Hi Satyavarapu,
You wrote:
> Your idea of software simulation of Cosmos is good. Did you formulate any model ?
Thanks, I am glad you liked the idea. While I have not implemented the full software cosmos picture described in the body of the essay, I have calculated models of the grid structure described at the end.
You also said:
> And I take this opportunity to say, to come to reality and base your arguments on experimental results.
When I started studying cosmology about 15 years ago I spent a couple of years just reading papers on arXiv.org and concluded that there were many lovely theories, and many excellent mathematicians, but a paucity of data to decide between them. To take gravity as an example, my citation database eventually included about 100 distinct theories of gravity, most of which are still actively investigated.
So when I began my own research program in 2001, I resolved to start by gathering observational data rather than coming up with yet another theory, or even committing to one or another of the theoretical approaches then in fashion. Because of my professional background in software engineering, I had some idea of how the cosmos might appear if indeed it were all a simulation. The Landscape Test that I describe in the essay is a statistical test based on (conceptually) simple measurements; in other words, on direct observational evidence. While this evidence conflicts with a materialistic view, it is quite consistent with the software cosmos picture I describe in the essay.
Aloha,
Hugh