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Complexity, Entropy and the Physics of Information

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TLDR
In this article, the authors discuss the connections between quantum and classical physics, information and its transfer, computation, and their significance for the formulation of physical theories, but also consider the origins and evolution of the information-processing entities, their complexity, and the manner in which they analyze their perceptions to form models of the Universe.
Abstract
This book has emerged from a meeting held during the week of May 29 to June 2, 1989, at St. John’s College in Santa Fe under the auspices of the Santa Fe Institute. The (approximately 40) official participants as well as equally numerous “groupies” were enticed to Santa Fe by the above “manifesto.” The book—like the “Complexity, Entropy and the Physics of Information” meeting explores not only the connections between quantum and classical physics, information and its transfer, computation, and their significance for the formulation of physical theories, but it also considers the origins and evolution of the information-processing entities, their complexity, and the manner in which they analyze their perceptions to form models of the Universe. As a result, the contributions can be divided into distinct sections only with some difficulty. Indeed, I regard this degree of overlapping as a measure of the success of the meeting. It signifies consensus about the important questions and on the anticipated answers: they presumably lie somewhere in the “border territory,” where information, physics, complexity, quantum, and computation all meet.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Quantum information — what price realism?

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined recent suggestions to reformulate quantum mechanics with realistic foundations by reformulating it in light of quantum information theory (QIT) and found that these suggestions are nothing but instrumentalism in disguise.
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Special Relativity at the Quantum Scale

TL;DR: A preliminary attempt to develop a quantum formulation of special relativity based on a model that retains some geometric attributes and derives a transformation rule for velocity that reduces to Einstein's velocity-addition formula in the macroscopic limit and reveals an interesting aspect of time.
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Information-devoid routes for scale-free neurodynamics

TL;DR: It is shown how and why BTP might display this physical and biological synergy meaningfully, making it possible to model nervous activities, and illustrated how the amplification of scale-free oscillations does not require information transfer.
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Towards a Local Hidden Variable Theory

TL;DR: In this paper, a local hidden variable theory of quantum mechanics is formulated by adapting Gell-Mann and Hartle's many-histories formulation, which violates the independence of hidden variable values and measuring device settings.
Book ChapterDOI

Quantum Aspects of Self-Organization in Dynamically Random Systems

TL;DR: In this article, a broad range of quantum effects which are likely relevant to self-organization processes in dusty plasmas and, in general, in dynamically random (loosely bound) systems are discussed.