Scientists: John von Neumann
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John von Neumann (1903–1957)Born in Budapest to a banking family, von Neumann was a child prodigy who could divide eight-digit numbers in his head by age six. By his twenties, he was helping formalize quantum mechanics. He immigrated to America in the 1930s, helped design the atomic bomb in the 1940s, and in the 1950s, quietly built the blueprint for every computer in the world. He laid the foundations of game theory, AI, and self-replicating machines. He called what was coming “a singularity," a point when machines would evolve past us. In his final days, ravaged by cancer, he began to fear what he had built. Was he a genius ahead of his times, or was he something more, something leading us in an ominous direction that he felt was inevitable? FOR MOREThe Life of John von Neumann -- Britannica The Maniac by Benjamin LabatutJohn von Neumann and the art of being thereIf you're ready to create, I built The Creators Collective as a home for artists, writers, and tender rebels who believe in living wholeheartedly. Through poetry, story, and creative work of every kind, we dare to live out loud. For just $44 a month, you can join The Salon, our first tier, and get monthly live classes, full access to the creative archive, weekly sparks to keep your fire alive, and a community of fellow makers at the table with you. Or, you can take a deeper dive into The Inner Circle, giving you access to more engagement, behind-the-scenes insights, private interactive calls, and opportunities for direct mentorship. It’s the space where we move past inspiration and into true creative transformation. THE SALONTHE INNER CIRCLENext LIVE CLASS is Radiohead: Paranoid Android talking about creating human art in an inhuman world.