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Revision as of 22:41, 12 September 2004 edit134.124.56.187 (talk) Fredkin was misspelled as Frenkin← Previous edit Revision as of 19:06, 13 September 2004 edit undoMichael Hardy (talk | contribs)Administrators210,279 editsNo edit summaryNext edit →
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Digital philosophy is a new movement in philosophy advocated by prominent scientists such as Edward Fredkin, ], and G.J. Chaitin. It is basically a modern re-interpretation of ]'s ], as it substitutes the monad with ] ]. Digital physics conjectures that the universe is a special type of ] that is Turing complete. '''Digital philosophy''' is a new movement in ] advocated by prominent scientists such as ], ], and ]. It is basically a modern re-interpretation of ]'s ], as it substitutes the ] with ] ]. Digital physics conjectures that the universe is a special type of ] that is Turing complete.


The digital approach in metaphysics promises to solve the hard problems in philosophy of mind and physics, since the mind can be given a computational treatment following the footsteps of Leibniz, and dispenses with the non-deterministic essentialism of (Copenhagen interpretation of) quantum theory. In a digital universe, existence is equivalent to computation, and so is thought. Thus computation is the single substance of a monist metaphysics, while subjectivity is constructed through universal computation. (This intriguing approach to epistemology has been dubbed Multism, since it posits the existence of multiple universes.) The digital approach in ] promises to solve the hard problems in ] and ], since the mind can be given a ]al treatment following the footsteps of Leibniz, and dispenses with the non-deterministic essentialism of (Copenhagen interpretation of) quantum theory. In a digital universe, existence is equivalent to computation, and so is thought. Thus computation is the single substance of a ] metaphysics, while subjectivity is constructed through universal computation. (This intriguing approach to epistemology has been dubbed Multism, since it posits the existence of multiple universes.)


There is a newsgroup called sci.physics.discrete and two mailing lists, namely digitalphilosophy and digitalphysics, on yahoogroups.com There is a newsgroup called sci.physics.discrete and two mailing lists, namely digitalphilosophy and digitalphysics, on yahoogroups.com
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-- talk about multism, algorithmic information theory, etc. -- -- talk about multism, algorithmic information theory, etc. --


==See also==
Links:


* ]


==External links==
--
Eray Ozkural


See ].

Revision as of 19:06, 13 September 2004

Digital philosophy is a new movement in philosophy advocated by prominent scientists such as Edward Fredkin, Stephen Wolfram, and G. J. Chaitin. It is basically a modern re-interpretation of Leibniz's metaphysics, as it substitutes the monad with digital computation. Digital physics conjectures that the universe is a special type of cellular automata that is Turing complete.

The digital approach in metaphysics promises to solve the hard problems in philosophy of mind and physics, since the mind can be given a computational treatment following the footsteps of Leibniz, and dispenses with the non-deterministic essentialism of (Copenhagen interpretation of) quantum theory. In a digital universe, existence is equivalent to computation, and so is thought. Thus computation is the single substance of a monist metaphysics, while subjectivity is constructed through universal computation. (This intriguing approach to epistemology has been dubbed Multism, since it posits the existence of multiple universes.)

There is a newsgroup called sci.physics.discrete and two mailing lists, namely digitalphilosophy and digitalphysics, on yahoogroups.com

-- talk about multism, algorithmic information theory, etc. --

See also

External links

Ed Fredkin's digital philosophy page