Last year the Foundational
Questions Institute's third essay contest posed the following question
to physicists and philosophers: “Is Reality Digital or Analog?”
The
organizers expected entrants to come down on the side of digital. After
all, the word “quantum” in quantum physics
connotes “discrete” —hence, “digital”. Many of the best essays held,
however, that the world is analog. Among them was the entry by David
Tong, who shared the second-place prize. The article here is a version
of his essay.
In the late 1800s the famous german mathematician Leopold Kronecker
proclaimed, “God made the integers, all else is the work of man.” He
believed that whole numbers play a fundamental role in mathematics. For
today's physicists, the quote has a different resonance. It ties in with
a belief that has become increasingly common over the past several
decades: that nature is, at heart, discrete—that the building blocks of
matter and of spacetime can be counted out, one by one. This idea goes
back to the ancient Greek atomists but has extra potency in the digital
age. Many physicists have come to think of the natural world as a vast
computer described by discrete bits of information, with the laws of
physics an algorithm, like the green digital rain seen by Neo at the end
of the 1999 film The Matrix.
Read more...
http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/266404069?count=20&q=physics&client_source=feedzilla_widget&order=relevance&format=json&sb=1
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