For it to be atoms of spacetime, it's very important that those atoms are small, but small in whose frame? There is no universal notion of small in whose frame, you see? ... The table is made out of stuff because the table chooses a frame. But we can't say that about the vacuum without breaking Einstein's symmetries. So, that's why you can't just have atoms of spacetime. The notion of atoms of spacetime is in radical conflict with Einstein's relativity. — Arkani-Hamed
atoms are supposed to be matter, that puts a lot of doubt onto whether an atom of spacetime is even a legitimate concept to begin with.
What does he mean when he says that the table chooses a frame? — petrichor
I am not sure I understand though why the space atoms "won't line up with their own space-atom grid that their asserting exists around them." I can visualize the compression, but not the misalignment. — petrichor
In the article by Wolfram (link), he claims that special and general relativity can be easily derived from the behavior of a causal network. If you read starting at the section called "Evolving the Network", you'll see what I refer to. What do you make of this? Plausible? — petrichor
But these are all speculations. And until we actually find a serious candidate rule for our universe, it’s probably not worth discussing these things much. — Wolfram
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.