@pood In my mind it's kind of like trying to figure out the "SUBLEQ"/NAND (or their inverses) of whatever machine family our physics classifies as an instance of.
In some ways, I think that our universe is probably, quite specifically, a "complete" manner of machine with no halting condition.
If that is the case, then there's some kind of single-argument instruction that has a single piece of non-local data associated with it whose execution at every location would explain the action of every moment, if it's an extension of "Turing Machines" into the complex space.
This is what people seek in the Grand Unifying Theory of Physics: an equation where the source of all numbers is "knowable" given a reference frame, no matter which reference frame you select.
This may not be possible, insofar as Minecraft Steve has no basis for parsing the Minecraft server loader moment, since while it operates under the same GUT of function, the vacuum state (the higher level rules) is "false", and the apparent physics are built on an architecture capable of radically different function (a C program's rules and flow and behavior, while reified with assembly, only account for a tiny subset of assembly sequences). There's just no context for understanding what built those series of facts just-so, because that part of its function doesn't happen observably during normal play.
This is one of the reasons I use computer science and math to understand theological questions: because they are just really weird math questions.
I find it ironic. I share a lot in common with the common Internet crank. Maybe one of the only thing that separates me is that I will regularly say that, and have self awareness, not just tangential such that I miss it but that I look right at it and point and loudly bring attention to it in an explicit and long-winded way.
But if there is any other thing that separates, it is that I approach religion as if it must fit into math rather than approaching math from the perspective of someone besotted with religion.