Intelligence's attempt to defeat entropy, the Szilard Engine, Landauer's Principle, and the physical cost of information.
OPEN CONTENT →Closed Timelike Curves (CTC), the Grandfather Paradox, and Polchinski's billiard ball.
OPEN CONTENT →Quantum Darwinism: Is a shared memory error of millions a wave collapse leak?
OPEN CONTENT →Perfect determinism, Heisenberg's wall, and Wolfram's "Computational Irreducibility" principle.
OPEN CONTENT →Strange Attractors, the Butterfly Effect, and fractal limits in simulation.
OPEN CONTENT →The Benjamin Libet experiment. Are you making your decisions, or does your brain decide before you do?
OPEN CONTENT →James Clerk Maxwell, one of the greatest physicists of the 19th century, created a hypothetical entity challenging the seemingly unshakeable laws of thermodynamics (the continuous increase of entropy). Imagine a closed box with a small door in the middle. Inside the box, gas molecules randomly scatter in all directions.
The "Demon" waiting at the door observes the molecules. It separates fast (hot) molecules to the right and slow (cold) molecules to the left. Without expending any energy, just using information, it heats one half of the box and cools the other. It reverses entropy. So, how can an intelligence trick the laws of the universe?
Physicist Leo Szilard solved this paradox with the Szilard Engine. For the Demon to separate molecules, it must observe them and keep their information in its "memory." As Rolf Landauer proved in the 1960s ($E \ge k_B T \ln 2$); it's not processing information, but erasing information (memory) that must physically dissipate heat. When the Demon's "head" is full, to measure new molecules, it will have to erase old data and thus spew back to the universe the entropy (heat) it owes. This proves a startling truth: Information is physical.
Time travel is not just science fiction; it is also a mathematical reality. In 1949, the famous mathematician Kurt Gödel solved Einstein's General Relativity equations to find the Rotating Universe (Gödel Metric) model. In Gödel's solution, spacetime bends around itself in such a way that a spaceship moving forward actually arrives in its own past. These are called Closed Timelike Curves (CTC).
Mathematics allows for going to the past, but it collapses the logical system: the Grandfather Paradox. If you go back in time and prevent your grandfather from marrying, you would never have been born. But if you were never born, who is the person who went back in time to prevent this?
Against this, physicist Joe Polchinski developed the "Billiard Ball Paradox" (A ball enters a wormhole and hits its past self, preventing it from entering the wormhole). To prevent this collapse, Igor Novikov's Self-Consistency Principle comes into play: Universal probabilities (Quantum Mechanics) physically do not allow an action that would create a paradox. The weapon jams, your foot slips. Or according to the Many-Worlds theory; the moment you pull that trigger, instead of the system collapsing, it creates a brand new parallel "Timeline" where you were never born (branching), catching the error (exception).
It is the phenomenon of large groups of people collectively remembering a shared falsehood as "fact" that does not align with reality. Neurology explains this as a psychological production of false memories (Confabulation). However, from the perspective of Many-Worlds (Everett) and Quantum Darwinism (Wojciech Zurek), the situation is much more unsettling.
According to Quantum Darwinism, objective reality consists only of wave function collapses upon which the majority of the universe "agrees" (and which copy the most information to the universe's environment). If reality is constantly branching into parallel universes like a massive tree (Decoherence), the wave functions of two diverging universes might brush against each other for a tiny fraction of a second.
Pikachu's black tail-tip or Uncle Monopoly's monocle are actually solid physical realities that occurred in the neighboring parallel universe right next to us. We are not misremembering; the quantum neurons in our minds are momentary data leaks that copied information from another branch during decoherence.
This demon, created by Pierre-Simon Laplace in 1814, advocates perfect determinism. If there existed a super "Intelligence" that knew the exact position and momentum of every atom in the universe at the present moment, it could read the entire past and future of the universe like a book, using the laws of physics. According to this model, "Free Will" is merely an illusion conjured by our brains, incapable of perceiving complexity.
Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle killed this demon by forbidding, as per the universe's source code, the simultaneous knowledge of both a particle's position and momentum. However, the truly unsettling aspect of the matter is computer scientist Stephen Wolfram's principle of "Computational Irreducibility."
Even if the universe were a perfect set of rules (Cellular Automaton), according to this principle, there is no mathematical shortcut to learning a system's future state. The "only way" to know what will happen is to literally run that system (the universe) at 1x speed. Even if God or the Simulator knows all the code, to know what you will choose tomorrow, they must wait for that code to "execute" (be rendered). Even if the future is written, it has not yet been read.
The biggest blow to Laplace's Demon comes from Chaos Theory. Even deterministic systems exhibit "sensitive dependence on initial conditions." A butterfly flapping its wings in Brazil can cause a hurricane in Texas. This means a one-in-a-billion "Floating Point" error in the simulation's source code can change the fate of the entire universe. In systems with a positive Lyapunov Exponent ($\lambda > 0$) in phase space, the difference between two initial states grows exponentially ($e^{\lambda t}$) over time.
However, Chaos is not just randomness. When chaotic systems are observed, Strange Attractors, which are Fractal Geometries, emerge. No matter how wildly the system fluctuates, it ultimately cannot escape a mathematical pattern (a butterfly-shaped trajectory). Infinite complexity is confined within a limited space.
If the universe is a simulation, Chaos Theory whispers this to us: A "noise" has been added to the system to generate infinite diversity, but the algorithms (Attractors) that draw the main boundaries never allow the system to completely collapse. We are living a mathematical necessity, which we perceive as coincidence, upon those fractal trajectories.
Time travel, paradoxes, and Chaos Theory have shown us how perfectly the universe possesses "debugging" mechanisms to prevent internal logical errors and system collapses. The universe erases information, bends time, and confines infinite chaos within fractal boundaries to maintain its consistency.
How truly vast are the physical dimensions of this box, whose rules are so strictly protected? We embark on a massive journey towards the end (the edges of the Macrocosmos) of this system, where everything is interwoven with unshakeable connections.
Who does the decision to continue reading this article right now belong to? We can hear you say "Me". However, that famous experiment conducted by neuropsychologist Benjamin Libet in the 1980s revealed a terrifying data point that shook the history of philosophy. Subjects were asked to flick their fingers at any moment they wanted. Devices measured the subjects' brain waves down to the millisecond.
The results were chilling: About 300 milliseconds before the person "consciously decided" to flick their finger, the brain's motor cortex had already produced the electrical potential (Readiness Potential) to initiate that action.
According to this data, what we call "free will" is not the mechanism making the decisions. Free will might be a "User Interface (UI) illusion" uploaded to our consciousness afterward, to make us feel as if a decision already made by the laws of physics and neurology belongs to us. Just like when we click a file icon on a computer, we think we are the ones executing millions of lines of code in the background.
If the universe is a deterministic simulation, even the doubt you feel right now is part of an unavoidable chain reaction, coded by the momentum of the Big Bang at the beginning of the universe. You are not free; you are merely a flawless passenger watching what unfolds from a first-person camera.