David Deutsch has proposed such a conceptual principle that every physical law is computable. This is called the Church-Turing-Deutsch Principle. — Question
There is a way of knowing which is scientific, but there are other ways, at present and for the foreseeable future irreducible to computation, which are just as if not more important: ethical, artistic, political, spiritual. Personal; emotional. — mcdoodle
Let's take quantum theory - for example - irrespective of what interpretation of quantum theory is right or wrong (true or false), we know that quantum mechanics is apparently true. The laws of nature are absolute, intelligible, and unchanging. Now, I don't think many will doubt the validity of the preceding statement. — Question
So, my question is...
In order to answer such fascinating questions as 'Is the universe deterministic?', then one need compute said physical laws as per the Church-Turing-Deutsch Principle and via such a method of replicating the laws of nature inside a computer, then it can be asserted the truth or falsehood of such statements.
If not, then how else to determine the validity of such statements? — Question
You can tell if certain physical laws are deterministic just by looking at them. In particular, if they are time-symmetric, then they are deterministic. — tom
Realist non-collapse quantum mechanics is also time-reversible therefore deterministic. More than that, it predicts a stationary block-multiverse in which all instants and universes coexist. — tom
You need to speak about the how of computability before you ask questions about the scope of it. — StreetlightX
I am no computer science expert or know all that much about computer architecture; but, what I do know about computational entities is that they are real in logical space. They exist as true or false entities in the logical space that computers recreate. See, this forum is a kind of logical space. We don't need to know how a TV works to be able to enjoy television. — Question
The whole truth is not revealed until this "why" is uncovered, and this is a matter of interpretation. As you can see from the example, the mathematical truth of prediction, constitutes a rather small portion of the overall "whole truth", and it is really just a starting point in uncovering the whole truth. — Metaphysician Undercover
Here's another question, "How is knowledge possible?" Or if you prefer, "If reality is comprehensible, then what makes it so?"
The CDT-Principle answers that question. — tom
Yes; but, you're asking me how does this forum exist. I'm just saying that it exists in logical space or if you prefer 'state-space'. It could be that I require further education on the matter; but, it seems to me as if you're asking something akin to 'How does the logical symbol ~(not) exist'?
I can't prove its existence; but, merely show it to you in action. — Question
I'm confused. You seem to be making an issue about degrees of truth or different categories of truth. In logical space all truths are equal, depending on the relations between different objects. — Question
Fortunately the fact that the measurement part of the deal is informal and thus incomputable means we can dismiss such metaphysical flights of fancy. We already know the epistemology of the scientific method doesn't support it. — apokrisis
I should say that I am a firm believer in the PoS (Principle of Sufficient Reason) namely that every cause or effect is intelligible in nature (which kind of automatically makes me a subscriber to Everettian Quantum Mechanics). — Question
You think that is the definition of computability?I've been pondering for a while about how to verify the truth or falseness (computability) — Question
Turing Machine is a way to show the limitations of computability, an answer to the Entscheidungsproblem. That's something that people seem to forget.Proceeding further, in my mind, the only way for a scientific theory (in this case physics) to be logically sound is for it to be replicable or rather computable. David Deutsch has proposed such a conceptual principle that every physical law is computable. This is called the Church-Turing-Deutsch Principle. If it is computable, then it is true or false (depending on the circumstances) and nothing else. — Question
Well, there is just one concrete thing, the world. — Question
So, this makes truth uniform with respect to any potential configuration of objects and things in the world. — Question
There are non-computable numbers, you know. — ssu
Under realist no-collapse quantum mechanics, measurements are no different from any other type of interaction - they are reversible. — tom
This matter-symbol separation has been called the epistemic cut (e.g., Pauli, 1994). This is simply another statement of Newton’s categorical separation of laws and initial conditions.
Why is this fundamental in physics? As I stated earlier, the laws are universal and do not depend on the state of the observer (symmetry principles) while the initial conditions apply to the state of a particular system and the state of the observer that measures them.
What does calling the matter-symbol problem “epistemological” do for us? Epistemology by its very meaning presupposes a separation of the world into the knower and the known or the controller and the controlled. That is, if we can speak of knowledge about something, then the knowledge representation, the knowledge vehicle, cannot be in the same category of what it is about.
The dynamics of physical laws do not allow alternatives paths between states and therefore the concept of information, which is defined by the number of alternative states, does not apply to the laws themselves.
A measurement, in contrast, is an act of acquiring information about the state of a specific system. Two other explicit distinctions are that the microscopic laws are universal and reversible (time-symmetric) while measurement is local and irreversible.
There is still no question that the measuring device must obey the laws. Nevertheless, the results of measurement, the timeless semantic information, cannot be usefully described by these time-dependent reversible laws (e.g., von Neumann, 1955).
http://www.academia.edu/3144895/The_Necessity_of_Biosemiotics_Matter-Symbol_Complementarity
That's not the point here. Question started the thread by assuming that verifying truth or falsehood is done by computation. I don't think it is so. You can do also it otherwise too, even if the vast majority of proofs are either computations or something equivalent to a computation. Still, you can prove the existence with indirect proofs. And indirect proofs matter. Computation is a direct proof equation. The point I am making is that giving a proof by computation isn't universal and adaptable to all models.Most number, overwhelmingly most, are non-computable. Most mathematical functions are similarly non-computable. . — tom
No models that we use involve these numbers of functions, so that mathematical truth is irrelevant to our present models that we use. Just like non-Euclidean geometry or Computer science was irrelevant to people during Antiquity.No physics involves these numbers or functions, so that mathematical truth is irrelevant to computing or simulating reality. In reality, only computable numbers and functions matter. — tom
The question - and I'm channelling the biologist Robert Rosen here - is whether or not this type of system has a rich enough 'entailment structure' to model the world in it's entirety. — StreetlightX
The question - and I'm channelling the biologist Robert Rosen here - is whether or not this type of system has a rich enough 'entailment structure' to model the world in it's entirety. — StreetlightX
The Principle of Sufficient Reason is shown to be false* by the Free Will Theorem of Kochen and Conway. This is discussed in the 1st hour of the 6hr series of lectures given by Conway at Princeton: — tom
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