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by throwaway81523
697 days ago
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I think something like this. Imagine a computer with two memory cells x and y, and a program that maintains the invariant x+y=5. That is information about the program and about the state of the machine: if x=2 then y=3, if x=20 then y=-15, etc. Now replace that program with an arbitrary Turing machine that can do pretty much anything with those memory cells, like set both of them to zero. You no longer have the information encoded in the former invariant. I.e. That information has been destroyed. The machinery of quantum mechanics (the standard kind with Hilbert spaces) maintains certain invariants that you can compute things from, but Wolfram's stuff can do pretty much anything. Thus, same idea. |
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