Re: Turing vs math

From: <GSLevy.domain.name.hidden>
Date: Wed, 27 Oct 1999 01:28:27 EDT

In a message dated 99-10-25 05:31:10 EDT, James Higgo writes:

> But 'this very universe' will indeed become very irregular in most branches
> - we just dont experience them because of WAP. You 'die' billions of times
> every microsecond.

I agree a lot with this. This version of the WAP is "LOCAL" kind of in the
sense of gauge theories, instead of global as the conventional WAP is
understood. This local WAP makes each consciousness the center of its own
frame of reference, that is its own rational and physical world, embedded in
the irrational and unphysical plenitude. That's why it is so hard to find
flying rabbits and fire breathing dragons in our universe. Their existence
would either violate the physical and rational laws that makes consciousness
possible, or would require so much complexity as to make their existence
improbable (except in Hollywood, California).

George Levy
Received on Tue Oct 26 1999 - 22:30:23 PDT

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