On 12-05-2018 06:01, Dustin Wehr wrote:
I'm a big fan of Tegmark's 2007 article_ The Mathematical Universe,
_but I believe he got a couple details wrong, and those details are
interfering with my attempts to interest friends. So, I'm looking for
an exposition of the Mathematical Universe Hypothesis, of a similar or
shorter length, that omits those details, so that I have something I
can recommend to others without qualification. I can recommend
Tegmark's _Consciousness is a Mathematical Pattern_ TED talk without
qualification, but I need something that goes further, particularly
for people with a STEM background.

There should be nothing about the Computable Universe Hypothesis.
There should be nothing about Gödel's incompleteness theorems, unless
it's to explain why they do not pose a problem.

Ideally there is no claim about the MUH being testable. What would be
wonderful, in its place, is an admission that the MUH is probably
unfalsifiable, followed by a persuasive argument for why we should
reset our expectations when it comes to entertaining/evaluating a
theory of everything.


My own half-baked ideas:

https://fqxi.org/data/essay-contest-files/Mitra_without.pdf

Saibal

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