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Are there any theoretical machines which exceed Turing machines capability in at least some areas?

D.W.
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user1561358
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    Questions like "is X a defining characteristics of out(sic) universe?" is a physics question since physics is exactly the study of "the laws of the universe". Computer science is about mathematical objects which sometimes happen to be implementable through physical means. – Bakuriu Apr 05 '16 at 15:18
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    I'd recommend looking into "super turing machines", especially those as proposed by Have Siegelmann: https://www.umass.edu/newsoffice/article/umass-amherst-computer-scientist-leads-way-next-revolution-artificial-intelligence and http://binds.cs.umass.edu/papers/1995_Siegelmann_Science.pdf – nobillygreen Apr 05 '16 at 16:09
  • We ask that you ask only one question per post, please. If you have other questions, you can post them separately, after seeing answers to this. Also, questions about the defining characteristics of our universe are physics questions, and are off-topic here. I'm editing out the supplemental questions, to help you focus on a single question. You can post them separately (see the revision history to find them again). 2. What research have you done? What are your thoughts? A one-sentence question is too short. Try to edit it to flesh it out; that will help give you better answers.
  • – D.W. Apr 05 '16 at 19:03
  • "Can we assume that...." -- no, of course not. Why would you think that you can assume it? You can't just assume something because it would be nice if it were true, or it seems like it might be true, or because we don't immediately see a reason why it would be false. Computer science is about proof, not about just assuming things. What is your real question?
  • – D.W. Apr 05 '16 at 19:05