Web as a fundamental universal system

Abstract

We study the possibility that further advancement in the understanding of the order of chaos may demand a certain reconsideration of the approach to the classical mechanics. For this we suggest to consider the viewpoint that spatio-temporal relations between objects are emergent and that they are but a result of complex interactions of objects. Such an approach is a natural continuation of the revision of the notions of space and time started by the general theory of relativity. It leads to a possible extension of the structure of the classical mechanics. Namely, the result of the objects interactions can be wider than the spatio-temporal relations. In this case interactions form a generalized space ("Field-Space") wider than its spatio-temporal section (while the known interactions are embedded within that section). The study of such hypothesis demands constructing a theory, not relying on space and time as primitive notions. As primary elements of such a theory we consider objects and purely informational connections between them, not expressed in spatio-temporal terms. Following the logic of this theory, the world constitutes a complex information web. The Web is in the state of a constant flux (of a more general category than the one of the quantum fields) - an incessant change of connections, the complex order of which comprises the order of chaos. Reminding the space build-up from the Regge skeleton, the Web builds a unified Field-Space of pure information, manifested in space as energy distribution. We describe the emergence of spatio-temporal laws from the viewpoint of purely informational physics. The suggested construction of physics on the purely informational basis is a candidate for the theory of quantum gravity.

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