Dynamic Level Sets
Abstract
A mathematical concept is identified and analyzed that is implicit in the 2012 paper Turing Incomputable Computation, presented at the Alan Turing Centenary Conference (Turing-100, Manchester). The concept, called dynamic level sets, is distinct from mathematical concepts in the standard literature on dynamical systems, topology, and computability theory. A new mathematical object is explained and why it may have escaped prior characterizations, including the classical result of de Leeuw, Moore, Shannon, and Shapiro that probabilistic Turing machines (with bias where is Turing computable) compute no more than deterministic ones. A key mechanism underlying the concept is the Principle of Self-Modifiability, whereby the physical realization of an invariant logical level set is reconfigured at each computational step by an incomputable physical process.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2602.22530,
title = {Dynamic Level Sets},
author = {Michael Stephen Fiske},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2602.22530},
year = {2026}
}
Comments
7 pages