I start with a few.Without axioms it's difficult to get reasoning off the ground. You have to start somewhere, right? — fishfry
VR says that all you know is potentially lies. You are not of this universe, but rather you are experiencing it. All very dualistic.
If you think about it, the view can be empirically tested. Not so much with the simulation hypothesis.
— noAxioms
Yes but everyone agrees with that. There's a world "out there," and we experience it through our senses. — fishfry
As I said, one can empirically examine the causal chain that makes the body walk for instance. In a VR, it does not originate in the brain of the avatar, but external, from the mind controlling the body. Say you're playing tomb raider. Open up Lara Croft's head. No brain in there, or if there is, it's just a prop. None of the stuff she does has its cause originating from there.Not sure what you mean by empirical testing here.
Trendy, yes. Kind of dumbs down the validity of any scientific discovery. Why would a simulation choose to display CMB anisotropy if that isn't what a real universe would look like?It's always been unclear to me which aspect of simulate/VR Bostrom is arguing.
Definitely the former. But Elon musk is arguing for VR, and references Bostrom's paper to support it, so he has no idea what he's talking about.
— noAxioms
Right. And I saw a TED talk where George Smoot, the guy who discovered the cosmic background radiation anisotropy, was enthusiastically advocating simulation theory. Neil deGrasse Tyson too. A lot of people who should know better say trendy things for no reason at all. More arguments against simulation IMO.
I think that example was being used as an illustration of Moore's law, and not as support for a VR hypothesis.I've seen the argument -- perhaps this wasn't in the original Bostrom paper, I don't recall -- that we should consider Pong, the original video game. versus the amazingly realistic video games of today — fishfry
I would put things differently. We have clearly made tremendous progress in simulating all manner of physical processes, including those happening inside brains. Where we have made no progress is in developing a conceptual framework for connecting such physical processes with the subjective experience of consciousness. — Echarmion
We are already able to create systems that appear like a conscious subject on a passing glance (though humans also occasionally ascribe consciousness to anything from cats to rocks, so perhaps that's not surprising). — Echarmion
It seems likely that we'll be able to create artificial systems which are indistinguishable from conscious subjects in a number of circumstances in the near future. — Echarmion
Perhaps this will bring us closer to understanding our own consciousness, but perhaps not. — Echarmion
Without axioms it's difficult to get reasoning off the ground. You have to start somewhere, right?
— fishfry
I start with a few.
1) It's not all a lie. I mean, I can't know that, but if it's all crap, then I can know nothing regardless of how I interpret the lies, so I have no choice but to give weight to the empirical.
2) It's not about me. If I am the center of the universe, the rest is probably a lie. So I pretty much find that any view that puts me, humanity, Earth, the universe itself, as the center of something larger, to be unproductive. — noAxioms
Descartes apparently worried about it all being a lie. I reject that road only because it is untravelable, not because it is wrong. But it seems that modern science has thrown a cold paid of doubt on the validity of "I think therefore I am". — noAxioms
Not sure what you mean by empirical testing here.
As I said, one can empirically examine the causal chain that makes the body walk for instance. In a VR, it does not originate in the brain of the avatar, but external, from the mind controlling the body. Say you're playing tomb raider. Open up Lara Croft's head. No brain in there, or if there is, it's just a prop. None of the stuff she does has its cause originating from there.
Why does nobody pursue such investigations? Is technogoly still so backwards that it can't be done? They already have machines that can detect a decision having been made before you are aware of having done so yourself. — noAxioms
Trendy, yes. Kind of dumbs down the validity of any scientific discovery. Why would a simulation choose to display CMB anisotropy if that isn't what a real universe would look like? — noAxioms
I think that example was being used as an illustration of Moore's law, and not as support for a VR hypothesis. — noAxioms
But if my consciousness itself is simulated, then the simulation argument requires that consciousness is computational, a point I strenuously disagree with, with Penrose and Searle on my side.
— fishfry
Why do you think it's not computational? — RogueAI
With the Penrose & Searle reference right there? The answer is obvious. Bostrom obviously doesn't hold this view.requires that consciousness is computational, a point I strenuously disagree with, with Penrose and Searle on my side.
— fishfry
Why do you think it's not computational? — RogueAI
I hold them to be true out of necessity, not because they necessarily are. Another one then I forgot to list: No magic. "I don't know, needs more investigation" is a far better answer than the god of the gaps explanation. Every time one of those open questions finally gets answered, it's never magic. The magic explanation is thus far on the wrong end of a shutout.So you DO have axioms :-) — fishfry
You may not buy into Tegmark's suggestions, but that doesn't make him a troll. I don't agree with him either, but I still read the book and find it revolutionary. His attempts at empirical evidence are completely faulty, but one is expected to pony up evidence to bump the idea from interpretation to actual 'theory'. He doesn't call it that, only calling it 'hypothesis', but even that word implies falsifiability.Likewise Tegmark's mathematical universe. An even more obvious troll. — fishfry
Matter of time. Right now it only passes judgment on my choice of sites on which I choose to post my opinions.Is your web browser passing judgment on the opinions you post to this site? — fishfry
Obviously yes. As a Searle fan, you should know this. The question is does Blinky experience pleasure eating Ms Pacman? Blinky is an NPC. Ms Pacman is not. The answer there is no only because such experience would provide no benefit to Blinky, so there's no reason for it to be there. This would not be the case in Bostrom's sim, were it possible.Does Ms. Pac-Man experience pleasure eating white dots,
Agree, but a physicalist would say that the brain could be implemented by a Turing machine, just as it could be pencil and paper. Arguably, the latter might actually be more efficient. Turing machines are not designed for practicality. They're a model of computability.the brain does not operate by the same principles as a Turing machine.
So you DO have axioms :-)
— fishfry
I hold them to be true out of necessity, not because they necessarily are. Another one then I forgot to list: No magic. "I don't know, needs more investigation" is a far better answer than the god of the gaps explanation. Every time one of those open questions finally gets answered, it's never magic. The magic explanation is thus far on the wrong end of a shutout. — noAxioms
Why does the sun cross the sky each day? God carries it thus. What's have we learned since? Clue: It isn't that Earth goes around the sun, since it doesn't do that each day, yet that's the rebuttal typically given. — noAxioms
Likewise Tegmark's mathematical universe. An even more obvious troll.
— fishfry
You may not buy into Tegmark's suggestions, but that doesn't make him a troll. — noAxioms
I don't agree with him either, but I still read the book and find it revolutionary. His attempts at empirical evidence are completely faulty, but one is expected to pony up evidence to bump the idea from interpretation to actual 'theory'. He doesn't call it that, only calling it 'hypothesis', but even that word implies falsifiability. — noAxioms
Is your web browser passing judgment on the opinions you post to this site?
— fishfry
Matter of time. Right now it only passes judgment on my choice of sites on which I choose to post my opinions. — noAxioms
Does Ms. Pac-Man experience pleasure eating white dots,
Obviously yes. — noAxioms
As a Searle fan, you should know this. — noAxioms
The question is does Blinky experience pleasure eating Ms Pacman? Blinky is an NPC. Ms Pacman is not. The answer there is no only because such experience would provide no benefit to Blinky, so there's no reason for it to be there. This would not be the case in Bostrom's sim, were it possible. — noAxioms
the brain does not operate by the same principles as a Turing machine.
Agree, but a physicalist would say that the brain could be implemented by a Turing machine, just as it could be pencil and paper. Arguably, the latter might actually be more efficient. Turing machines are not designed for practicality. They're a model of computability. — noAxioms
I don't know enough about this. Is the idea that the many minds/consciousnesses all think up the same things that we generally take to be mind-independent stuff?Why is the burden of proof on me? We know mind and consciousness exist. The existence of mind-independent stuff is simply asserted. I would like to see a proof that this stuff exists. Something a little more robust than "go kick a rock". — RogueAI
I'm not making any claim other than we know mind and consciousness exist. It's up to the people asserting mindless stuff (i.e., matter) exists and consciousness and mind emerge from it to prove it. — RogueAI
You're making the strong claim that mind/consciousness can't come from matter, so the burden of proof of that claim is definitely on you. If Bostrom makes the claim that mind/consciousness does emerge from matter, then the burden of proof of that is his. I'm not sure if he's making the claim directly, but his sim argument depends on it, and he's claiming the sim argument, so the burden is still there, as it is on you for your strong claim.Minds/consciousness can't come from matter, therefore simulation theory is false.
— RogueAI
How do you prove that?
— Benj96
Why is the burden of proof on me? We know mind and consciousness exist. The existence of mind-independent stuff is simply asserted. I would like to see a proof that this stuff exists. Something a little more robust than "go kick a rock". — RogueAI
That's a far stronger argument for mind independent stuff. It doesn't refute solipsism since there aren't other minds also agreeing on the rock that you haven't even noticed yet. But similar arguments can be used to refute solipsism.Is the idea that the many minds/consciousnesses all think up the same things that we generally take to be mind-independent stuff? — Patterner
More to the point, why would anybody (even Bostrom) accept the SH? People choose a view either because there is evidence or because they want it to be true. The former is a rational motivation and the latter is rationalized. Bostrom's argument seems to attempt to bend the facts horribly to make the hypothesis plausible. This suggests that he wants it to be for some reason, but I cannot fathom why somebody would want to actually believe that. OK, I see why one might want to appear to believe it: Because of the popularity of the idea from movie fiction. He has gained money/status/notoriety from pushing a view that nobody else is in a coherent manner. Elon Musk is a decent example of an incoherent hypothesis, and he's not doing it for the notoriety that he already had. Without knowing it, he pushes for VR, and I can see reasons why somebody might choose that.Why do people who reject God accept the Great Simulator? — fishfry
The world simulating us is not constrained to the computability laws that constrain our world. It is thus constrained in Bostrom's view, but not in general. It's sort of a computing version of deism. The creating simulator starts it up, but then steps back and never interferes and lays no demands on what the occupants do, nor does it make any promises to them. The typically posited god usually does have promises and demands, but not necessarily under deism.The GS is just God constrained to computability.
I haven't got round to replying to that endless topic yet, but Tegmark is more appropriately discussed here since it has little to do with supertasks.I laid out my case that Tegmark is a troll here ... — fishfry
It's not much different than all these centuries where the universe was considered to be an 'object', a thing contained by time and in need of creation. They all of a sudden a new view comes along and the category changes. It isn't an object created in time, but rather a structure that contains time. Most people still hold the 'contained by time' view since it is more intuitive. Tegmark is doing something similar: changing the categorical relations. Refute it from its own premises, but not by begging different ones.How does he get around the category error problem, confusing the map with the territory, or the program with its execution? My hat is off to you for having read the source material.
Your refusal to apply the language you use for human activities to something non-human doesn't mean that the non-human thing isn't doing them.You give your browser far too much credit. It passes no judgment on anything. You are the one who has judgment. The browser just flips bits on your computer to implement certain communication protocols that it uses to exchange data with a web server. And the data has no meaning, it's just a long string of bits. Humans give it interpretation and meaning.
Ms Pacman is you. It's a VR game, and you enjoy eating the dots, else you'd not be cramming quarters into the machine. It is a straight up case of dualism. Ms Pacman's consciousness is yours. She is the avatar, who doesn't enjoy the dots any more than you claim your physical avatar enjoys the ice cream.Does Ms. Pac-Man experience pleasure eating white dots,
Obviously yes.
— noAxioms
You can't believe that. Are you joking with me or making some kind of point I'm not understanding? It's not possible that you believe that literally.
Searle says exactly that, since what your avatar does instantiates feeling in your mind. Intentionality comes from that mind and not from the avatar. Likewise, Ms Pacman makes no choices on her own, since the intentionality comes from the mind (you) who is obviously very much enjoying eating the dots.Searle's rolling in his grave and he's not even dead. That's not true. Searle denies that bit-flipping instantiates intentionality or feelings like pleasure.
Perhaps this is the disconnect. In what way is Searle a physicalist? Usually the term is used for a physical monist: All physics (including people) operate by the laws of physics, every bit of which is arguably computational.; Searle perhaps posits a different kind of matter that he still labels 'physics', but the physics community doesn't since there's been no demonstration of it.A physicalist, which Searle is
Have I claimed beliefs? Do I believe the rock exists independent of me? Do you know enough of my beliefs to answer that?I'm still disturbed by the things you claim to believe.
No, that's if VR is true. SH is not modelled by a video game.Anyway if simulation theory is true, we're all characters in a video game
Yes, for things I haven't even noticed yet. But I think an explanation is needed if I am in a place I've never been, write a list of what I see, and another person in the same situation puts the same things on their list.That's a far stronger argument for mind independent stuff. It doesn't refute solipsism since there aren't other minds also agreeing on the rock that you haven't even noticed yet. But similar arguments can be used to refute solipsism. — noAxioms
You're making the strong claim that mind/consciousness can't come from matter, so the burden of proof of that claim is definitely on you. — noAxioms
I don't know enough about this. Is the idea that the many minds/consciousnesses all think up the same things that we generally take to be mind-independent stuff? — Patterner
Perhaps only my mind exists, and, since it thinks up what I usually take to be other minds, it only makes sense that I think them up to perceive the same things that I take to be mind-independent? — Patterner
It seems odd enough that beings of a certain nature would come up with the idea of a reality that was of a nature unlike anything they had or could ever experience. Odder still that they would only ever see themselves as inhabiting that reality, and, indeed, being of that nature themselves. That doesn't seem like less of a problem than anything I can think of. :grin: I'll stick with proto-consciousness.Idealism is going to have to posit that for some reason, we're all dreaming of a reality where matter seems to exist. This, to me, seems like less of a problem than the Hard Problem. — RogueAI
Patterner bumped this old post, so I tracked down what was being referenced.
I'm not making any claim other than we know mind and consciousness exist. It's up to the people asserting mindless stuff (i.e., matter) exists and consciousness and mind emerge from it to prove it.
— RogueAI
Minds/consciousness can't come from matter, therefore simulation theory is false.
— RogueAI
How do you prove that?
— Benj96
Why is the burden of proof on me? We know mind and consciousness exist. The existence of mind-independent stuff is simply asserted. I would like to see a proof that this stuff exists. Something a little more robust than "go kick a rock".
— RogueAI
You're making the strong claim that mind/consciousness can't come from matter, so the burden of proof of that claim is definitely on you. If Bostrom makes the claim that mind/consciousness does emerge from matter, then the burden of proof of that is his. I'm not sure if he's making the claim directly, but his sim argument depends on it, and he's claiming the sim argument, so the burden is still there, as it is on you for your strong claim. — noAxioms
You make a second claim, that sim theory is false if your assertion is true. To me, that's another thing in need of proof. You arrange matter into a person and somehow a mind thingy finds it. — noAxioms
What's different about the simulation that the same thing wouldn't happen, that the simulated thing would be conscious the same way you claim to be, despite it being attached only to a simulated physical? — noAxioms
Why do people who reject God accept the Great Simulator?
— fishfry
More to the point, why would anybody (even Bostrom) accept the SH? People choose a view either because there is evidence or because they want it to be true. The former is a rational motivation and the latter is rationalized. Bostrom's argument seems to attempt to bend the facts horribly to make the hypothesis plausible. This suggests that he wants it to be for some reason, but I cannot fathom why somebody would want to actually believe that. OK, I see why one might want to appear to believe it: Because of the popularity of the idea from movie fiction. He has gained money/status/notoriety from pushing a view that nobody else is in a coherent manner. Elon Musk is a decent example of an incoherent hypothesis, and he's not doing it for the notoriety that he already had. Without knowing it, he pushes for VR, and I can see reasons why somebody might choose that. — noAxioms
The GS is just God constrained to computability.
The world simulating us is not constrained to the computability laws that constrain our world. — noAxioms
It is thus constrained in Bostrom's view, but not in general. — noAxioms
It's sort of a computing version of deism. — noAxioms
The creating simulator starts it up, but then steps back and never interferes and lays no demands on what the occupants do, nor does it make any promises to them. The typically posited god usually does have promises and demands, but not necessarily under deism. — noAxioms
I laid out my case that Tegmark is a troll here ...
— fishfry
I haven't got round to replying to that endless topic yet, but Tegmark is more appropriately discussed here since it has little to do with supertasks. — noAxioms
You say category error: Please explain that without begging a different view. You do explain it there, but you are very much begging a different view when doing so. Tegmark is saying that mathematics (not any mental concept of it) IS the territory. Our abstract usage of mathematics is the map, but that abstraction is not what is the universe. — noAxioms
It's not much different than all these centuries where the universe was considered to be an 'object', a thing contained by time and in need of creation. — noAxioms
They all of a sudden a new view comes along and the category changes. It isn't an object created in time, but rather a structure that contains time. Most people still hold the 'contained by time' view since it is more intuitive. Tegmark is doing something similar: changing the categorical relations. Refute it from its own premises, but not by begging different ones. — noAxioms
Your refusal to apply the language you use for human activities to something non-human doesn't mean that the non-human thing isn't doing them. — noAxioms
Ms Pacman is you. — noAxioms
It's a VR game, and you enjoy eating the dots, else you'd not be cramming quarters into the machine. It is a straight up case of dualism. Ms Pacman's consciousness is yours. She is the avatar, who doesn't enjoy the dots any more than you claim your physical avatar enjoys the ice cream. — noAxioms
Searle says exactly that, since what your avatar does instantiates feeling in your mind. Intentionality comes from that mind and not from the avatar. Likewise, Ms Pacman makes no choices on her own, since the intentionality comes from the mind (you) who is obviously very much enjoying eating the dots. — noAxioms
Perhaps this is the disconnect. In what way is Searle a physicalist? — noAxioms
Usually the term is used for a physical monist: All physics (including people) operate by the laws of physics, every bit of which is arguably computational — noAxioms
.; Searle perhaps posits a different kind of matter that he still labels 'physics', but the physics community doesn't since there's been no demonstration of it. — noAxioms
I'm still disturbed by the things you claim to believe.
Have I claimed beliefs? Do I believe the rock exists independent of me? Do you know enough of my beliefs to answer that? — noAxioms
Anyway if simulation theory is true, we're all characters in a video game
No, that's if VR is true. SH is not modelled by a video game. — noAxioms
First, if the world is simulated, why don't its 'designers' simply 'pop out' at times and leave us with some trace of their existence? Guidance through such a virtual world might be helpful, and yet there is no trace of anyone 'programming' or 'guiding' us anywhere. — jasonm
Similarly, why don't we sometimes notice violations of the laws of physics? If it's just a simulation, does it matter if the laws of physics are perfectly consistent? This applies to any law of this simulated world, including propositional logic. Again, if you are there, leave us with some trace of your existence through 'miracles' and other types of anomalies that our world does not seem to have. And yet there seems to be no instances of this kind. — jasonm
Third: what type of computing power would be required to 'house' this virtual universe? Are we talking about computers that are bigger than the universe itself? Is this possible even in principle? — jasonm
...it doesn't look like anything to me...
In that sense, I think the notion that the universe is 'simulated' is completely superfluous and can therefore be explained away as being 'highly improbable.' — jasonm
My example is memorizing words/symbols without knowing their meaning, only to learn later how to read them. That's proof of information independent of your mind, a sort of refutation of solipsistic idealism.Yes, for things I haven't even noticed yet. But I think an explanation is needed if I am in a place I've never been, write a list of what I see, and another person in the same situation puts the same things on their list. — Patterner
Bostrom seems to presume this. If they do manage to simulate a human enough to appear conscious, those that deny consciousness can come from matter will simply deny that the simulated person is conscious. A successful simulation won't change their opinion.If they are also asserting mind and consciousness can come from matter somehow, they have an even higher burden of proof. — RogueAI
No, not you. No quote of yours was in the bit there to which I was replying.Me? I make no such claim. — fishfry
What do you mean by that? I mean, technically, none of physics is computational if done to a sufficient level of detail, but I don't think that level of detail is needed in a simulation.I say that consciousness is physical but not computational.
Not too much. Both are deliberate choices of interesting mathematics. The vast majority of possible universe are not interesting.What's the difference between [ID]and sim theory?
I didn't say implement them. I said that they would find the familiar pattern. If nothing is known about how that works, then you can't say it wouldn't happen with the sim.A simulation of gravity does not implement gravity. Simulations of brains therefore do not necessarily implement minds.
There's a lot more veneration of the God talkers than you suggest here, and if Bostrom screamed his assertions from a box in a subway station, he'd get a lot less attention. He's getting mocked plenty in topics like this one. Bostrom is venerated at the Ted talk because the audience is full of people who's seen Inception and think that's what he's talking about.The question is, why do we mock the Godly street preacher, and venerate the simulation theory TED talker?
I'm gladly advocating it?? Bostrom claims we are in a sim of us: The world simulating us is the same as the one simulated. That's not ID since the design is already made and it is just mimicry. But in general, if you admit that we know nothing of the world running the sim, then the idea is no different than deism.Again, do you believe in intelligent design? Nothing provokes scientists more than that idea, they hate it. While gladly advocating simulation theory.
Is it? If we can know nothing of those running it, how do we know it is a computation? At what point does it cease to be sim theory and just become straight up god:"whoomp, there it is" theory?I see no difference between "God did it" and "The Great Simulator" did it, except that the GS is required to be a computation
OK. You have a tighter definition of the term. You must call it something else if it is done, but not done as computation as you currently understand it. Do quantum computers qualify? Are they (if one is actually created) beyond our current understanding? Can they run a simulation, or would a different world need to be used? Can a quantum computer solve the halting problem for a Turing machine?Simulation theory says we are computations. That can only be understood as computation as we currently understand it. Turing machines, finite state automata, etc.
Deism isn't theological. It would be if those running the simulation implemented say a moral code which they expect to be followed by the subjects being simulated, "or else ...".Well then you are agreeing with me. It's a theological claim.
That's messing with the simulation, violating the causality rules and such. If it works like that, then its a VR for the great simulator, and the rest of us are NPCs being asked to kill our sons.So the Great Simulator doesn't ask Abraham to kill his son?
Him redefining the categories is not a category error. You're begging a different definition. Mathematics is not a map in the view.But Tegmark's MUH is such a category error that I can't imagine he's serious.
A simulation is a created thing. It exists in time. There's no evidence that our universe exists in time.But now we know better. It doesn't need creation, only simulation!! /s
You see that Ms Pacman is you, but you still deny your inner life?Oh I see your point! Thank you for explaining that. She gets her consciousness from me. I enjoy making Ms. Pac-Man eat the dots. I can see that. But Ms. Pac-Man does not have an inner life.
A bit like you saying that your experience is the same experience had by the body of fishfry. Well, fishfry body doesn't have experience separate from 'you', and similarly Ms Paceman doesn't have separate experience. She does become a zombie while the game isn't being played, zooming around randomly and getting killed in short order.My experience is her experience.
It does? Where did I say anything like that? Because I intentionally caused it to move? That's different than me being the rock while doing so, making it move on its own.Is this a form of pantheism? I enjoy throwing a rock, and by your theory, the rock enjoys being thrown.
Searle also plays the game of refusing to apply a word to something nonhuman doing exactly what the word means when a human does it. That's begging his conclusion.But that's his argument against the Chinese room understanding Chinese. He says that we humans provide the meaning or intentionality. He says that the room does NOT have meaning or intentionality.
Not talking about a human activity. I'm talking about the actual nature of the world, not how we describe that nature.Physics is the historically contingent human activity of Aristotle and Newton and Einstein explaining why bowling balls fall down.
That's a description of VR, not a simulation. Mind is primary in that scenario. It is real, and the rest illusion.Ok ... not entirely sure about this. Isn't it the opposite? If my mind is primary and my experiences are an illusion, the illusion-giver, the simulator, may withdraw my reality at any moment.
That sounds more like a sim, yes. If they unplug it, everything/everybody is gone, but perhaps still on disk somewhere. It could be restarted 2 years from now and the simulated beings would never notice the interruption. They very much would notice if it was a VR.If there's a simulator, they may get bored of providing me with this interesting reality and unplug me, and I'll cease to be.
It would be like quitting PacMan. Devoid of experience of the pacman world, but not devoid of experience.And if VR is true, the same thing might happen, but my untethered mind will remain, but devoid of experiences.
I put this to ChatGPT4. Have a look at what it said. — Wayfarer
Me? I make no such claim.
— fishfry
No, not you. No quote of yours was in the bit there to which I was replying. — noAxioms
I say that consciousness is physical but not computational.
What do you mean by that? I mean, technically, none of physics is computational if done to a sufficient level of detail, but I don't think that level of detail is needed in a simulation.
Computation is classical and physics has been shown to be not. — noAxioms
What's the difference between [ID]and sim theory?
Not too much. Both are deliberate choices of interesting mathematics. The vast majority of possible universe are not interesting. — noAxioms
A simulation of gravity does not implement gravity. Simulations of brains therefore do not necessarily implement minds.
I didn't say implement them. I said that they would find the familiar pattern. If nothing is known about how that works, then you can't say it wouldn't happen with the sim. — noAxioms
The question is, why do we mock the Godly street preacher, and venerate the simulation theory TED talker?
There's a lot more veneration of the God talkers than you suggest here, and if Bostrom screamed his assertions from a box in a subway station, he'd get a lot less attention. He's getting mocked plenty in topics like this one. Bostrom is venerated at the Ted talk because the audience is full of people who's seen Inception and think that's what he's talking about. — noAxioms
I'm gladly advocating it?? Bostrom claims we are in a sim of us: The world simulating us is the same as the one simulated. — noAxioms
That's not ID since the design is already made and it is just mimicry. But in general, if you admit that we know nothing of the world running the sim, then the idea is no different than deism. — noAxioms
I see no difference between "God did it" and "The Great Simulator" did it, except that the GS is required to be a computation
Is it? If we can know nothing of those running it, how do we know it is a computation? At what point does it cease to be sim theory and just become straight up god:"whoomp, there it is" theory? — noAxioms
It seems a lot of my answers agree with yours, but your tone suggests disagreement with my replies. — noAxioms
Simulation theory says we are computations. That can only be understood as computation as we currently understand it. Turing machines, finite state automata, etc.
OK. You have a tighter definition of the term. You must call it something else if it is done, but not done as computation as you currently understand it. Do quantum computers qualify? Are they (if one is actually created) beyond our current understanding? Can they run a simulation, or would a different world need to be used? Can a quantum computer solve the halting problem for a Turing machine? — noAxioms
I mean, the god people do it all the time. God created physics, be it computable or not. — noAxioms
Time as well, and general causality. That sounds an awful lot like a simulation mechanism to me. Old school says the sim began ~6000 years ago, but lately, in an attempt to avoid all out denial of science, they've backed off to a view of the project starting at the big bang, and perhaps with initial conditions that bring us about, because it's all about us after all.
That's a big difference BTW between god and a sim: A sim is run to see what happens, to gain information. God creates something where he knows exactly what will happen, and he wants that to happen. He gains no knowledge by running the universe experiment, at least not the god typically asserted. — noAxioms
Deism isn't theological. It would be if those running the simulation implemented say a moral code which they expect to be followed by the subjects being simulated, "or else ...". — noAxioms
So the Great Simulator doesn't ask Abraham to kill his son?
That's messing with the simulation, violating the causality rules and such. If it works like that, then its a VR for the great simulator, and the rest of us are NPCs being asked to kill our sons. — noAxioms
But Tegmark's MUH is such a category error that I can't imagine he's serious.
Him redefining the categories is not a category error. You're begging a different definition. Mathematics is not a map in the view. — noAxioms
The MUH predicts that the majority of consciousness are Boltzmann brains, reducing the hypothesis to where it cannot be simultaneously believed and justified. That's a huge hit to the idea, and one which he must be aware, and has perhaps attempted a refinement, but it wasn't addressed in the book. — noAxioms
A simulation is a created thing. It exists in time. There's no evidence that our universe exists in time. — noAxioms
Oh I see your point! Thank you for explaining that. She gets her consciousness from me. I enjoy making Ms. Pac-Man eat the dots. I can see that. But Ms. Pac-Man does not have an inner life.
You see that Ms Pacman is you, but you still deny your inner life? — noAxioms
A bit like you saying that your experience is the same experience had by the body of fishfry. Well, fishfry body doesn't have experience separate from 'you', and similarly Ms Paceman doesn't have separate experience. She does become a zombie while the game isn't being played, zooming around randomly and getting killed in short order. — noAxioms
Is this a form of pantheism? I enjoy throwing a rock, and by your theory, the rock enjoys being thrown.
It does? Where did I say anything like that? Because I intentionally caused it to move? That's different than me being the rock while doing so, making it move on its own. — noAxioms
Pantheism? What's that got to do with it? Do you mean panpsychism? — noAxioms
A dualist has a mind and a body, and typically the body has presumed boundaries which usually don't include the rock, but there's no actual hard definition of where the boundary is since there's nothing physical about it. So for instance, are the clothes I'm wearing part of me? The usual presumption is yes, despite that probably not being the answer if it is asked as a question.
"Where does 'you'" physically stop? It's more of a language thing than a physics thing. I typically don't include the rock as part of 'me', and you probably don't either. I could open an entire topic about this. — noAxioms
Searle also plays the game of refusing to apply a word to something nonhuman doing exactly what the word means when a human does it. That's begging his conclusion. — noAxioms
I looked at the wiki page and the argument seems to have been updated. The guy doing it (instead of the computer) cannot pass the Turing test since speed is an issue. Somebody who takes 20 years to reply to 'hello' is probably not going to pass a Turing test. Speed up time in the box and this objection goes away. No, the man in the box does not understand the conversation any more than does the CPU in the AI or than does a human brain cell. — noAxioms
Physics is the historically contingent human activity of Aristotle and Newton and Einstein explaining why bowling balls fall down.
Not talking about a human activity. I'm talking about the actual nature of the world, not how we describe that nature. — noAxioms
With sim, the world behavior (physics) is primary, and things proceed according to the rules, without outside interference or intentionality. I have done both kinds. They're very different. — noAxioms
If there's a simulator, they may get bored of providing me with this interesting reality and unplug me, and I'll cease to be.
That sounds more like a sim, yes. If they unplug it, everything/everybody is gone, but perhaps still on disk somewhere. It could be restarted 2 years from now and the simulated beings would never notice the interruption. They very much would notice if it was a VR. — noAxioms
It would be like quitting PacMan. Devoid of experience of the pacman world, but not devoid of experience. — noAxioms
I put out some definitions in my topicOh ok these definitions are changing.
Simulation, in the sense of simulation theory, means that my reality (VR) or my very self (Simulation) are exactly being created by the Great Simulator (GS from now on). — fishfry
Depends on if its a sim or a VR. My topic covers this.If the GS is only approximating me or my reality, what is being approximated?
Well, in sim theory, it is a simulation of at least me, so I disagree with your assertion that there is no 'of' there. In VR theory, it is the creation of my artificial experience.The word simulation is always accompanied by "of." If there is a simulation, it's a simulation "of" something.
Fine. You don't buy into the possibility of simulation theory since it contradicts other values which you hold to be true.So when I say that intelligence, or mind, or the world, is physical but not computational, I mean that the universe does something that is physical -- involves the atoms and the quarks and the quantum fields and whatever future physics will be discovered -- that transcends our current understanding of computation.
Besides the ridicule fallacy, how does that differ from the way I see it?Ok, but that's not how the TED talkers would see [difference between ID and sim]. They'd mock intelligent design, yet believe in simulation.
Well, you deny the possibility of the latter, but I find it to still be the same use of the world. A simulation of our physics is necessarily an approximation since there is no way to represent anything physical exactly, so for instance it is probably going to be discreet physics with a preferred frame of reference.I hope that we are agreed that a simulation of gravity or a simulation of the stock market is not the same use of the word as the GS simulating my mind for me. The latter is a complete instantiation, not just an approximation.
How would anybody go about doing that?Are you equivocating the word simulation? Simulation theory does not mean the same as when we simulate the Super Bowl to predict the winner.
In sim theory, there is no 'my mind' to instantiate. It is not necessarily a simulation of something that also exists in the GS world. Most simulations are of nonexistent things. I suppose the weather is an exception to this since the initial state is taken from the GS world, not as a work of intentional design.The GS instantiates my mind and/or my experience.
Good, because I think Bostrom's hypothesis falls flat.Apologies if I confused your views with Bostrom's.
That's well known. Godel showed it for instance.A thing can't simulate itself.
Bostrom is clear on this. It is a simulation of ancestral history. I mock that suggestion in my topic.I always want to ask the simulation proponents, simulation of what?
I can't see a simulation not having a model to run. There's always an 'of', else the task is undefined. So I could run a simulation of a three legged creature to see which kinds of gaits it might find natural. There is no creature in the GS matching the one being simulated, but there's still an 'of'.I had a funny thought. Just as all waves must travel in a medium; yet light is a wave that does not require a medium; perhaps the GS simulates without the need for an "of" to simulate.
Tyson just seems to ride on Bostrom's paper ("<-- what he said"), which I doubt he understands.We agree then. Neil deGrasse Tyson and George Smoot believe in simulation theory.
Bostrom suggests that. A different sim theory might not. We know nothing of the GS, so I agree, it differs little from deism. Bostrom says we know everything about GS world since they us in 'the future'.My understanding is that simulation theory claims it's all a computation.
AgreeBut any function that a quantum computer can compute can already be computed by a classical computer. And the proof is that quantum computers are often simulated on classical hardware. They run slowly, but in principle they do the same things either way.
It is only this constricted if one presumes the GS world has the same constraints as the world we know.And simulation theory is God restricted to our current notions of computation.
He says the GS is us, so of course they think and feel like us. But I agree, I see no reason why they would find a need to create a fictional world framed in some past century, a simulation of the scale he suggests. It's not like it would produce any actual events that took place in the history of the GS world. What would be the staring date of such a sim? Last Tuesday?But why should the GS run ancestor simulations? Isn't it rather arrogant of us to impute motives to the GS as if the GS thinks and feels like us?
Not possible given your stated beliefs. Only the players can be conscious, not the NPCs. But actually, I have suggested similar things myself, claiming to be a p-zombie in a world where not all are, because I don't see this hard problem that so many others find so obvious. Clearly they have something I don't. So OK, I'm an NPC.Maybe we are characters in someone's video game
So a sim run by a world devoid of sickness and war, but populated by sadists with a need to create ant farms to torture? I can't see a world populated by such beings being free of natural misery.Maybe they are the cause of sickness and war and suffering. Maybe they are sadists. That's a more realistic hypothesis than that we're an ancestor simulation.
Yes. He recategorizes mathematics. The hypothesis has severe issues, but category error isn't one of them.[Tegmark] says the world literally is a mathematical structure.
Not under MUH they aren't. Being abstract requires them to supervene on an abstractor, making them non-fundamental.They are abstract.
It would be be part of one under MUH, just like one would be part of our universe if there were some out there.But even a Boltzmann brain is not a mathematical structure.
OK, you you have a definition of 'me' that doesn't include any avatar.By the time I was done last night I rejected your concept. Same reason that my chess pieces do not care if they get captured or win or lose the game.
By being an avatar of a mind, but that isn't panpsychism I think, but I don't really understand that view. I suppose the rock is no different from a chess piece. I cannot move it by mind alone, but that's also true of my fingers.Yes pansychism. How else can the rock, the baseball, the chess pieces, and Ms. Pac-Man experience my pleasure in the game?
Yes, I can extend my definition of 'me' to any boundary I wish. It's mostly just a language designation. There are no physical rules about it.You seem to include Ms Pac-Man as you. Isn't that what you said?
Yes, the system understands Chinese. A part of the system doesn't necessarily understand it, just like the CPU of my computer doesn't know how to open a text document. That doesn't mean that the computer doesn't open the document, unless that you define 'to open a document' as only something a human does, and an unspecified alternate word must be used if the computer is doing the same thing.The Chinese room speaks Chinese, who am I and who is Searle to say it doesn't understand what it's doing?
The Chinese room, as described, seems to be in a sort of sensory deprivation environment. Surely there are questions you can ask it that bear this out. They have machines now that officially pass the Turing test, and some of the hardest questions are along such lines.That's the argument against my position. My Chinese friend speaks Chinese and my Chinese room speaks Chinese, what's the difference.
An LLM cannot pass a Turing test. Something like ChatGTP does not claim to understand language. It's not how they work, but maybe it's not how we work either.Well we're back to LLMs.
OK.I'm willing to stipulate that the Chinese room is as fast as it needs to be. It still doesn't understand Chinese.
Yes, like that.I thought VR is Descartes's clever deceiver, who gives me an illusion of all my experience, yet my mind is still mine. And Sim says that my minds also is simulated/instantiated by the GS so that there really is no me outside the GS.
If Pacman was fully immersive, and I had been playing all my life, then I am essentially a mind connected only to pacman. If the game is unplugged, then all the hookups are still there, but I am left in a sensory deprivation state. If not hooked to a different feed, then it stays that way. I of course have no control over it. I cannot take off the VR headset because the connections required to do so have been severed in order to connect fully to pacman.Memory?
Pretty sure he means 'as commonly understood'. It doesn't mean that all sim theories suggest that, but with him it kind of does.If by "computer" Bostrom means something other than a computer as commonly understood, he should say that explicitly.
One could argue that the claim that consciousness is not computational is the one in need of evidence. I mean, a perfect simulation of our physics is not computational, but consciousness seems to operate at a classical electro-chemical level, and that is computational. I don't assert it to be thus, so it's a possibility, not a hard claim.So my remarks on computability stand. Bostrom's thesis that the world and my mind are computational, as the word is understood today, is an unwarranted and probably false assumption; and in any event, needs evidence.
Oh ok these definitions are changing.
Simulation, in the sense of simulation theory, means that my reality (VR) or my very self (Simulation) are exactly being created by the Great Simulator (GS from now on).
— fishfry
I put out some definitions in my topic
Simulation theory and VR theory are very different, but you seem to be using simulation for both. — noAxioms
I often shorten the former to 'sim'. I am OK with defining GS as the world running the sim or the VR. With VR, you are in the GS world (but not necessarily of it), and with sim you are not.
If the GS is only approximating me or my reality, what is being approximated?
Depends on if its a sim or a VR. My topic covers this. — noAxioms
Well, in sim theory, it is a simulation of at least me, so I disagree with your assertion that there is no 'of' there. In VR theory, it is the creation of my artificial experience. — noAxioms
Fine. You don't buy into the possibility of simulation theory since it contradicts other values which you hold to be true. — noAxioms
You say there might be 'future physics' discovered that completes your model, but the GS might already have that understanding, and might have built their sim in such a way as to leverage it. — noAxioms
Ok, but that's not how the TED talkers would see [difference between ID and sim]. They'd mock intelligent design, yet believe in simulation.
Besides the ridicule fallacy, how does that differ from the way I see it? — noAxioms
I hope that we are agreed that a simulation of gravity or a simulation of the stock market is not the same use of the word as the GS simulating my mind for me. The latter is a complete instantiation, not just an approximation.
Well, you deny the possibility of the latter, but I find it to still be the same use of the world. A simulation of our physics is necessarily an approximation since there is no way to represent anything physical exactly, so for instance it is probably going to be discreet physics with a preferred frame of reference — noAxioms
Are you equivocating the word simulation? Simulation theory does not mean the same as when we simulate the Super Bowl to predict the winner.
How would anybody go about doing that? — noAxioms
The GS instantiates my mind and/or my experience.
In sim theory, there is no 'my mind' to instantiate. It is not necessarily a simulation of something that also exists in the GS world. Most simulations are of nonexistent things. I suppose the weather is an exception to this since the initial state is taken from the GS world, not as a work of intentional design. — noAxioms
Good, because I think Bostrom's hypothesis falls flat. — noAxioms
That's well known. Godel showed it for instance.
I mean, they can, but at far slower efficiency. I wrote a program that essentially simulated itself for profiling purposes. You could simulate the execution of any code (including itself), but it ran at about a 1/10000th of the normal speed, and optimized that to about 1/40th the normal speed. That could simulate itself, but per Godel, it could not be used to see if it finishes. — noAxioms
Bostrom is clear on this. It is a simulation of ancestral history. I mock that suggestion in my topic. — noAxioms
I can't see a simulation not having a model to run. There's always an 'of', else the task is undefined. So I could run a simulation of a three legged creature to see which kinds of gaits it might find natural. There is no creature in the GS matching the one being simulated, but there's still an 'of'. — noAxioms
Tyson just seems to ride on Bostrom's paper ("<-- what he said"), which I doubt he understands.
Smoot knows what he's talking about at least, but I could not find a paper/article with his hypothesis to get even a glimmer of what he's suggesting or what evidence he claims supports it. Perhaps something concerning the CMB. It's all you-tube, and I don't get my physics from you tube. — noAxioms
My understanding is that simulation theory claims it's all a computation.
Bostrom suggests that. A different sim theory might not. We know nothing of the GS, so I agree, it differs little from deism. Bostrom says we know everything about GS world since they us in 'the future'. — noAxioms
And simulation theory is God restricted to our current notions of computation.
It is only this constricted if one presumes the GS world has the same constraints as the world we know. — noAxioms
He says the GS is us, so of course they think and feel like us. But I agree, I see no reason why they would find a need to create a fictional world framed in some past century, a simulation of the scale he suggests. It's not like it would produce any actual events that took place in the history of the GS world. What would be the staring date of such a sim? Last Tuesday? — noAxioms
Maybe we are characters in someone's video game
Not possible given your stated beliefs. Only the players can be conscious, not the NPCs. But actually, I have suggested similar things myself, claiming to be a p-zombie in a world where not all are, because I don't see this hard problem that so many others find so obvious. Clearly they have something I don't. So OK, I'm an NPC. — noAxioms
So a sim run by a world devoid of sickness and war, but populated by sadists with a need to create ant farms to torture? I can't see a world populated by such beings being free of natural misery.[/quoe]
Didn't say they're devoid of sickness and war. They're imposing it on us. A hypothesis with plenty of evidentiary support.
— noAxioms
— noAxioms
But even a Boltzmann brain is not a mathematical structure.
It would be be part of one under MUH, just like one would be part of our universe if there were some out there. — noAxioms
Does your physical body enjoy the ice cream? You didn't answer that question. I want to see if you're consistent. — noAxioms
By being an avatar of a mind, but that isn't panpsychism I think, but I don't really understand that view. I suppose the rock is no different from a chess piece. I cannot move it by mind alone, but that's also true of my fingers. — noAxioms
Yes, I can extend my definition of 'me' to any boundary I wish. It's mostly just a language designation. There are no physical rules about it. — noAxioms
Yes, the system understands Chinese. — noAxioms
A part of the system doesn't necessarily understand it, just like the CPU of my computer doesn't know how to open a text document. That doesn't mean that the computer doesn't open the document, unless that you define 'to open a document' as only something a human does, and an unspecified alternate word must be used if the computer is doing the same thing. — noAxioms
The Chinese room, as described, seems to be in a sort of sensory deprivation environment. Surely there are questions you can ask it that bear this out. They have machines now that officially pass the Turing test, and some of the hardest questions are along such lines. — noAxioms
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ELIZA
An LLM cannot pass a Turing test. Something like ChatGTP does not claim to understand language. It's not how they work, but maybe it's not how we work either. — noAxioms
I thought VR is Descartes's clever deceiver, who gives me an illusion of all my experience, yet my mind is still mine. And Sim says that my minds also is simulated/instantiated by the GS so that there really is no me outside the GS.
Yes, like that. — noAxioms
If Pacman was fully immersive, and I had been playing all my life, then I am essentially a mind connected only to pacman. If the game is unplugged, then all the hookups are still there, but I am left in a sensory deprivation state. If not hooked to a different feed, then it stays that way. I of course have no control over it. I cannot take off the VR headset because the connections required to do so have been severed in order to connect fully to pacman. — noAxioms
If by "computer" Bostrom means something other than a computer as commonly understood, he should say that explicitly.
Pretty sure he means 'as commonly understood'. It doesn't mean that all sim theories suggest that, but with him it kind of does. — noAxioms
One could argue that the claim that consciousness is not computational is the one in need of evidence. — noAxioms
I mean, a perfect simulation of our physics is not computational, but consciousness seems to operate at a classical electro-chemical level, and that is computational. I don't assert it to be thus, so it's a possibility, not a hard claim. — noAxioms
If I try to simulate our actual world, I must approximate it since perfect simulation is impossible, requiring, among other things, infinite precision variables. So Lara Croft has, among other traits, square legs. All very crude. It gets better in later years, but still an approximation of what it wants to be.I did object to your idea of approximation. My understanding is that simulation theory creates reality, it does not approximate it. — fishfry
No, operates under the laws of computation as they (in the far future) understand them. Not under our current understanding.and operates via the laws of computation as we understand them.
Agree with that. Hence my aversion to magic.It's just a magical speculation at this point.
I agree with this. I'm certainly not promoting sim theory.The exact same people who disdain God love the Great Simulator. I find that viewpoint lacking in self-awareness.
Both will always be an approximation. Any simulation of something 'real' must be. The physics of the simulation will be different than the physics of the GS. If the two are close enough, then the simulation can achieve its goals. Hence weather forecasting not being a total waste of time.I hope that we are agreed that a simulation of gravity or a simulation of the stock market is not the same use of the word as the GS simulating my mind for me. The latter is a complete instantiation, not just an approximation.
That's fine, but none of those has actually produced a real game before it was played. Sure, it can be used to set odds. Sure, it gets the final score right sometimes, but never the way the score gets that way. Of course the stock market is similar, but one can simulate the effect of certain news on the market. It can simulate a panic, and help test methods to control such instabilities.This was the first of many links I found. It's commonly done. Simulation to predict sporting events is done all the time.
Don't need a theory. Just a simulator. If it works, I don't have to know how it works. If it can't work, then it wont.You have a subjective experience of your mind. Any theory of mind has to explain it or hold it as a mystery.
"of ancestral history". His words. A fictional one at best, just like the football simulator. It's not going to show any historical events we know unless you start the sim just before they happen. If they start the simulation far enough back, there won't even be humans in it, ever.Bostrom says that we are a simulation. And the question is, of what?
Yea, I saw those links. I didn't watch the talk, because I don't get my physics from there.Smoot did a TED talk. I get all my physics from Youtube these days.
Bostrom thinks mind is computational. I see few detractors that claim that it cannot be, and thus he must be wrong.Well, I agree that if mind is physical but not computational, a new definition of computation must be in our future somewhere.
I'm not sure if LARPing qualifies as a simulation. They all know it's an act. Nobody really wants to kill the opposing side.The funny thing is that, other than civil war re-enactors. WE don't do ancestor simulations.
So the consciousness is a separate thing, not just a different process of the body that utilizes different noncomputational physics. If the latter were true, then the body would be liking the ice cream, just via a noncomputational mechanism.My body processes the nutrients in the ice cream. My consciousness experiences the enjoyment.
Funny, but I totally agree with that wording.Even if pleasure is a chemical response in the brain, my experience is the pleasure. The chemicals in the brain don't have experiences, I do.
Only because you choose not to consider them to be part of you, just like when you say "Also my body". That's a choice to include that.The chess pieces don't enjoy playing the game,
I would say that a thing with no understanding of chess would not be able to win the game. Again, the different in our views seems to be a language one. Two systems (black boxes) are doing the same thing, but the word 'understands' only applies if it's done the magic way and not the computational way. I take a more pragmatic definition: If it wins or even plays a plausible game, the word 'understands' is functionally applicable.I say the system understands nothing, any more than the computer running a chess program understands chess.
It would probably slaughter any human at Jeopardy or some other typical trivial game. But I agree, the word 'understands' is pretty inapplicable to the LLM.An LLM passed the bar exam. That's impressive.
If you mean that a brain isn't implemented as a Turing machine, I agree, but neither is any computer anywhere. The circuits don't work that way.There are no structures in the brain that implement Turing machines. The neurons don't work that way.
A person is neither. It can in theory be simulated by either of those, but it wouldn't be done by modeling the person as either of those. A person is no more a Turing machine than is the weather. A digital computer is a Von Neumann machine, and a person isn't one of those either. There are digital circuits involved however. Wires, on/off states, etc. No clock. No bus. No instructions.As a Turing machine or a digital computer?
If I try to simulate our actual world, I must approximate it since perfect simulation is impossible, requiring, among other things, infinite precision variables. So Lara Croft has, among other traits, square legs. All very crude. It gets better in later years, but still an approximation of what it wants to be. — noAxioms
If I simulate Conway's game of life (not our actual world, but one with very simple rules), well, it necessarily would have bounds, but otherwise would not be done as an approximation. — noAxioms
No, operates under the laws of computation as they (in the far future) understand them. Not under our current understandi — noAxioms
Agree with that. Hence my aversion to magic. — noAxioms
I agree with this. I'm certainly not promoting sim theory. — noAxioms
I hope that we are agreed that a simulation of gravity or a simulation of the stock market is not the same use of the word as the GS simulating my mind for me. The latter is a complete instantiation, not just an approximation.
Both will always be an approximation. Any simulation of something 'real' must be. The physics of the simulation will be different than the physics of the GS. If the two are close enough, then the simulation can achieve its goals. Hence weather forecasting not being a total waste of time. — noAxioms
That's fine, but none of those has actually produced a real game before it was played. Sure, it can be used to set odds. Sure, it gets the final score right sometimes, but never the way the score gets that way. Of course the stock market is similar, but one can simulate the effect of certain news on the market. It can simulate a panic, and help test methods to control such instabilities. — noAxioms
Don't need a theory. Just a simulator. If it works, I don't have to know how it works. If it can't work, then it wont. — noAxioms
"of ancestral history". His words. A fictional one at best, just like the football simulator. It's not going to show any historical events we know unless you start the sim just before they happen. If they start the simulation far enough back, there won't even be humans in it, ever. — noAxioms
Yea, I saw those links. I didn't watch the talk, because I don't get my physics from there.
I still have no idea what Smoot is proposing. — noAxioms
Bostrom thinks mind is computational. I see few detractors that claim that it cannot be, and thus he must be wrong. — noAxioms
I'm not sure if LARPing qualifies as a simulation. They all know it's an act. Nobody really wants to kill the opposing side.
It happens a lot by me since I'm in a USA town that regularly holds a celebration of the British destruction of the place. The LARP types (reenactors) love it because the red-coats hardly ever get to be the guys that win. The blue guys fire back, but lose, but in reality there was no resistance. Everybody skedaddled and the place was burned down. — noAxioms
So the consciousness is a separate thing, not just a different process of the body that utilizes different noncomputational physics. If the latter were true, then the body would be liking the ice cream, just via a noncomputational mechanism. — noAxioms
Only because you choose not to consider them to be part of you, just like when you say "Also my body". That's a choice to include that. — noAxioms
I would say that a thing with no understanding of chess would not be able to win the game. — noAxioms
Again, the different in our views seems to be a language one. Two systems (black boxes) are doing the same thing, but the word 'understands' only applies if it's done the magic way and not the computational way. I take a more pragmatic definition: If it wins or even plays a plausible game, the word 'understands' is functionally applicable. — noAxioms
It would probably slaughter any human at Jeopardy or some other typical trivial game. But I agree, the word 'understands' is pretty inapplicable to the LLM. — noAxioms
If you mean that a brain isn't implemented as a Turing machine, I agree, but neither is any computer anywhere. The circuits don't work that way. — noAxioms
Also, a brain is just part of a person-system just like a CPU is part of a self-driving car.. A person is conscious, not a brain, — noAxioms
A person is neither. It can in theory be simulated by either of those, but it wouldn't be done by modeling the person as either of those. A person is no more a Turing machine than is the weather. — noAxioms
A digital computer is a Von Neumann machine, and a person isn't one of those either. There are digital circuits involved however. Wires, on/off states, etc. No clock. No bus. No instructions. — noAxioms
An exact simulation of any GS world cannot be done by that GS.Sim theory doesn't say the simulator approximates our world. Sim theory says the simulator creates or instantiates our world. Exactly. — fishfry
The base simulator IS the real world, and it isn't approximating our world, it is approximating its own world according to Bostrom. I say 'base' because we might be 13 levels down or something, but it cannot be infinite regress.If the simulator is only approximating our world, then what is the real world?
Not me. There's probably somebody out there that does. It's like asking if electrons have an interior life. Wrong question.Do you think (or does anyone think) the dots in Life have an interior monologue?
I suspect he meant a computer as we know it today, but oodles smaller/faster, as if Moore's law can continue for many more centuries. The computers of today are pretty inconceivable to those that first made them, as are the applications to which they can be applied.Bostrom asks, "Are you a COMPUTER simulation?" (my emphasis)
If he meant computer as understood by some future society but not by us, he would have said that. He didn't. Did he?
Being correct is not a function of finding one person that agrees with you on something. We could both be wrong.You agree with me on this point then, am I correct?
Well for one, that mind is computational or not.Can you remind me of what we're agreeing or disagreeing on then?
About point 1: It has been proven that a world like ours cannot simulate itself perfectly, so it has to be limited, an approximation at best.My only concerns with what you've said so far are:
1) That simulation theory claims the simulator approximates some deeper reality; and
2) That Ms. Pac-Man is an extension of my mind and can be said to have an inner life, namely mine.
I don't see a different usage of the word, no. But again, this might just be a difference in language, how each of us uses the words in question.I hope that we are agreed that a simulation of gravity or a simulation of the stock market is not the same use of the word as the GS simulating my mind for me.
Again, that cannot be. That's not possible. All of them have to be approximations.The latter is a complete instantiation, not just an approximation.
Nonsense. Real things are simulated all the time, and all of them are approximations.Any simulation of something 'real' must be.
Correct. It needs to be close enough to achieve the goal of the simulation, but it doesn't need to be closer than that.The physics of the simulation will be different than the physics of the GS.
He goes into some detail about what parts are more heavily approximated and which are done to greater detail.You are misconstruing what Bostrom and other simulationists believe, then. They're not saying we're an approximation. They're saying our exact reality is being instantiated by a computer.
Indeed, why? I see no reason to do it, even if we had this unimaginable capability.Ok. But why would they do that?
Agree. I said I didn't get my physics from videos. I didn't say that anybody that appears in a video is disreputable.A person does not suddenly become disreputable by virtue of being filmed.
You have no more explanation than science does. Just saying that your comment, true or false, isn't evidence one way or the other.My consciousness is the thing that has the experience, and science has absolutely no explanation for that.
Fair enough. I hold the bar higher for LLM because you can ask it to write a program to do a small thing, and it does, but it fails for something more involved, any task that requires more understanding of a deeper problem. This is why no LLM is replacing human programmers at corporations (yet), even if they very much are writing papers for students.Wait, you just got through emphasizing that functional behavior is understanding. If an LLM passes the bar exam, by your definition it understands the law. But now you are going back on that.
Because asserting that a TM is or is not a person is very different than asserting that a TM and a human are or are not capable of simulating each other.If you agree with me that a TM is not a person, why are we having this conversation?
An exact simulation of any GS world cannot be done by that GS.
My comment to which you replied talks about us being the GS, and when we run a simulation of this world it is always an approximation. My example was a VR one, but it goes for an actual sim as well.
If our world is a simulation, then it is either a total fiction created by some completely different (and more capable) GS world, or, per Bostrom, it is an approximation of the GS world. It cannot be exact for several reasons, another of which is that our world is not finite in extent. — noAxioms
Anyway, read Bostrom. The paper sets out details of where the simulation goes into greater detail (but still an approximation) and where it approximates to a greater degree. — keystone
The base simulator IS the real world, and it isn't approximating our world, it is approximating its own world according to Bostrom. I say 'base' because we might be 13 levels down or something, but it cannot be infinite regress. — keystone
Not me. There's probably somebody out there that does. It's like asking if electrons have an interior life. Wrong question. — keystone
I suspect he meant a computer as we know it today, but oodles smaller/faster, as if Moore's law can continue for many more centuries. The computers of today are pretty inconceivable to those that first made them, as are the applications to which they can be applied. — keystone
You agree with me on this point then, am I correct?
Being correct is not a function of finding one person that agrees with you on something. We could both be wrong. — keystone
Well for one, that mind is computational or not. — keystone
About 2, the difference is pure language. You use words differently than do I. I see no fundamental differences between our views. — keystone
I hope that we are agreed that a simulation of gravity or a simulation of the stock market is not the same use of the word as the GS simulating my mind for me.
I don't see a different usage of the word, no. But again, this might just be a difference in language, how each of us uses the words in question. — keystone
Again, that cannot be. That's not possible. All of them have to be approximations. — keystone
Nonsense. Real things are simulated all the time, and all of them are approximations. — keystone
Correct. It needs to be close enough to achieve the goal of the simulation, but it doesn't need to be closer than that. — keystone
You are misconstruing what Bostrom and other simulationists believe, then. They're not saying we're an approximation. They're saying our exact reality is being instantiated by a computer.
He goes into some detail about what parts are more heavily approximated and which are done to greater detail. — keystone
Indeed, why? I see no reason to do it, even if we had this unimaginable capability. — keystone
Agree. I said I didn't get my physics from videos. I didn't say that anybody that appears in a video is disreputable. — keystone
I did take apart a Sabine video, showing it to be flat out wrong. It shows that the videos are not peer reviewed, and a good physics source is. This doesn't make Sabine disreputable. It means mistakes remain where peer review is absent. — keystone
My consciousness is the thing that has the experience, and science has absolutely no explanation for that.
You have no more explanation than science does. Just saying that your comment, true or false, isn't evidence one way or the other. — keystone
Fair enough. I hold the bar higher for LLM because you can ask it to write a program to do a small thing, and it does, but it fails for something more involved, any task that requires more understanding of a deeper problem. This is why no LLM is replacing human programmers at corporations (yet), even if they very much are writing papers for students. — keystone
Bottom line is, the LLM algorithm isn't "understand, then write about that understanding", it is more "write something likely to be a plausible reply", a reworded plagiarism of pre-existing content. — keystone
Because asserting that a TM is or is not a person is very different than asserting that a TM and a human are or are not capable of simulating each other. — keystone
By doing nothing more than auto-completing these games as text strings, — fishfry
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