> up to the point that many computer scientists now seem to equate computation with the functioning of the universe.
Do you think that's a kind of tunnel vision? If the only thing you focus on is computation, you'll probably end up seeing computation everywhere - it became a way of seeing the world.
It is a common accusation. There's a somewhat famous quote I've seen a few times:
"It's interesting to look back through history on this one. Each age has its pinnacle of technology, and each age uses that technology as a metaphor for nature, for the universe. In ancient Greece, the technological marvels were musical instruments and the ruler and compass. The Greek philosophers tried to build an entire cosmology from number, harmony, proportion, form, and so on — from mathematics, basically. Remember the music of the spheres? The Pythagoreans believed that nature was a manifestation of rational mathematics. Later on the pinnacle of technology was the clockwork. Newton wanted a clockwork universe, the entire universe as a gigantic clockwork mechanism, with all the parts interlocking and ticking over with infinite precision. Then in the 19th century along came steam power, and the universe was then depicted as an enormous heat engine, or thermodynamic machine, running down toward its heat death. Today the computer is the pinnacle of technology, so it's now fashionable to talk about nature as a computational process."
Which seems to source from https://www.edge.org/conversation/paul_davies-time-loops .
While "computer" may give us impressions of something with "a CPU" and "RAM" and "a disk drive", it does at least seem plausible that the universe as computation is a plausible base level, though. Unlike "the music of the spheres", which to the extent that it made predictions of the world, it got them wrong in the most basic way, viewing it through a lens of computation allows us to put some quite subtle and interesting limits on things. "Computation" is a pretty flexible substrate; it is difficult to imagine how the proposition "the universe is a computation and subject to the limitations thereto" could be falsified, and if it could, it is difficult to imagine how we would be able to know it was so falsified. Nevertheless the math of computation allows us to say non-trivial things about the universe as a result; it is not a vacuous generalization, though it is certainly a loose one... being able to say yet more concrete things about the nature of the computation, such as "this is exactly how gravity works", has quite a bit more utility.