Digital physics
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In physics and cosmology, digital physics is a collection of theoretical perspectives based on the premise that the universe is describable by information. It is a form of digital ontology about the physical reality. According to this theory, the universe can be conceived of as either the output of a deterministic or probabilistic computer program, a vast, digital computation device, or mathematically isomorphic to such a device.
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See also
- A New Kind of Science
- Arthur Eddington
- Bekenstein bound
- Bremermann's limit
- Bousso's holographic bound
- Bit-string physics
- Cellular automata
- Church–Turing thesis
- Church–Turing–Deutsch principle
- Clive W. Kilmister
- Combinatorial hierarchy
- Combinatorial physics
- Combinatorics
- Continuous spatial automata
- David Deutsch
- David McGoveran
- Digital philosophy
- Digital probabilistic physics
- Discrete calculus
- Douglas Adams
- EPR paradox
- The Fabric of Reality
- Ed Fredkin
- Frederick Parker-Rhodes
- Fredkin finite nature hypothesis
- Gerard 't Hooft
- H. Pierre Noyes
- Holographic principle
- Hypercomputation
- Information theory
- Jacob Bekenstein
- John Stuart Bell
- John Archibald Wheeler
- Konrad Zuse
- Landauer's principle
- Margolus-Levitin theorem
- Mathematical universe hypothesis
- Max Tegmark
- Tipler's Omega Point
- Programming the Universe
- Physical information
- Quantum computation
- Quantum information
- Qubit
- Seth Lloyd
- Simulation hypothesis
- Simulated reality
- Ted Bastin
- Theory of Everything
- Ultimate ensemble
- Wolfram Alpha
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