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
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.
Is a map of the territory another "territory"? Just because the map does not represent itself on the map even though it is part of the territory does not mean that it is above and beyond the territory. It just means that it would be useless to do so. — Harry Hindu
and yet S(M) is always more complex than M, S(M) can always be discarded via Occam's Razor. — hypericin
The Boltzmann brain thought experiment suggests that it might be more likely for a single brain to spontaneously form in a void (complete with a memory of having existed in our universe) rather than for the entire universe to come about in the manner cosmologists think it actually did.
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In Boltzmann brain scenarios, the ratio of Boltzmann brains to "normal observers" is astronomically large. Almost any relevant subset of Boltzmann brains, such as "brains embedded within functioning bodies", "observers who believe they are perceiving 3 K microwave background radiation through telescopes", "observers who have a memory of coherent experiences", or "observers who have the same series of experiences as me", also vastly outnumber "normal observers". Therefore, under most models of consciousness, it is unclear that one can reliably conclude that oneself is not such a "Boltzmann observer", in a case where Boltzmann brains dominate the Universe. Even under "content externalism" models of consciousness, Boltzmann observers living in a consistent Earth-sized fluctuation over the course of the past several years outnumber the "normal observers" spawned before a Universe's "heat death".
As stated earlier, most Boltzmann brains have "abnormal" experiences; Feynman has pointed out that, if one knows oneself to be a typical Boltzmann brain, one does not expect "normal" observations to continue in the future. In other words, in a Boltzmann-dominated Universe, most Boltzmann brains have "abnormal" experiences, but most observers with only "normal" experiences are Boltzmann brains, due to the overwhelming vastness of the population of Boltzmann brains in such a Universe.
Is a map of the territory another "territory"?
— Harry Hindu
It can be, e.g: — Michael
Let's look at this from a human perspective. The possibilities are:
1. We're in a simulation, meaning there's the real world + the simulation we're a part of.
2. We're in the real world. This isn't a simulation.
Your point is that the simulation is part of the real world, whichever world that is, and that implies that I'm wrong (about the simulation hypothesis being a perfect Harry client for the novacula Occami :snicker: ).
Let's do the math.
From the simulator's point if view: Real world + The Simulation it creates = Real World (no issues).
From the simulated's point of view: The Simulation it's part of + The real world of the simulator > The Simulation it's part of. — Agent Smith
What I said about the distinction between natural and unnatural (artificial) has nothing to do with the distinction between reality and simulation.You have a point monsieur - the simulation is part of the real world; you said the same thing about the notion of unnatural many suns ago if you recall. — Agent Smith
So you think that simulated people deserve the same rights as real people?The difference between unnatural and simulation is that yhe latter is a world and so deserves, how shall I put it?, equal respect as the real deal. — Agent Smith
What I said about the distinction between natural and unnatural (artificial) has nothing to do with the distinction between reality and simulation. — Harry Hindu
So you think that simulated people deserve the same rights as real people? — Harry Hindu
No, we wouldn't. But I doubt we're simulations. Why would the creators create simulations that create simulations? What would be the point?We could be simulations, in fact that's what follows if you think my argument based on the novacula Occami is flawed and you do. Do we deserve the same rights as our creator(s)? — Agent Smith
No, we wouldn't. But I doubt we're simulations. Why would the creators create simulations that create simulations? What would be the point? — Harry Hindu
Thier case might be the more parsimonious actually, — Count Timothy von Icarus
We have an issue because mathematics tells us we should be able to have continuous things, but instead we only have discrete things — Count Timothy von Icarus
Help me understand, why should a brain spontaneously materializing be more likely than one evolving naturally? — hypericin
The Boltzmann brain thought experiment suggests that it might be more likely for a single brain to spontaneously form in a void (complete with a memory of having existed in our universe) rather than for the entire universe to come about in the manner cosmologists think it actually did.
Mathematics doesn't "tell us" this. Just because reality sometimes follows structures predicted in math doesn't mean that the existence of a mathematical construct is any kind of argument for it's instantiation in reality. — hypericin
Is math something we discovered, or something we invented? — Count Timothy von Icarus
How does our limited cognitive power offer up a finer grained (indeed, infinitely finer grained) reality than that which seems apparent? — Count Timothy von Icarus
In this related argument, 3D space and time are illusory, a sort of hologram created by 2D information theoretic structures. — Count Timothy von Icarus
3D space-time might actually be an error compressing code that evolution hit upon, an effective means of encoding fitness information, rather than the structure of reality. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Reason being that a simulator would only need to simulate the areas you're currently looking at, not the entire universe. It could be analogous to video games, which render the world around them based on the players' line of sight. — Count Timothy von Icarus
That is far more complex than just a brain forming in a void. — Michael
But I never proposed that complexity be the sole criterion for choosing a theory. — hypericin
Replace S(M) with common sense life and M with Boltzmann brain. — Michael
But here S(M) does possess explanatory power above M. With M we wonder how this extraordinarily unlikely event happened. — hypericin
So both M (Boltzmann brains) and S(M) (common sense life) are extraordinarily unlikely, but given that S(M) is less likely than M, what greater explanatory power does it have? — Michael
And yet, if for every passing year a god were to count one atom in the (observable) universe (there are between 10^78 and 10^82 of them), by the time it had counted all of them it wouldn't have made the slightest perceptible dent in its waiting time for a single Boltzmann brain to appear. If for every atom, it begins anew the entire yearly enumeration of every atom, still, not the slightest sliver of progress, it's waiting would have not even begun.We can't be, that's the problem. — Michael
It just has to do that thing about another 100,000,000,000,000,000,000 (hundred quadrillion) times, and by that time it can expect one to have appeared! — hypericin
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