

NO NO NO!

YOU MUST STUDY STRENGTH OF MATERIALS! A SUBJECT FOR REAAAAAL MEN, YOU HEAR ME STUD? REAALLLL MEN.

HERE, STUDY THIS AND COME BACK WHEN YOU ARE A FULL GROWN MAN WITH A BIG BEARD AND A BEAR:

 
Joined
Nov 29, 2025
Messages
515
YOU MUST STUDY STRENGTH OF MATERIALS! A SUBJECT FOR REAAAAAL MEN, YOU HEAR ME STUD? REAALLLL MEN.
Too late for me, but other's should heed his advice. I studied computer science and pure math long ago and dropped out of college before my final year. Now many years later, I'm ready to retire.

Nice book you've linked, btw.
 
𝕶𝖓𝖔𝖜 𝖄𝖔𝖚𝖗𝖘𝖊𝖑𝖋
Joined
Oct 7, 2024
Messages
858
Too late for me, but other's should heed his advice. I studied computer science and pure math long ago and dropped out of college before my final year. Now many years later, I'm ready to retire.

Nice book you've linked, btw.
Why did you drop it btw?

So ended working in a different field? Engineering?
 
Joined
Nov 29, 2025
Messages
515
Why did you drop it btw?

So ended working in a different field? Engineering?
Coming out of my third year, I was depressed and broke. I had failed my English and philosophy general education requirements because I couldn't bring myself to write some boring, cucked essays. I dreaded the thought of having to retake them.

I lucked out and got a job as a programmer for the summer. Started making some serious money for the first time in my life. When autumn came, decided I would take a year off from studies to work and save up some money. A year later, after being promoted and having worked on some interesting projects, made the call that finishing college wasn't worth my time. Never looked back.
 
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