| Not sure the universe is incapable of doing this. The number of states a chess field can have is 13. It's either empty or has one of the 6 different pieces in black or white on it. So 13^64 is an upper limit for the number of positions. We could solve chess if we could put these 13^64 positions into a tree, right? 13^64 = 10^71. The number of atoms in the observable universe is estimated to be 10^80. So even the observable universe might be big enough to form this tree. Even if we use big clunky objects like atoms. We do not have any idea of the size of the unobservable universe. And I don't know how many states an atom can have. Who knows, maybe a single atom can solve chess if it's programmed correctly? According to quantum theory, pretty small objects like electrons can store and process an amazing (infinite?) amount of information in certain ways. |