stevendaryl said:
I'm not sure if this along the same lines, or not, but Julian Barbour has a program of removing time from physics and replacing it by relationships. His book "The End of Time" describes it.
Hi Steven! I remember reading a beautiful essay of his where he uses classical mechanics and in effect turns a system like the solar system into a big clock. He extracts time from classical dynamics. The essay won first prize in a FQXi contest. You may have read it. He gives more attention to specific detail than Gambini Porto and Pullin do. But it is along similar lines in the sense that they too consider natural systems as clocks.
They use theoretical reasoning to get BOUNDS on how stable and precise physical clocks can be.
One thing they consider as a longterm frequency standard is a vibration mode of a black hole. (Harder to imagine how one would excite and observe said vibration, compared with Barbour's observation of a planetary system

)
I neglected to say just now: if anyone hasn't read the two "Planck star" papers, just google
"planck star" and
"planck star phenomenology"
That is the basis of the problem that this thread is about. According to Loop QG, black holes bounce. This leads to the "Planck star" model of black hole. Extreme gravitational time dilation means that the rebound, which happens quickly from an inside perspective, takes billions of years seen from outside. The rebound results in a long-delayed energetic gamma ray burst at the end of the star's life.
Gambini et al would expect the outside observer to see no information writ in the final GRB (nothing that would allow one to reconstruct knowledge of what initially fell in.)
How does that square with the apparently quick (possibly unitary) evolution which occurs inside?
Is there something in the bounce itself which "resets" any possible clocks. Are any clocks that survive the bounce possible at all?