There are a lot of Super Hard problems where we do know why they are hard to solve. Quite a few of them in fact:
- How can we cure cancer?
- How can we maintain human biological hardware indefinitely?
- How can we build a human traversible wormhole?
- How can we build a dyson sphere?
- How can societies escape inadequate equilibria?
Are these perhaps boring, because the difficulty is well understood?
Would it be worthwhile to enumerate the various classes of Super Hard problems, to see if there are commonalities between them?
They are not boring, I am simply asking about some specific cluster of problems, and none of them belong to that cluster.
Ack, ok.
There are a lot of Super Hard problems where we do know why they are hard to solve. Quite a few of them in fact:
- How can we cure cancer?
- How can we maintain human biological hardware indefinitely?
- How can we build a human traversible wormhole?
- How can we build a dyson sphere?
- How can societies escape inadequate equilibria?
Are these perhaps boring, because the difficulty is well understood?
Would it be worthwhile to enumerate the various classes of Super Hard problems, to see if there are commonalities between them?
They are not boring, I am simply asking about some specific cluster of problems, and none of them belong to that cluster.
Ack, ok.