Computational Irreducibility as the Foundation of Agency: A Formal Model Connecting Undecidability to Autonomous Behavior in Complex Systems
By: Poria Azadi
Potential Business Impact:
Makes AI's future actions impossible to guess.
This article presents a formal model demonstrating that genuine autonomy, the ability of a system to self-regulate and pursue objectives, fundamentally implies computational unpredictability from an external perspective. we establish precise mathematical connections, proving that for any truly autonomous system, questions about its future behavior are fundamentally undecidable. this formal undecidability, rather than mere complexity, grounds a principled distinction between autonomous and non-autonomous systems. our framework integrates insights from computational theory and biology, particularly regarding emergent agency and computational irreducibility, to explain how novel information and purpose can arise within a physical universe. the findings have significant implications for artificial intelligence, biological modeling, and philosophical concepts like free will.
Similar Papers
Systemic Constraints of Undecidability
Formal Languages and Automata Theory
Makes computers unable to solve some problems.
Dual Computational Horizons: Incompleteness and Unpredictability in Intelligent Systems
Artificial Intelligence
Computers can't know everything about their own future.
Dual Computational Horizons: Incompleteness and Unpredictability in Intelligent Systems
Artificial Intelligence
Limits how smart computers can become.