Law without law: from observer states to physics via algorithmic information theory
Markus P. Mueller

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel observer-centric approach to physics using algorithmic information theory, suggesting that objective reality emerges from local observer states and explaining quantum phenomena without assuming an external world.
Contribution
It introduces a rigorous, solipsistic framework based on universal induction that recovers many features of physical laws and explains quantum phenomena as emergent from observer states.
Findings
Objective reality emerges as a statistical phenomenon
Explains quantum phenomena like Bell inequality violation
Resolves puzzles such as the Boltzmann brain problem
Abstract
According to our current conception of physics, any valid physical theory is supposed to describe the objective evolution of a unique external world. However, this condition is challenged by quantum theory, which suggests that physical systems should not always be understood as having objective properties which are simply revealed by measurement. Furthermore, as argued below, several other conceptual puzzles in the foundations of physics and related fields point to limitations of our current perspective and motivate the exploration of an alternative: to start with the first-person (the observer) rather than the third-person perspective (the world). In this work, I propose a rigorous approach of this kind on the basis of algorithmic information theory. It is based on a single postulate: that universal induction determines the chances of what any observer sees next. That is, instead of a…
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