Fra said:
So in the evolving picture, maybe locality and causality is not hardcoded, but a general feature of equilibrium, or close-to-equilibrium conditions so that a world with non-local or a-causal interactions would quickly reorganise into respecting localit and causality, at least in the statistical sense. Then locality and causality might even be considered statistical in nature, and when the continuum of the statistics breaks down, locality or causality just doesn't make sense.
/Fredrik
You seem to be agreeing with me then. Locality/causality is not hardcoded but would emerge through development/interaction/decoherence/whatever.
Locality demands a context to be "seen". You need a spacetime reference frame to tell that causes preceded their effects. So it is suspect to wire in locality into little spacetime triangles, no matter how small we then shrink them.
I agree that causality would be statistical, that it is an equilibrium story.
And that should then lead us to the question of what exactly is being equilibrated (decohered)? I would say in some sense local and global information.
And also what do we call the state where the statistical continuum breaks down (I offer the technical idea known as vagueness).
A crucial point is that causality in fact seems to have two faces.
At the most local level - an interaction like a photon exchange between two particles - I would take seriously the Cramer transactional approach to QM and say this is a symmetric and timeless event. It is ambiguous in itself (seen without a context) and reads equally well in both directions. Cause and effect are indistinguishable (though something has happened).
Then at the global level, a world in which many events are woven together, a thernodynamic arrow of time emerges. A history of events, a history of expansion and cooling, develops.
So locality is a combination of the two. Or an equilibration of the two. A locally symmetric looking emergence of an event being played out against a globally asymmetrically developing context.
And it is a bootstrapping approach as events add up to create the context just as the context bears down to constrain, shape, decohere, the events.
In CDT modelling terms, this would make me think that a triangle would need to exhibit a strongly asymmetric time arrow when the scale is large, and the arrow become symmetric as scale shrinks to Planck distances and energies.
On the other hand, as Marcus keeps telling us, lattice type approaches do seem to lose their spatial dimensions at extremes of shrinking. As global context disappears from sight, it is no longer possible to tell if an action is in this direction (as opposed to two other directions) and so all that can be said is there is an action in some direction.
So this kind of modelling may be a partial physical model of a background independent or bootstrapping realm.
But actually, it still seems inside out, wrong way round, as an explanation. It is not how a system loses its constraints that is interesting but how it gains them. So it is the reason why we would go from "actions in an undefined direction" to "actions oriented within three spatial directions" which would be the desired output of a background independent theory.
An event in spacetime is always about both an exchange that takes place between two locales (two particles and the photon they swapped), but also all the other places in which something could have happened, but didn't. The light cone within which a sum over histories just took place.
So spatially-speaking, it involves one positive direction and two null directions. And all three directions are informational you would agree. So what a background independent approach must explain is not the loss of dimensionalities with shrinking, but the reason why just three dimensions with expansion of scale.
Yes. it is helpful perhaps to demonstrate as with CDT that dimensionality is lost as context is eroded. But the real issue is how that quite narrow choice of dimensionality is gained in the first place - why QM foam would arrange itself into decohered global contexts of this kind.