> I get that entropic gravity doesn't use free parameters.
You are correct, my error in skim reading too fast.
> It could just be that the theory knows its limits.
Yes that's essentially what I meant by chaos, if you could know enough information you could predict where all your hammocks end up, but that requires vast and subtle knowledge about how you think and minutiae of your environment and how you interact with it that caused you to make arbitrary decisions... the interesting thing about chaos is that it _can_ be deterministic, in other-words, given initial conditions it can be computed - but even then in the context of such large systems that computation is infeasibly and irreducibly costly, in which case (i guess) you use free parameters in combination with what conceptually similar to statistical mechanics?
You are correct, my error in skim reading too fast.
> It could just be that the theory knows its limits.
Yes that's essentially what I meant by chaos, if you could know enough information you could predict where all your hammocks end up, but that requires vast and subtle knowledge about how you think and minutiae of your environment and how you interact with it that caused you to make arbitrary decisions... the interesting thing about chaos is that it _can_ be deterministic, in other-words, given initial conditions it can be computed - but even then in the context of such large systems that computation is infeasibly and irreducibly costly, in which case (i guess) you use free parameters in combination with what conceptually similar to statistical mechanics?