I’ll read the papers once I get on the computer—don’t worry, I may have not finished uni, but I always loved reading papers over a cup of tea.
I’m kind of writing about this subject right now, so maybe there you can find something that interests you.
How do I know what parts of the universe will respond to what changes?
To me, at least, this seems like a mostly false question, for you to have true knowledge of that, you’d need to become the Universe itself.
If you don’t care about true knowledge just good % chances, then you do it with heuristic.
First you come up with composites that are somewhat self similar, but nothing is exactly alike in the Universe, except the Universe itself. Then you create a heuristic for predicting those composites and you use it, as long as the composite is similar enough to the original composite that the heuristic was based on. Of course, heuristics work differently in different environments, but often there are only a few environments even relevant for each composite, for if you take a fish out of water, it will die—now you may want a heuristic for an alive fish in the air, but I see it as much more useful to recompile the fish into catch at that point.
This of course applies on any level of composition, from specific specimens of fish, to ones from a specific family, to a single species, then to all fish, then to all living organisms, with as many steps in between these listed as you want. How do we discriminate between which composite level we ought to work with? Pure intuition and experiment, once you do it with logic, it all becomes useless, because logic will attempt to compression everything, even those things which have more utility being uncompressed.
I’ll get to the rest of your comment on PC, my fingers hurt. Typing on this new big phone is so hard lol.
I’ll read the papers once I get on the computer—don’t worry, I may have not finished uni, but I always loved reading papers over a cup of tea.
I’m kind of writing about this subject right now, so maybe there you can find something that interests you.
How do I know what parts of the universe will respond to what changes? To me, at least, this seems like a mostly false question, for you to have true knowledge of that, you’d need to become the Universe itself. If you don’t care about true knowledge just good % chances, then you do it with heuristic. First you come up with composites that are somewhat self similar, but nothing is exactly alike in the Universe, except the Universe itself. Then you create a heuristic for predicting those composites and you use it, as long as the composite is similar enough to the original composite that the heuristic was based on. Of course, heuristics work differently in different environments, but often there are only a few environments even relevant for each composite, for if you take a fish out of water, it will die—now you may want a heuristic for an alive fish in the air, but I see it as much more useful to recompile the fish into catch at that point.
This of course applies on any level of composition, from specific specimens of fish, to ones from a specific family, to a single species, then to all fish, then to all living organisms, with as many steps in between these listed as you want. How do we discriminate between which composite level we ought to work with? Pure intuition and experiment, once you do it with logic, it all becomes useless, because logic will attempt to compression everything, even those things which have more utility being uncompressed.
I’ll get to the rest of your comment on PC, my fingers hurt. Typing on this new big phone is so hard lol.