You didn't understand the argument. — Hallucinogen
supposing simulation is true. Which you can't prove. — Vaskane
Point out the exact statement I made that is "god of the gaps". — Hallucinogen
Your thread title!!!! and most of the statement made in your opening! — universeness
The holographic principle is a reductio ad absurdum as proven by Nietzsche — Vaskane
would have to simulate a world that physically exists; a hologram is digital representation of a physical object. All the rest follows from the impossibility of 'simulating' a holographic space into existence out of a mind that consists of nothing. Might as well go back to "In the beginning was the Word." (and the word was either 'quantum' or 'abracadabra'.)Any simulation of a world — Hallucinogen
Clearly you do not understand what you're talking about.Firstly, it should be obvious that we can read, understand and interpret bits. Second, our perception is literally composed of what a bit is - a binary distinction. You either see an object or your don't. You either distinguish something from another, or you don't. Our perception is completely dependent on binary distinctions. — Hallucinogen
without first contrasting what a simulation is vs what a non-simulated world is, its mostly circular. — Philosophim
without first contrasting what a simulation is vs what a non-simulated world is, its mostly circular.
— Philosophim
A world is a set of objects in a space. The decision of whether something is simulated versus non-simulated would rest on whether something emerges from information processing.
I haven't spotted the circularity, could you point it out to me? — Hallucinogen
What I meant is that without defining what a non-simulated world is — Philosophim
its turned out like:
A. Its given that the world is simulated.
B. Therefore the world is simulated. — Philosophim
What I meant is that without defining what a non-simulated world is
— Philosophim
But I just did this? A world is a set of objects in a space. The question is whether it emerges from information processing or not. — Hallucinogen
1. Any simulation of a world either operates mechanically in physical space (e.g., in a computer) or is the result of information processing in a mind (e.g., a programmer’s mind). — Hallucinogen
2. The success of digital physics and the holographic principle imply that physical space is an emergent 3D representation of information processing. — Hallucinogen
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
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. — Hallucinogen
A non-simulated world is a set of objects in space. But if that's the case, then a simulated world is not a set of objects in space. — Philosophim
A world is a set of objects in a space. The decision of whether something is simulated versus non-simulated would rest on whether something emerges from information processing. — Hallucinogen
These really aren't separate issues though. — Philosophim
A mind is not itself a simulation right? Meaning that it is a non-simulated bit of reality that simulations can run in. — Philosophim
An accurate simulation of a non-simulated world can be applied to a non-simulated world without difficulty. — Philosophim
That doesn't mean the world is simulated, it just means that simulation of the actual world is accurate. — Philosophim
All that we can conclude from this is that our simulations of the world accurately reflect how our minds function. — Philosophim
The only way you can validly claim 4 is based on one is to state, "A simulated world is either..." Because that's what you stated in 1. — Philosophim
There has to be something non-simulated to simulate right? — Philosophim
Otherwise there isn't a non-simulated world — Philosophim
and thus the simulation cannot be accurate or inaccurate, it just is. — Philosophim
But if it is an accurate simulation, it is not indistinguishible — Philosophim
because it lacks the key property that you defined a non-simulated world as being: A set of objects in space — Philosophim
If a simulated world is a set of objects in space, then it is not a simulated world. — Philosophim
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.