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tom.stoer said:You wouldn't have a discrete structure and diffeomorphism invariance 'at the same time'; mathematically diffeomorphism invariance would reduce the smooth structure to a kind of discrete set set of equivalence classes of smooth spacetimes.
Even though I found the Achim Kempf paper (and his PIRSA talk) interesting and convincing at the time, still I am inclined to agree with Tom view. Kempf's idea was a conjecture--it could be that discrete and continuous representations are on equal footing.
But Tom is talking about how reality looks after diff-invariance is "factored out". It may be a deeper picture than Kempf's. I don't feel sure, but if I had to choose I think I would go with this "discrete set of equivalence classes" idea. Just my two cents.
atoms. orbitals. Fock space...these are fundamentally discrete, could geometric relations also be?
Kempf has some good points about information/sampling theory though