912 research outputs found
Causal Fermion Systems as a Candidate for a Unified Physical Theory
The theory of causal fermion systems is an approach to describe fundamental
physics. Giving quantum mechanics, general relativity and quantum field theory
as limiting cases, it is a candidate for a unified physical theory. We here
give a non-technical introduction.Comment: 19 pages, LaTeX, minor improvements (published version
Noether-Like Theorems for Causal Variational Principles
The connection between symmetries and conservation laws as made by Noether's
theorem is extended to the context of causal variational principles and causal
fermion systems. Different notions of continuous symmetries are introduced. It
is proven that these symmetries give rise to corresponding conserved
quantities, expressed in terms of so-called surface layer integrals. In a
suitable limiting case, the Noether-like theorems for causal fermion systems
reproduce charge conservation and the conservation of energy and momentum in
Minkowski space. Thus the conservation of charge and energy-momentum are found
to be special cases of general conservation laws which are intrinsic to causal
fermion systems.Comment: 41 pages, LaTeX, 3 figures, small improvements (published version
Consciousness qua Mortal Computation
Computational functionalism posits that consciousness is a computation. Here
we show, perhaps surprisingly, that it cannot be a Turing computation. Rather,
computational functionalism implies that consciousness is a novel type of
computation that has recently been proposed by Geoffrey Hinton, called mortal
computation
If consciousness is dynamically relevant, artificial intelligence isn't conscious
We demonstrate that if consciousness is relevant for the temporal evolution
of a system's states -- that is, if it is dynamically relevant -- then AI
systems cannot be conscious. That is because AI systems run on CPUs, GPUs, TPUs
or other processors which have been designed and verified to adhere to
computational dynamics that systematically preclude or suppress deviations. The
design and verification preclude or suppress, in particular, potential
consciousness-related dynamical effects, so that if consciousness is
dynamically relevant, AI systems cannot be conscious
Dynamics of Causal Fermion Systems - Field Equations and Correction Terms for a New Unified Physical Theory
The theory of causal fermion systems is a new physical theory which aims to describe a fundamental level of physical reality. Its mathematical core is the causal action principle. In this thesis, we develop a formalism which connects the causal action principle to a suitable notion of fields on space-time. We derive field equations from the causal action principle and find that the dynamics induced by the field equations conserve a symplectic form which gives rise to an Hamiltonian time evolution if the causal fermion system admits a notion of 'time'. In this way, we establish the dynamics of causal fermion systems.
Remarkably, the causal action principle implies that there are correction terms to the field equations, which we subsequently derive and study. In particular, we prove that there is a stochastic and a non-linear correction term and investigate how they relate to the Hamiltonian time evolution. Furthermore, we give theorems which generalize the connection between symmetries and conservation laws in Noether's theorems to the theory of causal fermion systems. The appearance of the particular correction terms is reminiscent of dynamical collapse models in quantum theory
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