We consider a hypothesis in which classical space-time emerges from
information exchange (interactions) between quantum fluctuations in the gravity
theory. In this picture, a line element would arise as a statistical average of
how frequently particles interact, through an individual rate dt∼1/ft
and spatially interconnecting rates dl∼c/f. The question is if space-time
can be modelled consistently in this way. The ansatz would be opposite to the
standard treatment of space-time as insensitive to altered physics at event
horizons (disrupted propagation of information) but by extension relate to the
connection of space-time to entanglement (interactions) through the
gauge/gravity duality. We make a first, rough analysis of the implications this
type of quantization would have on the classical structure of flat space-time,
and of what would be required of the interactions. Seeing no obvious reason for
why the origin would be unrealistic, we comment on expected effects in the
presence of curvature.Comment: 22 pages. v3: extended introductio