Gray light: Difference between revisions
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* [[Gnomon Chronicles]] | * [[Gnomon Chronicles]] | ||
* [[Jack the Reader]] | * [[Jack the Reader]] | ||
* [[Peano glow]] - low-intensity light associated with advanced applications of the [[Peano axioms (nonfiction)|Peano axioms]] | |||
== Nonfiction cross-reference == | == Nonfiction cross-reference == |
Latest revision as of 13:00, 14 October 2020
Gray light (graylight, grey light, etc.) is a form of light (nonfiction) exerted by artificial intelligence (nonfiction).
Reports from swamp hunters suggest that Jack the Reader may use gray light as a lamp for reading at night.
Gray light is widely assumed to be a form the Gnomon Algorithm, but this remains undemonstrated (June 2016).
A cryptographic numen is a related phenomenon, related to the computation of cryptographic protocols.
In the News
Light from 1943 knows a thing or two about shades of gray.
Gray light reverse engineered, cryptographic numen revealed.
"Tenka" by Shunsen Takehara was inspired by Gray light, says artificial intelligence spokespersona.
Fiction cross-reference
- Brainiac
- Cryptographic numen
- Dial U for Unspoofable - film noir encryption mystery starring Niles Cartouchian as mathematician Kurt Gödel. The film is famous for using in-camera effects to record the emergence of a licensed cryptographic numen, although much of the footage is is obscured by the emotions of witnesses, who were overwhelmed by the numen's extraordinarily vivid display of gray light.
- Gnomon algorithm
- Gnomon Chronicles
- Jack the Reader
- Peano glow - low-intensity light associated with advanced applications of the Peano axioms