Genius: Stephen Wolfram, Ph.D.
Infosecurity.US continues our Genius Series, this time with a truly gifted and brilliant scientist: Stephen Wolfram, Ph.D.
Dr. Wolfram is the creator of Mathematica (now in it’s 6th Version), the author of A New Kind of Science, and the CEO of Wolfram Research. He is the youngest recipient of a MacArthur Prize Fellowship, and successfully defended his dissertation in theoretical physics from Cal Tech by the age of 20.
A short snippet of Dr. Wolfram’s bio appears after the page break, along with a video.
From his official About page: “Stephen Wolfram is a scientist, author, and business leader. He is the creator of Mathematica, the author of A New Kind of Science, and the founder and CEO of Wolfram Research. His career has been characterized by a sequence of original and significant achievements.
Born in London in 1959, Wolfram was educated at Eton, Oxford, and Caltech. He published his first scientific paper at the age of 15, and had received his Ph.D. in theoretical physics from Caltech by the age of 20. Wolfram’s early scientific work was mainly in high-energy physics, quantum field theory, and cosmology, and included several now-classic results. Having started to use computers in 1973, Wolfram rapidly became a leader in the emerging field of scientific computing, and in 1979 he began the construction of SMP–the first modern computer algebra system–which he released commercially in 1981.
In recognition of his early work in physics and computing, Wolfram became in 1981 the youngest recipient of a MacArthur Prize Fellowship. Late in 1981 Wolfram then set out on an ambitious new direction in science aimed at understanding the origins of complexity in nature. Wolfram’s first key idea was to use computer experiments to study the behavior of simple computer programs known as cellular automata. And starting in 1982 this allowed him to make a series of startling discoveries about the origins of complexity. The papers Wolfram published quickly had a major impact, and laid the groundwork for the emerging field that Wolfram called “complex systems research.” “
- Stephen Wolfram
- Stephen Wolfram, Ph.D
- Mathematica
- Wolfram Awards Undergrad $25,000 for Identifying Simplest Computer
- Wolfram’s 2,3 Turing Machine Is Universal
- O’Reilly School of Technology + Mathematica
- Simple Turing machine Capable of Solving Any Computational Problem
- Wolfram to host HPC services in the cloud

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