- #36
Fra
- 4,219
- 637
Perhaps by relaxing the fundamental status of these things I think you can have both emergent :) In the information view, I see both locality and "effective realism" as emergent in special cases.
I think of the processing indexing, and reindexing of events, naturally leads to a locality. Rather than thinking that remote points doesn't affect each other because of locality, one could also imagine that the fact that they don't effect each other (in a particular way) is why they are considered to be far away. If the spacetime is emergent this way, then persistent apparent non-local interactions should deform spacetime in direction of restoring locality, similary to that statistical noise in any direction doesn't change the average, but if odd things start repeating itself, it's no longer odd and the distributions adapt although slow due to inertia against revision.
In the topic of information geometry,the information can induce a distance metric.
"information distance is measured in units of the local uncertainty"
From Information Geometry to Newtonian Dynamics
-- http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/0710/0710.1071v1.pdf
Ariel Caticha share a similar spirit and he toys with allowing information measures to induce a distance metric. I read some of his papers on entropy dynamics and I like his basic spirit, but I didn't understand/agree on his choice of measure. I think his ultimate goal is to derive GR from some universal rules of inference.
http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/0710/0710.1071v1.pdf
Since QM is easier to get into an "information theoretic form", if we could also find classical GR in this form, the unification might be easier to see.
I don't see Ariels papers as the ultimate answers, but they do illustrate a deep suggestive connection and general direction of research. And this I share.
/Fredrik
I think of the processing indexing, and reindexing of events, naturally leads to a locality. Rather than thinking that remote points doesn't affect each other because of locality, one could also imagine that the fact that they don't effect each other (in a particular way) is why they are considered to be far away. If the spacetime is emergent this way, then persistent apparent non-local interactions should deform spacetime in direction of restoring locality, similary to that statistical noise in any direction doesn't change the average, but if odd things start repeating itself, it's no longer odd and the distributions adapt although slow due to inertia against revision.
In the topic of information geometry,the information can induce a distance metric.
"information distance is measured in units of the local uncertainty"
From Information Geometry to Newtonian Dynamics
-- http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/0710/0710.1071v1.pdf
Ariel Caticha share a similar spirit and he toys with allowing information measures to induce a distance metric. I read some of his papers on entropy dynamics and I like his basic spirit, but I didn't understand/agree on his choice of measure. I think his ultimate goal is to derive GR from some universal rules of inference.
http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/0710/0710.1071v1.pdf
Since QM is easier to get into an "information theoretic form", if we could also find classical GR in this form, the unification might be easier to see.
I don't see Ariels papers as the ultimate answers, but they do illustrate a deep suggestive connection and general direction of research. And this I share.
/Fredrik