And what if the person doesn't like what the Demon says and does the very opposite? Then the Demon obviously cannot say the future what the person will do, because it will be the opposite (hence wrong) what the Demon says. — ssu
Only if he doesn't interact with us, he can know. Then it is really that computable extrapolation with total information of the past on forward. The Demon simply cannot interact with us. — ssu
it really is a fictional character to us — ssu
Nope. Doesn't go like that. If the Demon predicts that it's the opposite, then the person does what the prediction says, hence the Demon was wrong in it's forecast. The simple fact is that you or the Demon cannot say what you don't say. Even in a game theoretic model this is totally clear.Well imagine that the Demon at the very next second that he will tell the person what to do the data will change.
And according to the new data that supposingly the Demon would have ,he could predict that the person would do the opposite thing just because he would want to prove the Demon wrong. — dimosthenis9
Yes, yet the Demon a) doesn't control everything and b) has to give a prediction.Remember we suppose the demon has available all the data at any second and has the ability to make the calculations also at the same time. — dimosthenis9
Because when it interacts, it is the subject. It's interaction effects what it should be looking objectively, that is the whole idea what Laplace was thinking about. Now it's the subject.Well i m not really sure why the Demon shouldn't interact with us as to be able to predict the future.Can you explain it a little more? — dimosthenis9
Right. if there is free will. If everything we think, feel, and do is not determined solely by progressions of arrangements of all the constituent parts of our brains, which change from one arrangement to the next because of the ways the laws of physics act upon them.Not determined in the same way? — frank
Now, you might say that there's some Nash equilibrium which will happen, but the real problem is that here obviously what the Demon says affects what will happen and this isn't what Laplace had in mind with his extrapolations. It's not something that you can simply extrapolate from the past: what the Demon says, actually does have an effect. — ssu
Well, let's assume the Demon knows what the winning numbers will be, but how does he define how much will be won by the winners? — ssu
But it is illogical then to think that we, being part of the universe and actors in the universe, could then now this future, because there is a correct model of the future. It's similar basically to the measurement problem. — ssu
But here's the point. The Demon isn't omnipotent. From Laplace's example, it "simply" knows a) everything from the past and b) all the laws of nature. And using a) and b) it should through extrapolation forecast perfectly the future. But now it is an actor! That information a) and b) doesn't have the future effect on what the extrapolation (the forecast) will have. Why? Because you can have diagonalization: negative self reference to the extrapolation.Well it is a nice example but the problem isn't if Demon will affect the result.Of course he would do it.But he would have known that will happen indeed even with his interference. — dimosthenis9
Which is waiting for what the Demon will say. And that's my whole point. You notice that this isn't anymore straight forward extrapolation, because the extrapolation itself defining how the humans do. And if you just assume that well, there's a way for the Demon to get around this, because there obviously is a correct model of what is going to happen. Nope! When that correct model is the opposite (or simply something else) than the forecast that the Demon gives, it's game over. Not a chance!He would knew that people would react this way suppose he had access to everybody's neurons data. — dimosthenis9
Or don't know, yes.OK, I see what you mean now. It doesn't follow from the fact that there will be a definite future that we can, or could even in principle, know what that future will be. I agree with that. — Janus
I don't see how any of this disagrees with what I said. All you are doing is just describing another instance of us lacking information about all the causes that lead to a particular effect.We do not have access to all the information necessary to say with certainty why any particular event happens.
— Harry Hindu
Not even so. Even if you have all the information, it still isn't possible. Let me explain:
Even if you would have all the information necessary to say with certainty why any particular event happens, that doesn't mean you can say the what will happen. You are part of the universe. You saying something can effect what is going to happen. Hence you saying anything, doing anything, can have an effect on what you ought to forecast. And what about when the future depends totally on what the forecast you give about it? You basically have the possibility of negative self reference and you cannot overcome that law of logic: you cannot say what you don't say. — ssu
I don't understand this. Can you clarify?Possibilities and probabilities are just ideas in the present moment.
— Harry Hindu
Or I would say a great way make a useful model of the future what we cannot exactly know, especially many times when we do have this kind of interaction going on.
They do not exist apart from the process of our making some decision in the present moment.
— Harry Hindu
So, cannot we then define the future to be what really will happen? We can, but that doesn't help us much. Far better models perhaps can be the idea of a multiverse where we end up in some distinct reality. — ssu
No, It's not the lacking information, it's that interaction creates new information/situation. With negative self reference, there really isn't the capability just to extrapolate it from the old information.All you are doing is just describing another instance of us lacking information about all the causes that lead to a particular effect. — Harry Hindu
Sorry if I misunderstood you. Perhaps I didn't get the point.Upon reading my post did you not formulate a response — Harry Hindu
Obviously we can forecast a wide variety of things by extrapolation. And we can also take into account the effect of our own actions. Yet at many times, we cannot and the factor isn't about us not knowing all the data, it's that us being an actor makes the Laplacian idea of "just having all info & laws" the extrapolation impossible. That's my main point.Your argument only carries weight if we are talking about the future of the universe as a whole, but not for particular instances of a local system within the universe. A lot of information is irrelevant to making predictions about specific, small-scale events. — Harry Hindu
I'll try, I hope you have the time and the patience to go through it. If I repeat too much, mark then just understood and I go further.I don't understand this. Can you clarify? — Harry Hindu
Can you give a real-world example?No, It's not the lacking information, it's that interaction creates new information/situation. With negative self reference, there really isn't the capability just to extrapolate it from the old information. — ssu
After reading my post did you have some idea about how you would respond and then predict that typing on the keyboard would display your response on the screen? How did your interaction with the computer change your prediction that the computer will display your response on the screen? You had to have some model of the future in typing your words, or else why would you be tapping your fingers on the keyboard in the first place? Your model of the future was of your ideas being on the screen for me to see. If your interaction with the computer changes the outcome then how can you ever hope that what you intend to be on the screen is what ends up on the screen?Upon reading my post did you not formulate a response
— Harry Hindu
Sorry if I misunderstood you. Perhaps I didn't get the point. — ssu
If one does not have patience then one should not be engaging in philosophy. :cool:I'll try, I hope you have the time and the patience to go through it. If I repeat too much, mark then just understood and I go further. — ssu
I agree. Let me go further and say that I'm kind of in line with Einstein with his idea of block time, or block universe. One might say that the future has already "happened" and we are just playing it all out and perceive the flow of time as a result of participating in this block universe. Think about it like a first person computer game that has been coded in its entirety. The beginning, middle and end are all coded, but you as the player must play it out from beginning to end, with some parts of the world you never interact with even though they exist as code and are there to be called if you ever visit that part of the game world. You can even play the game differently each time doing things in different order but still eventually arriving at the end of the game. The game code is like the block universe in that everything has already happened and you are just a participant. It is the playing of the game that gives rise to the flow of time as a participant in this block universe.Let's define "the future" as the all the events that really happen. Hence it is incoherent of talking that the "future" changed, the future is what happens.
Classic determinism starts from this kind of World view that "the future" is this line of events that will happen in the block universe going from the present to the future. Hence everything is determined. — ssu
Right, so the model and the future are two separate things. The model exists in the present moment as an idea and the other is the actual events that are "yet to happen".A correct prediction of "the future" is a model, that is a true model that depicts the future. — ssu
You simply said that the entity cannot predict the future but provide no reason as to why it would be impossible. But we know that we can predict the future accurately in many instances, but sometimes we cannot. What creates this distinction if not having access to the proper information or not?Now Laplaces argument goes that with all information of the past and present and knowledge how things work, an entity can then extrapolate the future precisely, extrapolate the correct model of the future.
What's the problem? The entity being an actor in the universe. A lot of his actions don't have an effect on the future (the Milk Way will collide with Andromeda 4,5 billion years from now or something...), and some of his effects of his actions can be taken into effect. But in some situations, the entity simply cannot predict the future from the way Laplace stated. The extrapolation is simply impossible, yet still, there does exist a "the future" and thus a correct model of the future.
Are you still with me or did I loose you? — ssu
But the present moment is the past relative the future model you have. For you to have an accurate model of the future, you must have an accurate model of not just the past, but the present and any future event that happens between now and the future you are predicting. Like I said, the further in the future you are trying to predict leads to a higher degree of uncertainty because its not just what is happening in the present that must be accounted for, but also any interaction in the future that happens before the event you are modeling. Again, all we are talking about is a lack of information about this block universe in all moments. Is it impossible to predict everything? Yes, because of a lack of information of all the events in the block universe, not for any other reason.What does then this mean. Well, you can say that the future is determined, but that there's a logical reason why we cannot know everything about the future. Why? Because the our actions at the present make a simple (hardly simple, but anyway...) extrapolation from the past information impossible.
Hence we have to use other many times not so exact models to describe the future. NASA engineers and astronomers can still rely basically on Newtonian physics to calculate the future state of the planets, but in some cases it isn't so. — ssu
You simply said that the entity cannot predict the future but provide no reason as to why it would be impossible. But we know that we can predict the future accurately in many instances, but sometimes we cannot. What creates this distinction if not having access to the proper information or not?
I would need examples of what you are talking about — Harry Hindu
Thanks for your patience. And good that we agree on a lot of things, so I'll try to give examples.Can you give a real-world example? — Harry Hindu
Right. if there is free will. If everything we think, feel, and do is not determined solely by progressions of arrangements of all the constituent parts of our brains, which change from one arrangement to the next because of the ways the laws of physics act upon them. — Patterner
LD is defined as knowing everything about everything, which I would assume would include the solution to the hard problem.Chalmers adapted LD to accommodate quantum physics by just making it open ended. In other words, the demon knows how events unfold, however that may be (I think that's what he meant anyway). So couldn't we have an LD that know mental states and however it is they evolve? — frank
frank
LD is defined as knowing everything about everything, which I would assume would include the solution to the hard problem. — Harry Hindu
I don't know how LD would deal with quantum events. I suppose it's possible that it would understand why things happen randomly, uncertainly, and, to it, the events would not be random and uncertain. If half the atoms of plutonium are going to decay in 81 million years, maybe it knows which half, and maybe even which one at which moment. I have no idea. But I am certainly willing to stipulate that for the sake of argument.Chalmers adapted LD to accommodate quantum physics by just making it open ended. In other words, the demon knows how events unfold, however that may be (I think that's what he meant anyway). So couldn't we have an LD that know mental states and however it is they evolve? — frank
That information a) and b) doesn't have the future effect on what the extrapolation (the forecast) will have. Why? Because you can have diagonalization: negative self reference to the extrapolation. — ssu
I don't know how LD would deal with quantum events. I suppose it's possible that it would understand why things happen randomly, uncertainly, and, to it, the events would not be random and uncertain. If half the atoms of plutonium are going to decay in 81 million years, maybe it knows which half, and maybe even which one at which moment. I have no idea. But I am certainly willing to stipulate that for the sake of argument. — Patterner
however, if consciousness is not the result of, or at least not entirely the result of, physical events, of which LD has absolute knowledge, then it would not have absolute understanding of consciousness. LD only knows what it knows knows. — Patterner
This is what I was asking about before, is the randomness we observe really a product of our own ignorance, the state of our minds and the information we have access to at any given moment, or is the randomness something inherent to reality outside of our minds? If the former then LD will know how to solve the problem of integrating quantum mechanics with classical/macro physics. If the latter then LD is invalid. — Harry Hindu
Predicting that someone will write 1s or 2s at the beginning of their posts is not something we normally do.
Think about how I gave examples of sending a spacecraft to Pluto, or predicting where an asteroid will be 100 years from now — Harry Hindu
Of course, but that's not the issue here!It seems to me that there are many predictions that require your interaction to be correct, as in the case of you predicting that a k will appear on the screen when you type k on the keyboard. — Harry Hindu
Exactly, you got my point. :grin:Demon can't predict the "veto" that someone could use you mean. — dimosthenis9
This is a good argument.What if though the Demon could progress exactly the data at the very same time? - Wouldn't that mean that Demon can indeed have the "past" data( or better the present data also have the prediction effect) and make the calculations at the very same milliseconds?? — dimosthenis9
I believe this is saying that LD knows everything about everything IF everything about everything is deterministic. That, I believe, is the point of Laplace's thought experiment.We may regard the present state of the universe as the effect of its past and the cause of its future. An intellect which at a certain moment would know all forces that set nature in motion, and all positions of all items of which nature is composed, if this intellect were also vast enough to submit these data to analysis, it would embrace in a single formula the movements of the greatest bodies of the universe and those of the tiniest atom; for such an intellect nothing would be uncertain and the future just like the past would be present before its eyes. — Laplace
That, I believe, is the point of LD. Maybe? If all is deterministic, then numbers and information, and consciousness and intent, are irrelevant. It can all be reduced to particle physics, just as thermodynamics can. I suppose it would know why brain states also feel like mental states to us. But if "feel like" is all there is, but they have no casual power, and are, themselves, determined by the physical events, then it doesn't matter. Itt doesn't interfere with the calculations.That's if you limit LD to so-called physical events, which automatically excludes non-physical things like numbers and mental states. We could imagine an LD that has knowledge of the non-physical stuff, right? — frank
That, I believe, is the point if LD. Maybe? If all is deterministic, then numbers and information, and consciousness and intent, are irrelevant. It can all be reduced to particle physics, just as thermodynamics can. I suppose it would know why brain states also feel like mental states to us. But if "feel like" is all there is, but they have no casual power, and are, themselves, determined by the physical events, then it doesn't matter. Itt doesn't interfere with the calculations. — Patterner
I don't see why not. If idealism is correct, the reality the minds are thinking up that we take to be physical has consistent properties, rules, etc. No reason LD couldn't know all there is to know about all those properties, rules, etc., regardless of their true nature.I agree. I guess where I was headed is that an idealist can also be a determinist. LD can be revised to know everything about a universe that is essentially mind. — frank
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