"And although it will no doubt be very difficult to prove, it seems likely that this Turing machine will in the end turn out to be universal."
So I wrote on page 709 of A New Kind of Science (NKS).
I had searched the computational universe for the simplest possible universal Turing machine. And I had found a candidate--that my intuition told me was likely to be universal. But I was not sure.
And so as part of commemorating the fifth anniversary of A New Kind of Science on May 14 this year, we announced a $25,000 prize for determining whether or not that Turing machine is in fact universal.
I had no idea how long it would take before the prize was won. A month? A year? A decade? A century? Perhaps the question was even formally undecidable (say from the usual axioms of mathematics).
But today I am thrilled to be able to announce that after only five months the prize is won--and we have answer: the Turing machine is in fact universal!
Alex Smith--a 20-year-old undergraduate from Birmingham, UK--has produced a 40-page proof.
I'm pleased that my intuition was correct. But more importantly, we now have another piece of evidence for the very general Principle of Computational Equivalence (PCE) that I introduced in A New Kind of Science.
We are also at the end of a quest that has spanned more than half a century to find the very simplest universal Turing machine.
Read Full text at:http://blog.wolfram.com/2007/10/the_prize_is_won_the_simplest.html
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