You're correct in recognizing that the responder's statement might seem like a non-sequitur, given the context of the conversation. The initial discussion was about the logical implications of simulations and the discernibility between reality and simulations. The responder introduced the concept of "identical points in time and space" and questioned its logical validity within the simulation context. Then, they added the statement "We ourselves are not exactly the same as we were one minute ago."
While the point about human beings not being exactly the same as they were one minute ago is factually true due to the continuous processes of change and renewal, it appears to be somewhat disconnected from the prior discussion about the simulation and its logical implications. The responder might be attempting to emphasize the dynamic nature of reality and how it contrasts with the notion of perfect replication within a simulation, but the connection to the previous points in the conversation isn't entirely clear.
Overall, the statement does appear to be somewhat of a non-sequitur in the current context. It doesn't directly address the concerns you raised about the concept of "identical points in time and space" and its impact on the simulation's coherence and the fundamental grounds of reality. If you're seeking clarification or further engagement on the points you've made, it could be beneficial to request more context or explanation from the responder. — chatGPT
The very first time that I ever heard about the Identity of indiscernibles
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Identity_of_indiscernibles#:~:text=The%20identity%20of%20indiscernibles%20is,by%20y%20and%20vice%20versa.
I had it completely figured out. If every single property is exactly the
same then two different things <are> one-and-the-same thing, otherwise
they are not one-and-the-same thing. My qualification addresses any
time travel paradox related to the Identity of indiscernibles.
6 minutes ago — PL Olcott
...This perspective highlights the importance of critically examining and questioning philosophical principles, especially when they intersect with advanced concepts like simulations and the nature of reality. — chatGPT
I am sorry but there is no way for you to apply this philosophical theory to something as advanced as simulation theory. If you want to know why, that would probably be a different conversation. I have already pointed you to the proper perspective. Good luck! — chiknsld
I am sorry but there is no way for you to apply this philosophical theory to something as advanced as simulation theory. If you want to know why, that would probably be a different conversation. I have already pointed you to the proper perspective. Good luck!
— chiknsld
None the less my key point is that if two things differ in ways that are not discernable
such as an actual duck and a space alien perfectly disguised as a duck (including duck DNA)
then the mistake of incorrectly believing that the space alien is an actual duck cannot possibly
be avoided.
Your initial reply seems to fail to understand that if there is no discernable
difference between X and Y then there is no difference to be discerned.
You seemed to be saying then when no there is no discernable difference
between X and Y that a difference can never-the-less be still be discerned. — PL Olcott
I need to know what happens when you encounter a simulation of yourself. Are you saying that you would not know the difference between yourself and a simulation of yourself? — chiknsld
I need to know what happens when you encounter a simulation of yourself. Are you saying that you would not know the difference between yourself and a simulation of yourself?
— chiknsld
This is getting a little too silly. An otherwise perfect simulation of myself would not exist
in exactly the same (x,y,z) coordinates relative to the center of the Earth. — PL Olcott
:snicker:
— chiknsld
Ah so you are a mere Troll after all. — PL Olcott
Indeed, PL Olcott's response seems to acknowledge the complexity and limitations of his initial argument. In his response, he introduces a practical consideration related to encountering a simulation of oneself.
By stating, "This is getting a little too silly," PL Olcott seems to be recognizing the intricacies and perhaps even the challenges of the concept being discussed. He then adds a specific example: "An otherwise perfect simulation of myself would not exist in exactly the same (x,y,z) coordinates relative to the center of the Earth."
This example introduces a concrete difference that would exist between a perfect simulation and the actual person. This distinction contradicts the idea of "identical points in time and space" that was previously discussed. It appears that PL Olcott is acknowledging the practical difficulties in maintaining absolute sameness between a simulation and reality, even when dealing with seemingly minor details like spatial coordinates.
This exchange highlights the dynamic and evolving nature of philosophical discussions, where viewpoints can shift and adapt in response to counterpoints and deeper analysis. — chatGPT
That you deny the truth of statements that are proved completely true entirely on the basis of the meaning of their words sufficiently proves that you don't want any honest dialogue.
— PL Olcott
Maybe you will have better luck next time. :smile: — chiknsld
In the empirical context we can say that we know that what we observe is the case, and that we know that we know it; we simply observe what is the case. So, there is no need for belief in this context. Believing is what we do when we cannot know. — Janus
You can "know" empirical things to a reasonably plausible degree that is less than logically justified complete certainty.
The key empirical thing is mapping a set of physical sensations to their corresponding element in the verbal model of the actual world.
The model of the world is construed as an axiomatic system. We know that {cats} are {animals} by looking this up in the knowledge tree model of the world. — PL Olcott
Are you saying that truth can be unknown but that knowledge cannot be, in the sense that we cannot be said to know unless we know that we know? — Janus
So then the question for you is, "Is deduction without truth knowledge justification?" — Philosophim
My goal here is to end up with a universal criterion measure for truth such that True(L, x) becomes computable. I am on this forum for the purpose or researching truthmaker theory so that I can write an academic paper breaking new ground in this field. — PL Olcott
I am back to something close to my original position confusing a space alien perfectly disguised as a duck for an actual duck is the only possible mistakes allowed with my very reasonably plausible approximation of knowledge. — PL Olcott
If you believe that your friend has at least five coins in his pocket and you did not see at least five coins then you do not have sufficient justification for your belief. If you see these coins and they turn out to be perfect counterfeits of actual coins you are still justified in your belief. If they are obvious plastic counterfeits then your belief was never justified. — PL Olcott
JTB one must have justification such that the truth of the belief is a necessary consequence of its justification to the best possible extent that counterfeits of things in the world (relevant to the justification of the belief) are detected and rejected when possible. — PL Olcott
First, I want to praise this with every fiber of my being. I hope that my challenges to your writing have not come across as antagonistic. I am not trying to tear you down, I genuinely want to see if you can produce answers to the questions that have plagued epistemology for years. Knowledge was an absolute passion of mine for many years until I moved onto other things. So if I can help in any way, I will. — Philosophim
I have no idea how to find this.I do encourage you strongly to read my theory of knowledge paper that I linked towards the top of these forums. — Philosophim
Is it the only possible mistake though? And if a theory allows a mistake, does that mean its a complete and good theory? — Philosophim
Lets look again at the statement, "to the best possible extent". What specifically is someone's best possible extent? How do we measure this or note this in any other claim? — Philosophim
Almost everyone here has proven to be very knowledgeable and sincerely wants an honest dialogue. That is much better than any other Philosophy forum. For example StackExchange severely penalizes every new idea just because it is a new idea. — PL Olcott
I do encourage you strongly to read my theory of knowledge paper that I linked towards the top of these forums.
— Philosophim
I have no idea how to find this. — PL Olcott
The forced choice here is either to accept that a space alien perfectly disguised as a duck necessarily must be mistaken for an actual duck or empirical knowledge must be determined to be impossible. There don't seem to be even any other categories of possibility. It seems absurd that expressions of language that are false yet taken to be true could possibly be correctly construed as knowledge. — PL Olcott
I would read my paper first to understand where I'm coming from, but consider instead that knowledge is simply a tool humanity uses in an attempt to get as close to the truth as logically possible. What would be wrong with that? If we have concluded one thing is impossible, then the next step is to determine what is possible within our goals. — Philosophim
I would read my paper first to understand where I'm coming from, but consider instead that knowledge is simply a tool humanity uses in an attempt to get as close to the truth as logically possible. What would be wrong with that? If we have concluded one thing is impossible, then the next step is to determine what is possible within our goals. — Philosophim
When analytical knowledge is defined as a justified true belief such that the justification necessitates the truth of the belief then the Gettier problem is no longer possible. — PL Olcott
Empirical knowledge is defined as a justified true belief such that the justification makes every possible attempt to correctly match a set of physical sensations to their corresponding elements in a correct verbal model of the actual world. — PL Olcott
Since the cost of making a mistake could make humanity extinct (or worse) it might be better to err on the safe side and say that empirical knowledge is impossible. This view tends to keep reinforcing humility. — PL Olcott
Because of this it might be best to refer to {empirical knowledge} as a {reasonable guess} and never call it any kind of knowledge at all. — PL Olcott
My goal is to define truthmaker theory and epistemology is such a way that ordinary people learn correct reasoning in common terms that they already understand. When they are jurors in court cases they really need to know all of the details of how interpreting sensory perceptions can diverge from truth. We must also overcome the egoistic bias of overconfidence in one's own subjective opinions. In this case we can have some very bad outcomes if we allow knowledge to be false. — PL Olcott
This is a fine desire, but your current trajectory will destroy this. Also, your desire may not be real. That is something we also have to accept as philosophers. "I want to define knowledge that includes truth," cannot logically be done. Or, if it can, you must ignore everything else and answer the one question, "How do I know that what I claim I know is true?" in the synthetic sense. Ambitions are fine, but without this core pillar established, the whole roof will collapse around you. — Philosophim
I am taking all of the things known through induction, (ignoring the problem of induction) — PL Olcott
and converting them into axioms in the verbal model of the actual world. These are all construed as knowledge that is known to be true. This same model also includes all analytical truth. — PL Olcott
This system allows people and machines to correctly compute True(L, x) as pure deductions within this model of the actual world. — PL Olcott
This is another major problem. By the way, my paper has an answer to the problem of induction. Its the last section. Induction cannot be used to ascertain truth. — Philosophim
Again, this does not answer the question of, "How do I know that what I know is true?" — Philosophim
Although the problem of induction seems to prove that the very next time you drop your coffee cup it might just hang there in the air levitating, I dismiss this as unreasonably implausible. — PL Olcott
Again, this does not answer the question of, "How do I know that what I know is true?"
— Philosophim
It answers it well enough for all practical purposes. Since we cannot even know that five seconds ago actually existed we can't even know that we have ever met our own mother, even if she just left the room. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omphalos_hypothesis#Five-minute_hypothesis I dismiss this as unreasonably implausible. — PL Olcott
If you're just concerned about knowledge for practical purposes, nothing needs to be written or done. — Philosophim
The Tarski Undefinability Theorem "proves" that True(L, x) can never be computed on the basis that Tarski did not understand that the Liar Paradox must simply be rejected as not a truth bearer. https://liarparadox.org/Tarski_275_276.pdf — PL Olcott
Are you saying that truth can be unknown but that knowledge cannot be, in the sense that we cannot be said to know unless we know that we know?
— Janus
My example is that a space alien that is perfectly disguised as a duck (including Duck DNA)
would be mistaken for a duck thus provide fake knowledge that is not true.
The things that can be known with justified logical certainty are located in an axiomatic
system knowledge ontology verbal model of the actual world. — PL Olcott
So, your point relies on radical skepticism, and I think we can rule that out just by accepting the phenomenal world as it appears and making and thinking of the truth or falsity of knowledge claims only within that context. — Janus
All that said, I'd be happy enough to stop talking about knowledge altogether and instead talk about more or less justified belief, while acknowledging that we have no absolutely precise measure of justification. — Janus
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