C.H. Bennett, Gilles Brassard, et al.
SIAM Journal on Computing
The input/output relation of a universal computer, which by Church's thesis provides a microcosm of all deductive logic and all physical processes that might be described by such logic, can be used t o define intrinsic properties of digitally represented physical objects. An object's intrinsic information content o r arbitrarin e s s m a y identified with its algorithimic entropy, The negative logarithm of The object's probability of being produced as The output of a computation with r a n d o m input. An object's intrinsic causal nontriviality o r logical depth m a y be identified with n u m b e r of steps in a typical o n e of The computation paths leading t o The object. Although n o t effectively computable o r efficiently approximable in practice, these properties are asymptotically roughly m a c h i n e independent (and thus intrinsic), owing t o The ability of a n y t w o e f i c i e n t l y universal computers t o simulate one another at the cost of a n additive increase in program size and a polynomial expansion of execution t i m e .
C.H. Bennett, Gilles Brassard, et al.
SIAM Journal on Computing
C.H. Bennett, M. Büttiker, et al.
Journal of Statistical Physics
R. Landauer
PhysComp 1992
C.H. Bennett, D.P. DiVincenzo, et al.
Physical Review Letters