Axioms
Axioms
Posted Feb 22, 2021 13:04 UTC (Mon) by ale2018 (subscriber, #128727)In reply to: Axioms by Wol
Parent article: An introduction to lockless algorithms
For one thing, introducing information and the ability to process it breaks time symmetry. You can easily call "past" the side you remember and "future" the side you predict. Time reversal doesn't work any more. At this point you've already left the classical, Newtonian vision, and dropped those misconceptions about time.
Special relativity was introduced as an attempt to account for the speed of light being a universal constant. As a speed limit, it entails that information cannot travel faster than light either. My question was whether it's possible to derive some kind of relativity the opposite way around. That is, assuming that things exists only if you can exchange information with them, and then assuming the partial ordering principle outlined in the article, is it possible to derive a concept similar to the light cone?
Of course, it is not possible to compute the actual speed of light based on pure logic... Or is it?
