• Hyper
    36
    What I mean by this is that we draw a false distinction between that of real and fake. The matrix did exist, as a server in a computer. The matrix's computer existed in the physical world, and by proxy, the matrix itself existed in the physical world. The term "fake" is misleading because everything exists in a sense. Any thought you have exists as neurons in your brain. If we live in a simulation, it would also be the real world, because the simulation exists in the real world.
  • Outlander
    2.2k
    Go on. How does this make one re-examine our place in the world, one's concept of self and identity, and elementary philosophies of truth and reason? Does it at all?

    As somewhat of a non-traveler these days, for all I know, the entire world outside of my tri-county area may not exist. Of course, I know this to be false. I have friends in other parts of the world, I've traveled to places before, I can track shipments for packages that travel to and fro as well as watch live webcams of places. But for many practical intents and purposes, it's like the world outside our own little spheres of interaction may or may not exist.

    I doubt I'll ever step foot in the White House, for example. So, at least for my existence, it's as if the place does not exist, never did, and never will. Yet it does, surely. Might I ask: is Schrodinger's cat involved here in any way? :smile:

    Suppose when people say "real" or "fake" they mean something that exists in the manner in which we do, that can either be touched, felt, observed, or otherwise "experienced". There was a thread here about (or touching on) such differences between "existing" and "real". I forget the relevant quote at the moment but something along the lines of "unicorns are imaginary, but exist and are real". I've likely butchered the original quote in my misrememberance but it was something along those lines. Reminds me of the proofs thread where something can be factually false whilst simultaneously being valid and sound. A bit hard to grasp and easily dismissed as nonsensical.
  • Zolenskify
    63
    What do you mean, man?
  • unenlightened
    9.3k
    Try living in a picture of a house for a week, and get back to us.
  • T Clark
    14k
    Try living in a picture of a house for a week, and get back to us.unenlightened

    Yo mamma is so fat, her picture weighs 10 pounds.
  • T Clark
    14k
    What I mean by this is that we draw a false distinction between that of real and fake. The matrix did exist, as a server in a computer. The matrix's computer existed in the physical world, and by proxy, the matrix itself existed in the physical world. The term "fake" is misleading because everything exists in a sense. Any thought you have exists as neurons in your brain. If we live in a simulation, it would also be the real world, because the simulation exists in the real world.Hyper

    Welcome.

    This is something that get's discussed fairly often here on the forum, generally without consensus, because everyone has a different idea of what "real" means. I am interested in Taoist philosophy. The first verse of the Tao Te Ching, one of the founding texts, says "The Tao that can be spoken is not the eternal Tao. The name that can be named is not the eternal name." My understanding of the meaning of those lines is that things don't really become "real" until we name, conceptualize, them. That seems consistent with what you have written. Imaginary things are as real as material things because they are both brought into existence as concepts.

    On the forum, getting everyone to agree on the definition of the central ideas of a discussion is often neglected and often impossible. That is the cause of a lot of derailed discussions here. I think we'll probably see that in this discussion.
  • T Clark
    14k


    That made me think of this. It's from Woody Allen's 1966 "What's up Tiger Lily" and is badly edited.

    https://clip.cafe/whats-up-tiger-lily-1966/this-shepard-wongs-home/
  • 180 Proof
    15.4k
    If we live in a simulation, it would also be the real world, because the simulation exists in the real world.Hyper
    Circular reasoning & compositional fallacy.

    The term "fake" is misleading because everything exists in a sense.
    So how do you designate the distinction between a copy / counterfeit and the original? or distinguish a fictional account from a nonfictional account?

    Anyway, consider "Meinong's Jungle" ...

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meinong%27s_jungle

    Try living in a picture of a house for a week, and get back to us.
    — unenlightened

    Yo mamma was so fat, her picture weighed 10 pounds.
    T Clark
    :lol:
  • jkop
    923
    Things that aren't real aren't meaningfully different than things that are real.
    What I mean by this is that we draw a false distinction between that of real and fake.
    Hyper

    The paper of a fake bill is real, but that doesn't mean that the bill is real. Real money is meaningfully different from fake money.

    The term "fake" is misleading because everything exists in a sense.Hyper

    Everything doesn't exist in the same sense. For example, money is made of social agreements, paper is made of cellulose fibers. They exist in very different senses.

    An original work of something is produced in a particular context, a plagiarized version is produced in another context in which the producer has knowledge of the original version. A fake is always different from the original (regardless of practical distinguishability).

    If we live in a simulation, it would also be the real world, because the simulation exists in the real world.Hyper

    All the same, the electric events in a computer are real in one sense, but the simulation in the computer is real in another sense. You conflate the two different senses in which they are real, and get a fallacy of composition.
  • Patterner
    1.1k
    The first verse of the Tao Te Ching, one of the founding texts, says "The Tao that can be spoken is not the eternal Tao. The name that can be named is not the eternal name." My understanding of the meaning of those lines is that things don't really become "real" until we name, conceptualize, them.T Clark
    My understanding of those lines is that, the moment you try to speak of or name the Tao, you have automatically failed. Because words are limited, and limiting, while the Tao is infinite. Any attempt to use words to describe the Tao is an attempt to limit it. Which is impossible, so you cannot be talking about the Tao.
  • T Clark
    14k
    My understanding of those lines is that, the moment you try to speak of or name the Tao, you have automatically failed. Because words are limited, and limiting, while the Tao is infinite. Any attempt to use words to describe the Tao is an attempt to limit it. Which is impossible, so you cannot be talking about the Tao.Patterner

    I don’t see that your understanding contradicts mine.
  • Patterner
    1.1k

    I'm not sure I know how you mean it, or in how many ways. But I think living in the Matrix would be just as real as living in the real world. You are presented with any number of choices every day, ands you choose. Regardless of what system you exist within, you have your sense of right and wrong, likes and dislikes, desires and fears. If you were a sadist in the Matrix, you wouldn't be a saint when you unplugged, or vice versa.


    I don’t see that your understanding contradicts mine.T Clark
    No. Just different focus.
  • Leontiskos
    3.3k
    I think living in the Matrix would be just as real as living in the real world.Patterner

    You're on the way...

    hqdefault.jpg
  • T Clark
    14k
    No. Just different focus.Patterner

    YGID%20small.png
  • Count Timothy von Icarus
    2.9k


    Right, appearances (as set against reality) are still really appearances. Radical skepticism sets in when one supposes that appearances can be completely disconnected from "reality," but this position has to suppose much about the "reality" of the "relationship between reality and appearance," to really get off the ground.

    Radical skepticism collapses when it "goes all the way " into positing that there is "only appearance," and no reality. Yet, if there is only appearance, then the dichotomy collapses and appearances are reality.

    But, in the modern context this distinction has become pernicious because instead of the more fundemental "reality versus appearance" distinction we get the "subjective versus objective" distinction, which often comes with a lot of extra baggage, the main one being the idea that we don't every experience anything directly, but rather "experience our experiences." So one doesn't experience an apple, but rather experiences the experience of experiencing an apple. And so who knows what the apple is really like? We don't even know the apple's appearance, but only our own experience of its experience. This extra regress is how you can start to slide towards appearances having an arbitrary and unknowable relationship with reality.
  • Patterner
    1.1k
    You're on the way...Leontiskos
    But I wouldn't want to be rewritten. Trinity, Neo, Morpheus, and all the rest were themselves whether in the Matrix or out.
  • Leontiskos
    3.3k
    But I wouldn't want to be rewritten. Trinity, Neo, Morpheus, and all the rest were themselves whether in the Matrix or out.Patterner

    But Cypher is the only one who agrees with you. He wants to be rewritten to forget about the real world (and also his betrayal). You're really opting for the blue pill, are you not? One must choose before they know the difference between the Matrix and the real world, and that is why Cypher needs his rewrite.

    If you were a sadist in the Matrix, you wouldn't be a saint when you unplugged, or vice versa.Patterner

    Maybe. The Matrix is a simulation, so it really depends on how accurate the simulation is. But I don't know why anyone would want to live in a simulation.

    The Matrix is shot through with religious imagery, and implicit in much religious imagery is the idea that a new level of agency is itself awakened with conversion or enlightenment or whatnot. So it's not generally true that one's agency or capacity is equal in both worlds. In fact there is supposed to be a radical difference in all sorts of ways.
  • Patterner
    1.1k
    But Cypher is the only one who agrees with you.Leontiskos
    No. Nearly 99% off all test subjects accepted the program as long as they were given a choice. Even if they were only aware of the choice at a near unconscious level.

    He wants to be rewritten to forget about the real world (and also his betrayal).Leontiskos
    He and I diverge at that point.

    One must choose before they know the difference between the Matrix and the real world, and that is why Cypher needs his rewrite.Leontiskos
    The others don't need a rewrite. They go back and forth, themselves in either setting. And their decisions are real in either setting.

    If you were a sadist in the Matrix, you wouldn't be a saint when you unplugged, or vice versa.
    — Patterner

    Maybe. The Matrix is a simulation, so it really depends on how accurate the simulation is.
    Leontiskos
    That's likely. I suspect human consciousness/mind is the way it is because of the environment inn which it came to be. Consciousness/mind that came to be in an entirely different environment would be entirely different. And I doubt consciousness/mind of one environment could go back-and-forth between entirely different environments, and remain the same. It possibly could not go back-and-forth at all.



    Cypher, presumably, thought there was no possibility of surviving other than the path he chose. But he could not live with the guilt of that choice, so wanted to be rewritten. That's incomprehensible to me. Being rewritten, giving up your consciousness/mind/self, is as good as death. The last moments before being rewritten couldn't feel any different than the last moments before the blade of the guillotine hits. In my opinion, better to go out fighting. The last moments of consciousness would be of defiance, pride, and the love of your friends, rather than cowardice, guilt, and self-inflicted isolation.
  • Corvus
    3.5k
    Fake objects exist as fakes, and their properties are fake. Real objects have the real properties when examined and proved. Fake cannot be real and reals are not fakes just because they exist in the real world.
  • Hyper
    36
    , even though both bills can't be used for transactions, they still both exist.
  • Leontiskos
    3.3k
    The others don't need a rewrite. They go back and forth, themselves in either setting. And their decisions are real in either setting.Patterner

    The fact that they refuse a rewrite and Cypher desires it just shows that the experience of the one who takes a blue pill is different from the experience of the one who takes the red pill (even within the Matrix). And yet you seem to say that there is no difference.

    And I doubt consciousness/mind of one environment could go back-and-forth between entirely different environments, and remain the same. It possibly could not go back-and-forth at all.Patterner

    Yes, perhaps.

    Cypher, presumably, thought there was no possibility of surviving other than the path he chose. But he could not live with the guilt of that choice, so wanted to be rewritten. That's incomprehensible to me. Being rewritten, giving up your consciousness/mind/self, is as good as death. The last moments before being rewritten couldn't feel any different than the last moments before the blade of the guillotine hits.Patterner

    No, I don't think so. Cypher would want his rewrite whether or not the betrayal had occurred. In fact if you follow the plot, the betrayal is the cost of the rewrite, and thus the desire for the rewrite is prior. But "rewrite" may be the wrong word altogether. He just wants to forget that the real world exists. He just wants to rewrite history, such that he took a blue instead of red pill. Forgetting something is presumably not death.
  • Patterner
    1.1k
    The fact that they refuse a rewrite and Cypher desires it just shows that the experience of the one who takes a blue pill is different from the experience of the one who takes the red pill (even within the Matrix). And yet you seem to say that there is no difference.Leontiskos
    I really don't understand what you're saying. I'm saying those inside the Matrix are having real experiences, are facing real choices, and are making real decisions. Just because it's not the setting our species evolved in, and naturally lives in, doesn't mean they don't act in accordance with their values, fears, and desires, or that their choices don't have consequences.
  • T Clark
    14k


    It is rude to start a discussion and then not actively participate.
  • jkop
    923
    even though both bills can't be used for transactions, they still both exist.Hyper

    Sure, both exist as paper, but only one of them exists as money. A distinction between fake and real paper would be meaningless, but the distinction between fake and real money is meaningful.
  • Hyper
    36
    , This isn't the compositional fallacy, because in this case it isn't a fallacy. Whenever I think of a giraffe, neurons in my brain exist in the physical world that represent the giraffe. The matrix does exist, as lines of code in a server. There are physical switches inside the computer that represent what happens in the matrix.
  • Hyper
    36
    Sure, both exist as paper, but only one of them exists as money. A distinction between fake and real paper would be meaningless, but the distinction between fake and real money is meaningful.jkop

    The only reason people use it as money is because people think it is money. People thinking that it is useful is the only reason it is actually useful. I am not saying that everything has the same use, I am saying that since both exist as concepts, they both exist.
  • Hyper
    36
    , I would say that there is no distinction between the matrix and the real world, or at the very least that it would be useless to do so. A simulation exists in a physical sense. It exists as lines of code in a server.
  • Hyper
    36
    , I said that everything exists, not that everything has the same utility.
  • Corvus
    3.5k
    I said that everything exists, not that everything has the same utility.Hyper

    Of course everything exists. No problem with that. Problem is your claim that fake is also real just because it exists in the real world. That is a leap of reasoning gone over the barrier of common sense.

    Fake exists as fake, and real exists as real. Let's not confused about that.
  • Hyper
    36

    This argument just comes down to our definition of real. This definition of real is that anything that exists is real. Both fake and real are real because they exist.
bold
italic
underline
strike
code
quote
ulist
image
url
mention
reveal
youtube
tweet
Add a Comment

Welcome to The Philosophy Forum!

Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.