Hi Lev,
Coming late to a forum like this involves a lot of catchup. I think that you were originally interested in discussion of the application of ETS-like ideas to "cosmic space expansion" in some generic sense. Unlike some other posters I dont have any alternative theory to propose, just try to understand the ETS formalism better and understand its limits (for now). For me this means digging into precisely what certain words mean. Some problem words are "implementation" and "instantiation" (when discussing a presumed Fundamental formalism).
The papers and your reply on protein folding and DNA suggests that there are two entities here:
(i) the ETS/struct represention/formulation - which encodes information
(ii) the "spacial instantiation" of the above
So the "real object" (as conventially understood) lives in the spacial instantiation space, but gets its information (on how to fold - or evolve) from the struct (framework(s))in ETS?
In the ETS model the structs are the "behind the scenes" dynamic source of all information and change?
One short comment made in the main paper on Quantum Entanglement (about a measurement affecting future and past events) suggests to me that the ETS structs are acting as "hidden variable"-type repository of information. If so then hopefully you can agree that it is necessary to do quite a bit of work to tease out what is really in this theory.
For now I shall also remark about the lack of discussion of a formal grammar within the papers I have seen. Earlier posts suggested that the number 11 contained no historical information. This isnt quite correct from a grammar perspective. So in a formal language an 11 instance would have a specific syntactic construction like:
11 = plus(5,6)
this shows how this 11 got (computationally) constructed. We would expand 5 to get maybe:
5 = plus (succ(0),4) etc.
So contrary to claims made about numbers even they naturally form part of a syntax tree, which contains a struct-like history. Hence the need for a clarification in this area too.
I hope these comments are of interest for now.