The Pixelated Universe: Computational Finitism and the End of Infinity
2026 | English | 979-8255996926 | PDF | 337 pages | 9.37 MB
The Pixelated Universe
Computational Finitism and the End of Infinity
What if the single biggest assumption in all of physics is wrong?
For centuries, science has treated infinity as sacred: infinite space, infinite series, infinite multiverses. One engineer, working on a laptop, challenges that entire foundation.
Using three computational simulations, he shows measurable deviations that no continuum theory can explain. He dissolves the Navier‑Stokes Millennium Problem with a finite velocity cutoff. And he refutes AdS/CFT: when the boundary is made finite, the famous duality collapses.
These are not philosophical arguments. They are concrete, experimentally accessible claims—something the string‑theory establishment has never delivered.
Written by an outsider from the Global South, this book includes the explosive epilogue “Why an Engineer from the Periphery Broke AdS/CFT.”
The universe is not infinite. It is discrete, cyclic, and computably bounded at the Planck scale.
The answer was never 42. It is 9.
If you loved Tegmark, Penrose, or Wolfram, this is the book that finally dares to say the emperor has no clothes.
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