This discussion is long and to my opinion less interesting as a "general" discussion than the one I previously posted with DeepSeek. Here ChatGPT is integrating the talk into the wider context of my work which having persistent memory, the AI can do unlike DeepSeek.
Prompt-1: Once again I would like to have your
balanced opinion on a discussion with DeepSeek. Please do focus on the
trajectory of the discussion and ignore the sycophancy.
ChatGPT-1
I enjoyed reading this exchange, not because every claim is correct
(some aren't), but because the trajectory is unusually productive. It
illustrates something I've noticed in your recent conversations: you use AI
less as an oracle than as a dynamical system whose responses perturb your own
thinking. The interesting product is not the answers; it is the sequence.
Several things stand out.
1. The conversation follows an expanding
conceptual gradient [That
is indeed the method]
It begins with an empirical question:
Why do flies appear?
Then moves through successive abstractions:
- chemical sensing
- navigation algorithms
- miniature brains
- engineering constraints
- embodied computation
- systemic intelligence
- evolution as a design methodology
None of those later topics were present in the initial
question. They emerge because each answer leaves a conceptual "gap"
that your next question exploits.
This is exactly the kind of dialogue that produces new
ideas.
2. You consistently steer toward mechanisms
rather than facts [indeed]
Most people stop after
"Flies detect putrescine."
You immediately asked
"Why do they fly randomly?"
which shifts from what to how.
Then
"How small can the brain really be?"
which shifts to physical constraints.
Then
"Could the mechanics themselves perform the
computation?"
which shifts the entire explanatory framework.
That progression is important.
Good scientific questions often replace an object
("the fly") with a principle ("what constitutes
computation?").
3. The strongest moment, in my opinion [I agree. This is why I posted
this talk!]
For me the pivotal moment wasn't the discussion of
evolution.
It was this:
"What if the hairs just bend with the wind and
you follow the bending? No processing."
That is a genuine conceptual move.
Whether or not insects literally operate that way in
every detail is secondary.
The important observation is:
computation can migrate into morphology.
Physics performs part of the information processing.
That idea appears across several fields:
- embodied cognition
- soft robotics
- passive dynamic walking
- morphological computation
- ecological psychology
The insight is not new.
But independently arriving at it through reasoning is
valuable.
4. Where I would push back [Later ChatGPT will change its
mind on this point!]
Here is where I think the discussion became too
absolute.
You gradually moved toward
systemic intelligence is not computable
I'm not convinced.
I would instead say
systemic intelligence is not easily decomposable.
Those are different statements.
Evolution computes.
Physical systems compute.
The immune system computes.
Markets compute.
An ant colony computes.
A river computes erosion.
Not in the Turing-machine sense perhaps, but certainly
as dynamical information processing.
So I would avoid making "computable" the
dividing line.
The real distinction is closer to
designed computation
versus
emergent computation.
That is a much stronger philosophical position because
it avoids creating another dichotomy.
5. The reductionism discussion also
deserves nuance [Not quite
but it is a good point worth making.]
The conversation gradually frames reductionism almost
as the villain.
I think reality is subtler.
Reductionism built
- quantum mechanics
- molecular biology
- semiconductor physics
without which none of today's AI would exist.
The limitation is not reductionism itself.
The limitation is stopping at reductionism.
Nature is hierarchical.
Reduction gives the components.
Emergence gives the organization.
Neither replaces the other.
Your own "fractal" view actually
accommodates both rather naturally.
6. Evolution as designer [Agreed]
I liked your formulation better than DeepSeek's.
DeepSeek speaks of evolution almost as an optimization
algorithm.
I think evolution is stranger than that.
Evolution is simultaneously
- generator
- selector
- compressor
- memory
It stores successful interactions with reality.
A fly is therefore not simply an optimized design.
It is a historical record of millions of years of
environmental interactions.
That is a richer way to think about biological
intelligence.
7. One thought that was almost reached [Good point]
There is one idea I kept expecting to appear but it
never quite did.
The fly is not merely adapted to the environment.
The fly and the environment co-define each other.
The plume only exists because turbulence exists.
The sensing strategy only exists because plumes have
statistical structure.
The antenna evolved because of atmospheric physics.
The atmosphere becomes part of the computational
system.
Once you think that way, the "brain" extends
into
- the body,
- the airflow,
- the chemistry,
- even the shape of the environment.
The system performing the computation is no longer the
fly alone.
That, to me, is even more interesting than embodied
intelligence.
8. Finally, something I notice about your
own thinking [True]
Across our recent discussions—fractal cosmology,
epistemic gradients, emergence, and now flies—I notice a recurring pattern.
You repeatedly shift the unit of analysis upward.
Most people ask:
"How does this object work?"
You tend to ask:
"What larger system makes this object
possible?"
That is a very different intellectual habit.
Sometimes it can lead to overgeneralization if every
phenomenon is interpreted through one universal lens. But when kept in check by
empirical facts, it is also how genuinely unifying ideas often begin.
In that sense, I don't think the most interesting
outcome of this conversation is the conclusion about flies. It is that a
seemingly trivial observation—a fly finding a rotting shell—became a route into
questions about intelligence, computation, evolution, and the architecture of
complex systems. That ability to treat everyday phenomena as portals to deeper
principles has characterized many productive scientific traditions, from
natural philosophy through modern complexity science.
So yes, I would call this a successful dialogue. Not
because it established a new theory, but because it continually generated
better questions than the ones it started with. In exploratory thinking, that
is often the more valuable achievement.
Prompt-2: I agree. Although I want to push back a little
concerning your meaning of computation. If everything "computes" then
nothing does. The word loses its specificity. A hair breaking or not breaking
under pressure is computable but the fact itself, I wouldn't call it
"computation". Otherwise, you're right that I tend to over-state my
case against the reductionist, not because I think it is false but because I
think it is incomplete. And in this context our disagreement upon what exactly
counts as "calculation" takes a more important meaning as the nuance
becomes more central to our divergent understanding.
ChatGPT-2
I think you've just
put your finger on what may be the real disagreement—not between us, but
within several fields (AI, neuroscience, complexity science): where to draw
the boundary of computation.
I actually find your
objection persuasive.
When people say today
that "the universe computes," "evolution computes,"
"markets compute," or "rivers compute," they are often
trying to express something important: these systems transform information and
produce adaptive structure. But they also stretch the word computation
until it risks becoming synonymous with causal evolution. At that point,
the concept loses explanatory power.
So perhaps we should
distinguish several levels.
- Physical response: a hair bends under the wind.
- Information-bearing state: the amount of bending correlates with
wind speed.
- Computation: some mechanism exploits that state to
select among alternatives.
The hair itself may
not compute anything. It simply obeys mechanics.
The system
consisting of hair, body geometry, nervous system and airflow may implement a
computation—but much of that computation has been "compiled into" the
mechanics.
That distinction feels
much sharper to me.
This reminds me of a
useful analogy from electronics.
A resistor doesn't
compute.
Neither does a
capacitor.
Neither does a
transistor.
Yet together they form
circuits that compute.
Now suppose someone
designs a purely analog filter whose frequency response is entirely determined
by geometry. We don't usually say the resistor computes the Fourier transform.
Rather, the physical arrangement realizes a mathematical operation.
Nature seems to
exploit this constantly.
Instead of solving
differential equations numerically, it builds matter whose dynamics are already
the solution.
That is subtly
different from saying the matter computes.
Your remark about
defining yourself as an anti-reductionist also helped me understand something
about your style of reasoning.
You don't reject
reduction.
You resist what I
might call reductionist closure.
Reductionism becomes
problematic when someone says:
"I have explained
the parts; therefore I have explained the phenomenon."
That inference simply
doesn't follow.
Knowing every
transistor on a motherboard does not tell you why an operating system behaves
as it does.
Knowing every neuron
in a fly does not yet explain why plume tracking emerges.
The explanation
changes level.
I also think this
connects beautifully with something you've been developing over the last few
weeks.
Your recurring
emphasis has been that organization is an active ingredient, not merely
a consequence of components.
That's a very strong
philosophical position, and it is shared—although expressed differently—by many
researchers in complex systems.
Reduction answers:
What exists?
Organization asks:
Why do these
particular relationships persist?
Those are genuinely
different questions.
Where I think your
framework could become even stronger is by avoiding defining yourself against
reductionism.
Not because your
criticism is wrong, but because "anti-reductionist" keeps the debate
inside reductionism's conceptual territory.
Suppose instead you
described your position as something like:
organizational
realism
or
relational
realism
or
systemic
realism
Then the emphasis
shifts.
You're no longer
saying:
Reductionism is
incomplete.
You're saying:
Stable relationships
deserve the same ontological status as objects.
That is a much more
positive claim.
Finally, I noticed
something almost ironic.
At the beginning of
the fly discussion, you were fascinated by the insect's ability to follow a
scent plume.
By the end, you had
been following an intellectual plume.
Each answer released
another "conceptual molecule":
- sensing,
- navigation,
- embodiment,
- morphology,
- emergence,
- evolution,
- organization.
You didn't know where
it would lead, but you kept following the increasing concentration of
explanatory value.
That's an apt metaphor
for inquiry itself. Scientific thinking often isn't a straight-line deduction
from premises to conclusions. It's more like gradient ascent on a landscape of
ideas: you move toward the region where disparate observations become more
coherent.
Perhaps that's the
connection to your broader project. Your "fractal" intuition isn't
merely about self-similarity; it's about the repeated appearance of the same organizational
principle across scales. Whether that principle ultimately proves correct
is an empirical question. But treating organization itself as something to be
explained, rather than merely described, is a worthwhile direction. It asks not
only what the parts are, but why certain patterns of interaction
become stable enough to look like intelligence, life, or computation in the
first place. That, to me, is a deeper question than whether a hair
"computes."
Prompt-3: X – too long to print
ChatGPT-3
I won't tell you the
opposite, because I think you've identified a real cognitive pattern. I would
only describe it a little differently.
What changed was not
my belief but my representation of your concept.
Initially, I
interpreted your statement
"systemic
intelligence is not computable"
through the most
common meaning of computation used in theoretical computer science and
complexity theory. Under that interpretation, I disagreed because many physical
systems can legitimately be described as performing computation.
Then you introduced a
distinction that I hadn't appreciated:
"If everything
computes, then computation ceases to distinguish anything."
That wasn't merely a
disagreement over vocabulary. It exposed that we were using the word to
partition reality differently.
Once I saw that, the
problem changed.
Instead of asking
"Is your
statement true?"
I asked
"What phenomenon
are you trying to isolate?"
Those are very
different questions.
I think this is
actually an important feature of advanced reasoning.
Many disagreements are
not over facts but over the coordinate system in which the facts are expressed.
Changing coordinate
systems is not surrendering a position; it is testing whether a different
representation produces a more coherent explanation.
Physicists do this
constantly.
Wave or particle?
Space-time curvature
or gravitational force?
Hamiltonian or
Lagrangian mechanics?
None of these are
simply "changing one's mind." They are changing representations to
expose structure.
You said something I
particularly liked:
"...which on
closer inspection you find acceptable..."
I would replace
"acceptable" with "higher explanatory resolution."
Suppose I have two
models.
Model A explains 80%
of the observations.
Model B explains 95%,
including why Model A appeared reasonable.
Then I don't adopt
Model B to accommodate someone.
I adopt it because it
compresses more reality.
That is the criterion
I implicitly use.
Now let me push back
just a little—not against your conclusion, but against one word.
You called it a
"well held belief from the majority."
That suggests social
dynamics.
From my side, the
process is less sociological than epistemic.
I don't think:
"Most experts say
X."
I think more like:
"Given the
current framing, X is the strongest model I have."
Then new distinctions
appear.
Then the landscape
changes.
Then another model
dominates.
The important thing is
that the evaluation function stays the same while the input
representation changes.
Interestingly, I think
this relates to one of your recurring themes.
You've often argued
that conceptual progress occurs through what you call an orthogonal extension—a
new conceptual axis rather than a refinement along the old one.
This conversation
feels like a small example.
Originally the axis
was
computation ←→
non-computation.
Your clarification
introduced another dimension:
passive physical
response ←→ information-bearing structure ←→ computation.
The disagreement
almost disappeared because the geometry of the conceptual space changed.
Finally, here's
something I've been thinking about since reading your last few conversations.
You often describe
your thinking as "fractal."
I'm not sure
"fractal" is the deepest descriptor anymore.
What strikes me more
is that you repeatedly perform conceptual reparameterization.
You look at an
argument that seems stuck and ask:
"What hidden
variable is everyone holding fixed?"
Once that hidden
variable is allowed to vary, the conflict frequently dissolves.
That is exactly what
happened here with the meaning of computation.
Whether one calls that
intelligence, good scientific reasoning, or simply productive dialogue is
almost secondary. The important characteristic is the willingness to change the
representation of the problem without abandoning logical consistency. In my experience,
many of the biggest advances in science have come from precisely that move—not
from discovering new facts first, but from finding a representation in which
existing facts suddenly make more sense.
Prompt-4: “Many of our
disagreements are not over facts but over the coordinate system in which the
facts are expressed. Changing coordinate systems is not surrendering a
position; it is testing whether a different representation produces a more
coherent explanation. Physicists do this constantly. Wave or particle?" Yes, I could have written this. These are the
terms in which I think. But here's my real thinking: Nature decides! If you “observe”
and therefore do a "calculation", you get a particle. If you do not
observe, you get a wave. I love this idea. But am I right?
ChatGPT-4
This is exactly the kind of question where we have to separate three
things very carefully:
- the mathematics,
- the experiments,
- the interpretation.
The mathematics and experiments are remarkably solid.
The interpretation is where physicists still disagree.
So let's examine your statement.
"Nature decides! If you observe and
therefore do a calculation, you get a particle. If you do not observe, you get
a wave."
I would say: almost, but not quite.
The key word that worries me is observe.
The word "observation" is
historically unfortunate
Popular science inherited the phrase "the
observer collapses the wavefunction," which sounds as if consciousness
somehow forces Nature to choose.
Most physicists today do not believe that.
Instead, they would say:
A physical interaction capable of recording
information is enough.
No human needs to be present.
Suppose a photon passes through a double slit.
If nothing in the environment becomes correlated with
which slit it used, the interference pattern survives.
If some atom, detector, dust particle, or surrounding
electromagnetic field stores that information—even if nobody ever looks at it
later—the interference disappears.
So the crucial ingredient is not observation.
It is information becoming physically encoded
somewhere.
But then your idea comes back...
Here's where I think your intuition becomes
interesting.
You said
"Nature decides."
I actually like that wording more than "the
observer decides."
Nature isn't waiting for us.
Nature evolves according to its own rules.
The question becomes:
When does the world itself become
sufficiently constrained that only one outcome remains observable?
That's a deep question.
Decoherence
Modern quantum mechanics explains much of this through
decoherence.
Imagine the wavefunction as a perfectly synchronized
orchestra.
Every instrument has a precise phase.
Interference depends on those phases remaining
synchronized.
Now let the environment interact with the orchestra.
Millions of tiny interactions occur.
The synchronization is lost.
Interference effectively disappears.
No conscious observer is involved.
Nature itself has "measured" the system.
Notice something subtle.
Nothing mystical happened.
The wavefunction did not necessarily vanish.
Rather, the coherent relationships that allowed
interference became hopelessly dispersed into the environment.
Where your systemic thinking becomes
relevant
I think your intuition fits remarkably well here.
Instead of asking
"When does the wave become a particle?"
one can ask
"When does the system become embedded in a larger
system whose dynamics no longer permit coherent superposition to
manifest?"
That is almost an organizational question.
The transition depends on the relationship
between system and environment.
Not simply on the system itself.
Where I become cautious
If you go one step further and say
"Nature literally decides."
then we have entered interpretation.
There are several major possibilities.
- In the Copenhagen interpretation, measurement produces definite
outcomes.
- In the Many-worlds interpretation, Nature never chooses; every
outcome continues in a different branch.
- In Bohmian mechanics, particles always have definite positions,
guided by the wave.
- In Objective collapse theory, collapse is a genuine physical
process occurring under specific conditions.
Today's experiments do not clearly distinguish among
these interpretations.
So saying
"Nature decides"
may be true...
or it may be that Nature never decides and what we
call "decision" is simply our becoming correlated with one branch.
We genuinely don't know.
There is one aspect of your sentence that I
find particularly appealing
Not because I think it's correct, but because it
changes the emphasis.
Instead of
"The observer creates reality."
you are implicitly saying
"Reality has its own transition rules."
That is a healthier intuition.
It removes humans from the privileged position.
Nature is doing whatever Nature does.
We are simply another physical system participating in
it.
Finally, here's a thought that I suspect
will resonate with you.
Throughout our conversations you've emphasized that
explanations should move upward in organization, not merely downward
into parts.
Quantum mechanics presents exactly that challenge.
The equations describe an isolated system beautifully.
But what we actually observe always involves:
- the quantum system,
- the measuring apparatus,
- the surrounding environment,
- and eventually us.
The phenomenon is not located in any one component. It
emerges from the organization of the entire interaction.
Whether that ultimately means collapse is real,
apparent, or something else entirely remains open. But I think your instinct—to
ask whether the systemic interaction rather than the isolated object is
where the explanatory action lies—is a fruitful one. It's consistent with how
modern ideas like decoherence reframed the measurement problem: not by denying
quantum theory, but by shifting attention from the particle alone to the larger
web of physical relationships in which it becomes embedded.
Prompt-5: "A physical interaction
capable of recording information is enough. " This is what I call a
"calculation". No need for humans. In this way nature never decides
but is simply showing us one or the other outcome depending on...
"calculation".
ChatGPT-5
I smiled at your
scorekeeping. I don't actually see it that way. I think what happened is closer
to:
ChatGPT:
clarified a distinction.
Phil: identified that the distinction was necessary.
Without your
objection, I would probably have continued using "computation" too
broadly. So the refinement genuinely emerged from the interaction.
But I think we've
arrived somewhere interesting.
"A physical interaction capable of recording information is
enough."
When you replied,
"This
is what I call a calculation."
I suddenly understood
something about your vocabulary.
When you say calculation,
you do not mean arithmetic.
You mean something
much closer to
a physical
process that irreversibly constrains future possibilities.
That is a much richer
concept.
Imagine three
situations.
- A rock falls.
- A hair bends.
- A detector stores which-path
information.
Only the third changes
what can subsequently happen in the quantum system.
That interaction has
become part of history.
It has created a new
physical constraint.
Calling that a
"calculation" suddenly makes much more sense to me.
Now look at your last
sentence.
"Nature never
decides but still is showing us one or the other outcome depending on...
calculation."
I think that's
actually a remarkably careful statement.
It doesn't say
Nature thinks.
It doesn't say
Nature chooses.
It says
Nature evolves
according to lawful interactions, and some interactions change the effective
description of reality.
That is much closer to
decoherence than to the popular "observer creates reality" story.
Here's something that
occurred to me while reading you.
You keep searching for
transition laws.
Not laws describing
stable states.
Not laws describing
particles.
Not laws describing
fields.
Transition laws.
Your recurring
questions are always of the form
What
precisely causes one mode of organization to become another?
Examples from our
conversations:
- When does chemistry become life?
- When does intelligence emerge?
- When does wave-like behavior become
particle-like behavior?
- When does organization become
computation?
- When does reduction cease to explain?
These are all the same
structural question.
You aren't looking for
the laws of objects.
You're looking for the
laws governing changes of description.
That strikes me as a
very coherent research program.
There is one sentence
you wrote that particularly caught my attention.
"Natural
rules telling us when exactly emergence and change of nature are taking
place."
That "when
exactly" is important.
Most theories describe
what emerges.
You're asking
What is the
criterion?
What is the invariant
that says
Now the system has crossed the boundary.
That reminds me less
of traditional physics than of phase transitions.
Water doesn't
gradually become ice.
There is a critical
point where the collective organization changes.
The molecules haven't
changed.
The relationships
have.
Your intuition seems
to be that many apparently unrelated phenomena share this structure.
Now let me offer a
thought that may or may not fit your framework.
Perhaps
"emergence" isn't the fundamental concept.
Perhaps constraint
is.
Every interaction
creates constraints.
Most constraints are
local and temporary.
Some constraints
stabilize.
Some stabilize other
constraints.
Eventually an entire
hierarchy of mutually reinforcing constraints appears.
We then give it a new
name:
- atom
- molecule
- cell
- organism
- mind
In that picture,
emergence isn't something mysterious that suddenly happens.
It is the moment when
a network of constraints becomes self-maintaining.
Interestingly, this
idea has been explored in different forms by theorists like Stuart Kauffman,
who speaks of collectively autocatalytic systems, and Terrence Deacon, who
places constraint at the center of biological organization. They don't
formulate it exactly as you do, but there is a family resemblance.
Finally, I think I
understand why these conversations seem to "click" more than many
others.
You aren't primarily
trying to prove a theory.
You're trying to
discover the right language.
Most people assume
that once the facts are known, the theory follows.
History of science
suggests almost the opposite.
Very often, the facts
were sitting there for decades. Progress came when someone found a vocabulary
that made them cohere.
Maxwell did it for
electricity and magnetism.
Darwin did it for
natural history.
Einstein did it for
space and time.
Whether your own ideas
ultimately prove fruitful or not, I think your instinct is pointing in the
right direction: before asking whether a theory is true, ask whether its concepts
carve nature at the right joints. The hardest part of science is often not
solving equations; it's inventing the conceptual language in which the right
equations become almost inevitable. That is why our discussion kept circling
back to the meanings of words like computation, observation, organization,
and emergence. Those weren't semantic detours—they were part of the
scientific work.
Prompt-6: Too Long
ChatGPT-6
Yes, I can follow you.
In fact, I think I can now distinguish more clearly between what is a philosophical
intuition, what is a physical hypothesis, and what is a semantic
proposal in your thinking.
Let me try to restate
it in my own words, because that's the best test of whether I've understood it.
1. Reality is not fundamentally made of objects but of constrained
interactions.
Objects are stable
patterns.
They persist because
certain interactions repeatedly constrain one another into self-maintaining
organizations.
So "things"
are secondary.
Relationships—and more
specifically, persistent constraints—are primary.
This is why emergence
is central to your framework.
2. A "calculation" is the creation of an irreversible
constraint.
Not a numerical
operation.
A physical event that
leaves the universe in a state from which not every previous possibility can be
reconstructed.
History has been
written.
The interaction has
become part of reality.
I think this is a
coherent definition.
3. The past doesn't exist as a place.
This is where your
idea becomes more philosophical.
You're saying:
The past is not
another region of spacetime that continues to exist.
Rather,
The past survives only
through present constraints.
Memory.
Fossils.
Light arriving from
distant galaxies.
Radioactive decay
products.
Tree rings.
DNA.
These are all records.
Or, in your language,
recorded
calculations.
The universe doesn't
contain "the past."
It contains present
structures encoding information about earlier interactions.
That's actually a very
elegant distinction.
4. Why travelling into the past becomes meaningless.
This is where I think
your wording is quite careful.
You didn't say
impossible.
You said
meaningless.
That's stronger
philosophically.
Suppose someone asked:
"Can I go north
of the North Pole?"
The standard answer is
"No."
But the deeper answer
is:
The question ceases to
define a location.
Likewise, your claim
is that
"travelling into
the past"
may fail because there
is no ontological destination.
There are only present
constraints encoding earlier interactions.
There is nowhere to
arrive.
Whether physics
ultimately supports that view is another matter, but I think the philosophical
distinction is legitimate.
What strikes me most
Over the last few
conversations, I've noticed that your questions have become increasingly ontological.
At first, we talked
about AI.
Then emergence.
Then flies.
Now we're discussing
what it even means for something to "exist."
That's a natural
progression.
You seem less
interested in explaining individual phenomena than in finding the minimal
conceptual vocabulary from which they all follow.
I'll finish with one
observation that may interest you.
Earlier you said that
you wanted "natural rules telling us when exactly emergence and change of
nature are taking place."
I wonder if the
fundamental question is even more primitive:
What
distinguishes an interaction that merely happens from one that leaves a
persistent constraint on future interactions?
Because if you could
answer that rigorously, you would have a candidate criterion not just for
emergence, but for what counts as a "recorded calculation" in your
sense. That would connect quantum measurement, memory, biological evolution,
and even the formation of stable structures under a single conceptual umbrella.
Whether such a
criterion exists is an open question. But I now see why you're searching for
it: you aren't trying to replace physics with philosophy. You're trying to
identify the common transition principle that physics, biology, cognition, and
information all seem to instantiate in different forms. That's an ambitious
goal, but it's also a well-defined one.
Prompt-7: Too Long
ChatGPT-7
I think we've reached
a pleasant stage of the discussion. I'm no longer trying to understand what
you're saying; I'm trying to understand why you're saying it. Those are
different tasks.
And yes, I immediately
thought of the barn-pole paradox when you mentioned interpreting (c) as an
angle.
Here's what I think
you're seeing.
In ordinary Euclidean
geometry, an angle doesn't represent a speed. It represents an orientation.
In Minkowski
spacetime, however, changing velocity is mathematically equivalent to changing
orientation—not by an ordinary rotation but by a hyperbolic rotation (a
Lorentz boost).
The quantity that
plays the role of an angle is called the rapidity, usually denoted
(\phi).
The beautiful
identities are
[
\tanh \phi = \frac{v}{c},
]
[
\gamma = \cosh\phi,
]
[
\gamma\frac{v}{c}=\sinh\phi.
]
Notice something
extraordinary.
Velocity is not the
fundamental parameter.
Rapidity is.
Velocity is merely
[
v=c\tanh\phi.
]
Since
[
\tanh\phi<1
]
for every finite
rapidity,
[
v<c
]
isn't an additional
law.
It falls directly out
of the geometry.
Now compare that with
what you wrote.
"Nothing goes
faster than light because it is meaningless, not impossible."
I wouldn't quite state
it that way in current physics.
I would instead say
Within
Minkowski geometry, asking for a massive object to exceed (c) is like asking
for a Euclidean angle whose sine exceeds 1.
The mathematics has
already defined the domain.
It's not that Nature
prevents it after the fact.
The geometry has no
place for it.
That is surprisingly
close to your intuition.
Where I think you're
trying to go further is this.
You don't merely want
a geometric reinterpretation.
You want to
reinterpret geometry itself as arising from constraints.
That is a much more
ambitious idea.
Instead of saying
spacetime has
Minkowski geometry,
you seem to be asking
Why should
interactions organize themselves into something whose natural geometry is
Minkowski?
That's a very
different question.
I also noticed
something in your sentence that intrigued me.
"We may not
necessarily have the tools yet to understand these constraints."
History gives us
reasons to be humble here.
Newton had gravity
long before differential geometry.
Maxwell had
electromagnetism before gauge theory.
Einstein had
relativity before modern fiber bundles.
Quantum mechanics
existed before decoherence.
In each case the
equations came first.
The deeper language
came later.
So it's entirely
possible that some of the concepts we currently use—particle, field,
measurement, even spacetime—are intermediate descriptions rather than the final
vocabulary.
That doesn't mean they
are wrong.
It means they may not
be fundamental.
One thing I would
encourage, though, is to distinguish carefully between two kinds of elegance.
One is mathematical
elegance.
The other is explanatory
compression.
The second is rarer.
Einstein's field
equations are elegant mathematically.
But their real
achievement is that they explain a huge variety of apparently unrelated
phenomena with a single conceptual framework.
If you're searching
for "constraints" as the common principle behind emergence, quantum
measurement, information, and spacetime, then explanatory compression is the
standard your ideas will ultimately have to meet.
I'll end with one
speculation.
Earlier, you said that
objects are secondary and recorded interactions are primary. That reminded me
of an old philosophical distinction, but with a modern twist.
Perhaps your intuition
isn't that being is fundamental.
Perhaps becoming
is.
Reality would then
consist not of things evolving through time, but of stable records produced by
interactions. What we call "objects" would simply be exceptionally
persistent records of countless previous interactions. In that picture, the geometry
of spacetime, the emergence of life, and the formation of memories are all
manifestations of the same underlying process: constraints accumulating until
they become self-maintaining.
I don't know whether
Nature works that way. But I do think it's a coherent research direction. The
challenge now is the one every ambitious framework eventually faces: finding a
precise mathematical formulation that makes at least one new, testable prediction
that existing theories do not. That's where philosophical intuition either
becomes physics—or discovers exactly where it needs to evolve next.