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In math, that complicates things. Does it really do anything in your argument?
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Sorry, my point you asked this about was unclear. What I really meant was that the probabilities themselves are finite and ultimately computable, but that there are an infinite number of them.
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That does not make sense. Who says the universe computes anything? Compute in real-world time? Probabilities of different evolution or as the whole universe including whole evolutions in time. Anyway, i do not think talking about the universe having to 'compute things' makes sense.
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I never meant to imply that the universe was actually computing things, merely that if observed from start to finish, that the probability of everything that did happen in a reality is, ultimately, a computable set.
As to your third point, I explained poorly again. in my view, since the final mathematic projection of any one given reality cannot be calculated until it has run its course, there is no concrete way to predict all of the events in your life. However, in the end, all of these actions come together to become part of the final, immutable mathematic description of the reality that you were a part of.
I know this may not help much, but I'm glad to have feedback.
Also, sorry it took so long to reply, work came up and kicked my ass.