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  1. New theories of everything: the quest for ultimate explanation.John D. Barrow - 2007 - New York: Oxford University Press. Edited by John D. Barrow.
    Will we ever discover a single scientific theory that explains everything that has ever happened and everything that will happen - a key that unlocks the ...
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  • Algorithmic randomness in empirical data.James W. McAllister - 2003 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 34 (3):633-646.
    According to a traditional view, scientific laws and theories constitute algorithmic compressions of empirical data sets collected from observations and measurements. This article defends the thesis that, to the contrary, empirical data sets are algorithmically incompressible. The reason is that individual data points are determined partly by perturbations, or causal factors that cannot be reduced to any pattern. If empirical data sets are incompressible, then they exhibit maximal algorithmic complexity, maximal entropy and zero redundancy. They are therefore maximally efficient carriers (...)
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  • Natural Philosophy of Cause and Chance. By Max Born. Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1949. 215 pages.Gustav Bergmann - 1950 - Philosophy of Science 17 (2):196-199.
  • Information, Randomness & Incompleteness: Papers on Algorithmic Information Theory.Gregory J. Chaitin - 1987 - World Scientific: Singapore.
    The papers gathered in this book were published over a period of more than twenty years in widely scattered journals. They led to the discovery of randomness in arithmetic which was presented in the recently published monograph on?Algorithmic Information Theory? by the author. There the strongest possible version of G”del's incompleteness theorem, using an information-theoretic approach based on the size of computer programs, was discussed. The present book is intended as a companion volume to the monograph and it will serve (...)
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  • [Book Chapter] (in Press).Harald Atmanspacher & Hans Primas (eds.) - 2007 - Springer.
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  • Natural Philosophy of Cause and Chance.Max Born - 1950 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 1 (3):245-248.
     
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  • Natural Philosophy of Cause and Chance.Max Born - 1949 - Philosophy 24 (91):370-372.
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  • Algorithmic randomness in empirical data.James W. McAllister - 2003 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 34 (3):633-646.
    According to a traditional view, scientific laws and theories constitute algorithmic compressions of empirical data sets collected from observations and measurements. This article defends the thesis that, to the contrary, empirical data sets are algorithmically incompressible. The reason is that individual data points are determined partly by perturbations, or causal factors that cannot be reduced to any pattern. If empirical data sets are incompressible, then they exhibit maximal algorithmic complexity, maximal entropy and zero redundancy. They are therefore maximally efficient carriers (...)
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