A thousand apologies. — Ranjeet
In computer science it is known that it takes more computational power to simulate a computer system than the computer system itself has; typically, much more. I think this principle can be generalized:
For any system S, any complete simulation of S, S', must be more more complex than S — hypericin
I think this is true if one assumes that the simulation is of the exact quality and complexity of the universe the computer making the simulation belongs to. — punos
As for solipsism, it is simpler — Agent Smith
As for solipsism — Agent Smith
Doubting Thomas! — Agent Smith
Agree, but a virtual reality (BIV) only needs to provide one artificial feed of experience to the experiencer in the vat, so to speak. It doesn't require an inordinate amount of resources. I'm not suggesting I support such a view, but the complexity argument doesn't seem to shoot this one down directly.For any system S, any complete simulation of S, S', must be more more complex than S — hypericin
This is apparently about an actual simulation (as opposed to a VR premise), and it presumes that the simulation is being performed by a universe with the same rules as the one being simulated. There's no reason to assume that since there's no evidence for it.You seem to be answering the argument, "How can a computer be so powerful as to simulate the whole universe, when the computer is a part of the universe?" I am not making that argument.
How would a physics simulation know when a particular state of simulated material qualifies as a sentient being requiring being fooled? It means the physics must change depending on what is measuring it.You only have to simulate enough to fool the sentient beings — hypericin
It doesn't require an inordinate amount of resources. — noAxioms
I mean, our physics can be simulated at best down to the classical level, not the quantum level. To do that, you need something with more capability, with completely different rules. — noAxioms
How would a physics simulation know when a particular state of simulated material qualifies as a sentient being requiring being fooled? — noAxioms
Or it just seems consistant. There's a built in, this is correctly connected to the past quale. That shouldn't require something more powerful than our unconscious, just something different. Also the OR is about how many entities are posited.Solipsism implies a vastly more powerful brain than what you believe you have, as 99.9999999999.... % of it is unconscious: the part that remembers everything, so that everything is consistent, every time you check it, the part that simulates every physical phenomenon to perfect exactitude, the part that knows the entirety of every science and art, etc. etc. etc. — hypericin
In computer science it is known that it takes more computational power to simulate a computer system than the computer system itself has; typically, much more. — hypericin
that would be no more a simulation of the universe than an iPhone is a simulation of an iPhone — hypericin
A simulation imitates the operation of real world processes or systems with the use of models. The model represents the key behaviours and characteristics of the selected process or system while the simulation represents how the model evolves under different conditions over time. — TWI
This isn't exactly true or useful. While it does take more power to emulate a system, you can fully emulate an older system on a more powerful system. Just look at MAME the Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator that emulates vintage arcade machines and vintage home computers and consoles.In computer science it is known that it takes more computational power to simulate a computer system than the computer system itself has; typically, much more. I think this principle can be generalized: — hypericin
While it does take more power to emulate a system, you can fully emulate an older system on a more powerful system. Just look at MAME the Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator — Harry Hindu
You can't get any better model of something than an artificial copy of it. — T Clark
As I pointed out, all you need is a more powerful information processing system to simulate another system that has less information. Your argument is invalid because you dont know if our universe contains all possible information. You just dont know how much information actually exists. Our universe could be a fraction of the total information so a larger system could actually be simulating our universe.Exactly how does this contradict what I said? — hypericin
Invalid if we think of the simulation as part of reality. All simulations exist within one reality. Simulating an old gaming console on your modern computer is real example of a simulation within reality. Both the simulator and the simulation are only a fraction of reality. The problem is that we just don't know how big reality is, or how much information exists.My brain tells me this:
1. Real (1 entity)
2. Real + Simulation (2 entities) — Agent Smith
Invalid if we think of the simulation as part of reality. All simulations exist within one reality. Simulating an old gaming console on your modern computer is real example of a simulation within reality. Both the simulator and the simulation are only a fraction of reality. The problem is that we just don't know how big reality is, or how much information exists. — Harry Hindu
No. It's not. A simulation exists within reality as it is composed of real things. You need a real computer to create a simulated one.A simulation’s an additional entity over and above reality. — Agent Smith
:roll:It's true that the simulation is part of reality, within it to be precise. However, the simulation is a world unto itself and so must be treated as equals with the world it is within. — Agent Smith
By understanding that if a simulation is a world it is no longer a simulation. A simulation only makes sense in light of a world.How would William of Occam tackle this? — Agent Smith
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