Mikhail Prokopenko, Paul C. W. Davies, Michael Harré, Marcus Heisler, Zdenka Kuncic, Geraint F. Lewis, Ori Livson, Joseph T. Lizier, Fernando E. Rosas
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Biological arrow of time: Emergence of tangled information hierarchies and self-modelling dynamics
We study open-ended evolution by focusing on computational and
information-processing dynamics underlying major evolutionary transitions. In
doing so, we consider biological organisms as hierarchical dynamical systems
that generate regularities in their phase-spaces through interactions with
their environment. These emergent information patterns can then be encoded
within the organism's components, leading to self-modelling "tangled
hierarchies". Our main conjecture is that when macro-scale patterns are encoded
within micro-scale components, it creates fundamental tensions (computational
inconsistencies) between what is encodable at a particular evolutionary stage
and what is potentially realisable in the environment. A resolution of these
tensions triggers an evolutionary transition which expands the problem-space,
at the cost of generating new tensions in the expanded space, in a continual
process. We argue that biological complexification can be interpreted
computation-theoretically, within the G\"odel--Turing--Post recursion-theoretic
framework, as open-ended generation of computational novelty. In general, this
process can be viewed as a meta-simulation performed by higher-order systems
that successively simulate the computation carried out by lower-order systems.
This computation-theoretic argument provides a basis for hypothesising the
biological arrow of time.