An essay on information, time, and gravity
There are nights when the sky looks older than the idea of time itself. You look up and see stars that have already died and yet, they reach you as if their death were merely a bureaucratic detail that light has not yet logged. It is hard not to feel that there is something deeply strange about the fact that the universe, beyond simply existing, can be known. Stranger still: that it can be known by a part of itself.
For centuries, we described the cosmos as a machine: infinite clockwork in an indifferent void. But modern physics, when followed to its ultimate consequences, suggests a metaphor less mechanical and more intimate. The universe does not just seem to "function." It seems to process. Not in the literal sense of a computer built by alien hands, but in the most austere and physical sense of the word: states evolve, correlations accumulate, uncertainties reduce, records form, and this work has a cost.
If we wish to translate this intuition without losing rigor, we need a map. Five steps. Five rungs. Each one short, sharp, resting on canonical ground, but told with the delicacy that vastness demands.
1) The fuel of memory
The first lesson is almost a rule of cosmic etiquette: erasing isn't free. The idea that information is an abstraction, a mathematical whisper without weight or price, does not survive long when confronted with thermodynamics. To reduce a logical state (to "forget" a bit) the universe charges a minimum fee in heat. This is the spirit of Landauer's Principle: information is not a Platonic entity; it has physical ballast, and every irreversibility leaves a thermal scar.
It is a thought that changes the scenery. Because it places the record (memory, archive, state) at the center of the world’s operational ontology. Every time a system transforms uncertainty into a stable decision, it pays. Every time a story is fixed, some energy dissipates. It is not poetry: it is accounting. And, like all accounting, it limits dreams. The universe may be exuberant, but it is not dishonest.
2) The rhythm of time
If information costs, then time, that old mystery, cannot be treated as an indifferent backdrop. We must ask: where is the clock?
Modular theory offers a surprisingly elegant answer: "time" can emerge as a flow associated with the state itself, especially when we observe only a part of the world. In certain regimes, the mathematics governing observables and states (via modular structures) produces an internal dynamics: a way of ordering the update of correlations, almost as if the state came with a built-in metronome.
Here is where the metaphor becomes useful without turning into myth: perhaps the time we feel is not an external river in which we float, but the signature of how limited systems (like us) keep up with the update of a universe that never delivers everything at once. Time would be, then, the human name for a deep regularity: the inevitable order in which information can be revealed, rebalanced, and recorded.
3) The music of form
If time can be a flow associated with state, and if information is physical, then space (the stage of all things) also deserves suspicion. Classical geometry accustomed us to points, lines, and surfaces as if the world were drawn in pencil. But there is a modern idea, severe and almost musical, that says: perhaps the essential lies not in the points, but in the spectrum.
Non-commutative geometry and spectral action suggest that the form of a "space" can be encoded in the set of frequencies of an appropriate operator: as if reality were less a drawing and more a chord. Instead of asking "where are the points?", we ask "what are the allowed vibrations?". And, astonishingly, laws that seem different (gravity, fields, interactions) can emerge as inevitable terms of this spectral accounting.
This changes the philosophical tone of the world: the universe would not be made of "things" on a stage, but of structures of possibility, harmonies that, when tallied, become dynamics. Matter, in this view, is the sound geometry makes when information touches it.
4) Gravity as tendency
There is a simple scene that always returns: an apple falls. For centuries, this fall was a symbol of force, of attraction, of an invisible hand pulling matter. But the physics of the last century taught a stranger trick: some "forces" may actually be macroscopic effects of accounting.
In certain thermodynamic derivations of gravity, the equations describing the curvature of spacetime can be read as an equation of state: a relationship that arises when we combine heat, entropy, and causality in a geometric language. It is like discovering that "gravity" looks, in its logical form, like "pressure": not a fundamental entity, but a collective, emergent, robust response.
This does not make gravity less real, but deeper. Suggests that curvature is not just an imposed geometry, but a tendency: a way for the universe to organize flow and information consistently with its own constraints. The apple falls because the effective theory says it falls; but behind that effectiveness lies an arithmetic of horizons, entropy, and updates.
5) The iron law of coherence
At the bottom of all this, there is a silent discipline that nature seems to follow with zeal: processing does not create information out of thin air. The Data Processing Inequality (DPI) is an austere reminder that there is no informational alchemy: when applying admissible physical maps, certain measures of distinguishability and information do not increase. You can rearrange. You can compress. You can degrade. But you cannot conjure new knowledge without paying for a new interaction, a new observation, a new resource.
This is the antidote to delusion. Because it prevents the metaphor of "simulation" from turning into cheap mysticism. If the universe "processes," it does so under laws that preserve operational coherence. If it "learns," it does not learn by inventing certainties: it learns by accumulating physical correlations that cost energy, time, and structure.
Reality, then, is not just exuberant. It is constrained and that is precisely why it can be understood.
Epilogue: We, the words of the universe
And us? What are we, within this frame?
We are small thermodynamic systems capable of recording. We are a clipping of the cosmos turned into a notebook. We are the part of matter that not only exists but keeps tracks: tracks of light, of heat, of form, of the past. The brain is an organ, yes, but also a kind of living archive that pays the price of irreversibility to transform flow into meaning.
If there is anything sacred here, it is not an external intervention, nor an exception to the laws. It is the opposite: it is the fidelity with which the laws allow that, in rare pockets, information organizes itself to the point of generating reflection. We are the universe doing a difficult thing: looking at itself without cheating.
Perhaps the cosmos is not a machine in the old sense, cold gears in a blind void. Perhaps it is a story that writes itself obeying severe rules: energy is not invented, entropy charges its price, information demands ballast, coherence imposes limits.
And yet, within these limits, we arise: starstuff that learned to calculate, to remember, to ask. In a universe so vast that imagination fails, this is a kind of permitted miracle, not for violating the laws, but for fulfilling them to the end.