The Theory of Choice

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The Theory of Choice is The General Theory of Everything

The main principles of the Theory of Choice:

  • The world contains the set of objects
  • Each object makes a sequence of choices
  • Each choice is made by choosing a state from the "choice space"
  • State of object defines the choice space
  • One variant of making choice is uniting with other object to the complex object
  • After uniting/joining to a complex object the choice space of each member has less degrees of freedom, than a free object has.
  • All degrees of freedom that member of complex object gives to its host form the "choice space" of this complex object.

There is no fundamental notion of time in this theory. The time for each object can be considered as a sequence of its choices, but it is not absolute time. When object becomes a member of complex object, its time can be synchronized with the time of its siblings by the sequence of choices of its host. In this case we can say that choice made by one sibling was made before or after the choice made by another sibling, comparing it to some choice of their host. We there were no choices, made by any host between the choices made by siblings, than we cannot say which choice was before or after which.

Instead of the notion of space there are rules that define "near-by" objects to each object. One object is considered "near-by" to another, if they can decide to join to one complex object, or one of them can decide to become the part of another.

The beginnings of the theory. The main problem that the theory wants to solve is the problem of "subjective time"

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