3. Quantum cognition and decision theory have shown that information processing in a mind exhibits quantum principles — Hallucinogen
Incorrect. All your premises are rushed, and without definitions. For example, if computers use bits, our mind reads the world as pictures.4. From (2) and (3), the information processing from which physical space is emergent is scientifically indistinguishable from the information processing that occurs in a mind. — Hallucinogen
1. Any simulation of a world either operates mechanically in physical space (e.g., in a computer) or is information processing in a mind (e.g., a programmer’s mind). — Hallucinogen
"The holistic IIT approach is in principle applicable to any information-processing dynamical network regardless of its interpretation in the context of consciousness. In this paper we take the first steps towards a formulation of a general and consistent version of IIT for interacting networks of quantum systems." — Towards Quantum Integrated Information Theory
Recently, many studies have applied quantum mathematical formalism to the modeling of quantum-like phenomena in human decision-making — A quantum-like information processing model...
Quantum theory provides an alternative probabilistic framework for modelling decision
making compared with classical probability theory, and has been successfully used to address behaviour considered paradoxical or irrational from a classical point of view. — Quantum cognition and decision theories: A tutorial
In contrast, quantum cognition holds that a cognitive property maybe indeterminate, i.e., its properties do not have well established values prior to observation. We argue that indeterminacy is sufficient for incompatibility between cognitive properties. — Contextuality and context-sensitivity in probabilistic models of cognition
In this introduction, we focus on two quantum principles as examples to show why quantum cognition is an appealing new theoretical direction for psychology: complementarity, which suggests that some psychological measures have to be made sequentially and that the context generated by the first measure can influence responses to the next one, producing measurement order effects, and superposition, which suggests that some psychological states cannot be defined with respect to definite values but, instead, that all possible values within the superposition have some potential for being expressed. — What Is Quantum Cognition, and How Is It Applied to Psychology?
In the quantum-like framework the brain is a black box, such that its information processing can be described by the formalism of quantum theory. “Mental observables”, e.g., in the form of questions, are represented by Hermitian operators (and in more general framework by so-called positive operator valued measures, Asano et al., 2015). The mental state (or the belief state) of an agent is represented like a quantum state ... Therefore we can apply the Heisenberg uncertainty principle to characterize interrelation of uncertainties of two incompatible questions — Quantum like modeling of decision making: Quantifying uncertainty with the aid of Heisenberg–Robertson inequality
if computers use bits, our mind reads the world as pictures — L'éléphant
So, that's a simulation. What's the original template? — Vera Mont
the template is information processing in a mind. — Hallucinogen
Whose mind? — universeness
and how do you know whether or not that mind is simulated? — universeness
Why? we humans can produce simulations/emulations to the extent that we even call them 'virtual' reality! So according to any simulated universe theory, we are simulations that create simulations. There is no compelling reason for that regression to stop. That's why the theists provide even poorer responses to 'who made god,' than scientists who speculate on 'before the big bang.'I don't see an evident basis on which to generalize the property of being simulated to the mind that is simulating the physical space (especially since it is minds in which information processing occurs). — Hallucinogen
The problem is that we have not established 'a mind,' as against say 'a mindless spark that sparked and then no longer exists or such cyclical posits as Roger Penrose's CCC. The only valid answer is:All we're establishing here is a mind, hence the conclusion in (6). — Hallucinogen
In other words, no human has any compelling evidence whatsoever about the existence of god and there is no 'digital physics argument' that is worth the paper or web post it is posited on. Such are pure speculations at best.The grounds for that possibility aren't given. — Hallucinogen
No it's not! There is no compelling evidence that such a conjecture has any truth value at all.The scientific evidence is that physical space is simulated. — Hallucinogen
3. Quantum cognition and decision theory have shown that information processing in a mind exhibits quantum principles known to underlie the emergence of physical space. — Hallucinogen
we humans can produce simulations/emulations to the extent that we even call them 'virtual' reality! — universeness
So according to any simulated universe theory, we are simulations that create simulations. — universeness
The problem is that we have not established 'a mind,' — universeness
In other words, no human has any compelling evidence whatsoever about the existence of god — universeness
You are simply using gaps in current scientific knowledge — universeness
I'm confused why you mention this - computers do "use" bits, and our minds do understand the world in pictures. This is an example of why my points are rushed and undefined? — Hallucinogen
Check your premises #1 and #2. You are arguing that the mind reads like how a computer does.3. Quantum cognition and decision theory have shown that information processing in a mind exhibits quantum principles known to underlie the emergence of physical space.
4. From (2) and (3), the information processing from which physical space is emergent is scientifically indistinguishable from the information processing that occurs in a mind. — Hallucinogen
No, I'm the one confused with the above comment. I pointed that the computer does not read the way our mind reads — L'éléphant
if computers use bits, our mind reads the world as pictures. — L'éléphant
You are arguing that the mind reads like how a computer does.
This is false. — L'éléphant
Our mind does not read bits. We use perception to view the world. In pictures -- which means a complete picture.Pictures can be represented in bits and bits can be processed to produce a picture. So I don't recognise the mutual exclusivity that serves as the basis of your reply. — Hallucinogen
Information processing is perception in humans. Computers do not perceive. There is no vantage point with computers.They both use information processing. Saying that one of them "reads" some substrate that isn't information isn't going to be defensible. — Hallucinogen
Which hypothesis do you mean? — Hallucinogen
Therefore, our world is the result of information processing in a mind, this mind we call God. — Hallucinogen
And you accuse me of making irrational jumps! :roll:Here's my variant of the Digital Physics Argument for the existence of God: — Hallucinogen
So according to any simulated universe theory, we are simulations that create simulations.
— universeness
This is an irrational jump. — Hallucinogen
No human being knows what physical space IS, and the facts about physical space that we do know do not implicate a mind at source. To suggest it does, is indeed an irrational jump.So a mind is implicated from facts about what physical space is. — Hallucinogen
6. Therefore, our world is the result of information processing in a mind, this mind we call God. — Hallucinogen
What hath Tod wrought?Let's suppose there is a six dimensional universe (6 spatial dimensions and one temporal dimension). In this universe there is a naturalistically evolved intelligent being called Tod.
Now suppose that due to existing in this six dimensional universe, brains and computers can be vastly more powerful than in our universe due to the extra dimensions available for interconnectivity, higher complexity of parts per volume, etc. (Feel free to add dimensions as needed.) In other regards we can consider Tod to be a lot like us for the purposes of this thought experiment.
Now Tod is a researcher at a university, and the prevailing wisdom is that intelligent life can only evolve in a universe with four spatial dimensions or more. Tod sets out to study this matter, and in the course of this study he sets up some comprehensive simulations of a universe with three spatial and one temporal dimension. After some trial and error, Tod succeeds in creating a simulated universe where intelligent life evolves.
Of course Tod's creation is meant to be understood as our universe. So, some questions:
1. Can it be proven by beings inside such a simulation what the nature of their existence is?
2. Is Tod deserving of worship by the intelligent beings that exist inside the simulation?
2a. Does it change things to know that Tod is going to shut the simulation down in ten minutes?
2b. Does it further change things to know that ten minutes in Tod's time is equivalent to 10 million years in our time?
Now, suppose Tod's colleague Ged gets a copy of Tod's program and runs it on his own 6D computer. However, unlike Tod who is hands off other than setting the simulation going, Ged gets really interested in the lives of some intelligent beings in one tiny microcosm of the simulation. Ged develops ways to manifest himself within the simulation he is running and to communicate with the 3D people who are being simulated. GED tells some of the 3D people that he is going to build 6D robots in the actual 6D universe and give the 3D people he approves of bodies in the real 6D world.
3. Is GED more worthy of worship than Tod? Why or why not?
Our mind does not read bits. — L'éléphant
We use perception to view the world. In pictures -- which means a complete picture. — L'éléphant
Information processing is perception in humans — L'éléphant
Computers do not perceive. There is no vantage point with computers. — L'éléphant
this one — Vera Mont
seems entirely superfluous, since it's either a tenet of unsupported faith or an infinite regression — Vera Mont
And you accuse me of making irrational jumps! — universeness
No human being knows what physical space IS, and the facts about physical space that we do know do not implicate a mind at source. — universeness
What do you think qualifies as the most compelling point you make in your OP as evidence that a god exists? — universeness
Why in God's mind rather than in say, Tod's laptop? — wonderer1
Prove that it's a jump. — Hallucinogen
Asserting baseless skepticism about scientific findings isn't a response I see often. — Hallucinogen
What do you think qualifies as the most compelling point you make in your OP as evidence that a god exists?
— universeness
Conclusions tend to rely on the whole of the argument, not just one isolated part of it. — Hallucinogen
The burden of proof regarding posits you put forward, as supposed evidence for the existence of a god lies with you the proposer, not me the sceptic, the atheist. — universeness
inflating and projecting scientific findings into god of the gaps woo woo posits — universeness
The conclusions can be anything you like when the whole of the argument amounts to pure flights of fancy. — universeness
You claimed that a statement I made was a jump. Your claim is about the reasoning of my statemen, and you have that reasoning in front of you, so the burden of proof is in fact on you to justify your claim about what you are reading. The only thing that carries no burden of proof is "I don't know", which is not what you said. You misunderstand the burden of proof, as if it means "I get to claim that someone else's reasoning is fallacious without responsibility" which is not what it means. — Hallucinogen
What success are you referring to? This is merely your opinion. In a Computer for example a 1 can be used to represent any value in an analogue range of measurements of voltage > 0 and <= 5 volts.2. The success of digital physics and the holographic principle imply that physical space is an emergent 3D representation of information processing. — Hallucinogen
The idea that QM is part of human consciousness is not proven and even if it was that does not mean god exists (another one of your jumps). No such link between information processing in the mind and the emergence of physical space has been proven (you are jumping around more than a typical Earth bound bunny rabbit!)3. Quantum cognition and decision theory have shown that information processing in a mind exhibits quantum principles known to underlie the emergence of physical space. — Hallucinogen
But 2 and 3 are nothing but pure conjectures based on your personal misguided interpretation of scientific proposals, so 'From (2) and (3),' is logically fallacious as you have not established that 2 or 3 is true!4. From (2) and (3), the information processing from which physical space is emergent is scientifically indistinguishable from the information processing that occurs in a mind. — Hallucinogen
Well, I think you should go for 'I' in those words I have bolded in the above quote, rather than assuming you speak for any significant group of 'we' considering there are more varieties of gods proposed than varieties of chocolate.5. Restating (1) in terms of (4), our world is either scientifically indistinguishable from the result of information processing in a mind, or it is the result of information processing in a mind.
6. Therefore, our world is the result of information processing in a mind, this mind we call God. — Hallucinogen
Your thread title!!!! and most of the statement made in your opening!Point out the exact statement I made that is "god of the gaps". — Hallucinogen
Well, peddlers of woo woo always claim such things, when their woo woo is clearly displayed, yes?This is a description of the quality of your own reasoning. You simply declare assertions about reasoning that you dislike to be incorrect with no substantive basis. Whenever you are challenged, you simply switch to a new form of denial without supporting what you previously denied. — Hallucinogen
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