A High Way Man
all ova da world
The paper is by Nick Bostrom who concluded that we have a 66% chance of living in a simulated reality.
I never thought I'd see a resonance cascade. Let alone create one.Riet said:Don't worry gaiz, all will be revealed after the resonance cascade. I just hope I'm near Gordon when the combine come.
Firstly I was using theory in a different sense. I know wat it means scientifically. Of course there is no evidence and i do have a clue on the probability! I am assuming we can eventually create conscious computer simulations, but the probability comes not in that but in when we do create them eventually, the probability of us being in one is far too great. So to sum it ALL up:3unitz said:its no more likely than any other "god did it" or "my life's a dream" hypothesis - there is completely no evidence either way. as soon as you assume something true, of which you have no clue on its probability of being true (eg. "we can create conscious computer simulations"), it completely de-validates any argument concerning the likelihood of the event occurring.
I have no idea how the technology is developed and no one else does yet. Reaons for the simulation include:zimmerman8k said:How is this technology developed? Most importantly, why does anyone want to expend time and resources creating a simulated reality for billions of people? What could they possibly gain from it?
shakespeare was an NPCJaques said:"All the world's a stage,
And all the men and women merely players;
They have their exits and their entrances;
And one man in his time plays many parts,
His acts being seven ages. At first the infant,
Mewling and puking in the nurse's arms;
And then the whining school-boy, with his satchel
And shining morning face, creeping like snail
Unwillingly to school. And then the lover,
Sighing like furnace, with a woeful ballad
Made to his mistress' eyebrow. Then a soldier,
Full of strange oaths, and bearded like the pard,
Jealous in honour, sudden and quick in quarrel,
Seeking the bubble reputation
Even in the cannon's mouth. And then the justice,
In fair round belly with good capon lin'd,
With eyes severe and beard of formal cut,
Full of wise saws and modern instances;
And so he plays his part. The sixth age shifts
Into the lean and slipper'd pantaloon,
With spectacles on nose and pouch on side;
His youthful hose, well sav'd, a world too wide
For his shrunk shank; and his big manly voice,
Turning again toward childish treble, pipes
And whistles in his sound. Last scene of all,
That ends this strange eventful history,
Is second childishness and mere oblivion;
Sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything."
Let's assume we can make a simulation. Then there would be heaps of reasons to make many. Then for 1 real universe there are many fake ones so ours is probably fake. Evidence is helpful but not needed in THIS case because if my assumption is true, my thesis is true i.e. that we are VERY LIKELY to be in a simulation. I don't understand why its taking ages for many of you guys to understand what ive been repeatin so many times. It all makes sense.zimmerman8k said:I agree with you that the strongest counter argument is to highlight the lack of evidence.
'Ancestor simulations'. What if humans of the far future are interested in what occured in the past (they will be) and our reality is their simulation (ie a restaging of 'historical events')?zimmerman8k said:Who would place us in this situation at their own expense and for what purpose? I am yet to hear a convincing explaination. I have already discredited the ludicrous explanation in The Matrix (see above).
If we are real beings put into this simulation, maybe we have to die before we wake up so we can leave without leaving in a big flash of light or something to ruin the experience. We could be bots and this simulation exists for the many reasons i gave above.zimmerman8k said:The question still remains; why would we be trapped in a simulated reality where we can't escape to the physical reality? Who would place us in this situation at their own expense and for what purpose? I am yet to hear a convincing explaination. I have already discredited the ludicrous explanation in The Matrix (see above).
Like what?? I gave you reasons and u even quoted the reasons! You know history, gaming etc.zimmerman8k said:Like what?
Even if we create many universes, for the assumption that a given being is most likely in a simulated universe to follow, we must also assume that many people are created trapped in the simulated universes. Which brings me back to what I just asked you, why would anyone want to do this?
Ya, but dude in Assassin's creed there are glitches and shit. I'm pretty sure we'd know by now.A High Way Man said:'Ancestor simulations'. What if humans of the far future are interested in what occured in the past (they will be) and our reality is their simulation (ie a restaging of 'historical events')?
I think we had the capability, we would run hundreds of simulations dealing with alternate histories - an investigation into little things that could've changed the course of history. ie if Germany won the war, etc.
Apart from purely recreational purposes (simulations for the LULZ), this is the only reason I think is plausible.
There's an entire genre devoted to Alternate History in Science-Fiction and Computer Games. I'd imagine it would be a fairly mainstream hobby for the future human to lean back on his/her couch and check how his/her Universe is going.zimmerman8k said:It seems like a huge expense to try and see the past. .
Good point. To escape this scenario, I'd propose they'd use AI. The AI of the future would be able to adapt to whatever timeframe the simulation is running, as long as 'seeds' are planted to suspend disbeliefzimmerman8k said:For such a simulation to work you would have to create beings in the artificial reality that think identically to the people that existed in the past time being simulated. This seems impossible because the brains of the people in the past have disintegrated into nothing and can never be replicated.
Do androids dream of electric sheep?zimmerman8k said:However, even if this were the case, it's a big stretch to say that people in the future would use this so extensively as to create beings trapped in simulated universes that greatly outnumber all the humans that have ever existed.
I agree with your example in the first paragraph quoted above that if it were just a matter of deciding between two proposed theories of reality [i.e. (1) the world is real vs. (2) the world is simulated] then Ockham's razor could be introduced to reject option (2) which holds our experiences to be the result of a simulation (assuming, that is, a paucity of evidence).zimmerman8k said:However, it is wrong to say that the theory that we are living in a simulated universe does not attempt to explain observational phenomena. Look at it this way. There are two competing explanations for how we experience what we currently perceive as being real. (1) What we see is physically real (2) What seems real is actually a simulated reality. So Ockham's razor suggests we should prefer theory (1) as it offers the least complex explanation. I see your point that theory (2) does little to help explain observable phenomena or to predict future events. However, it can still be used to do so. The fact that it is so poor at doing this is the very reason why Ockham's razor should be applied.
I agree with you that the strongest counter argument is to highlight the lack of evidence. However, Ockham's razor strengthens the counter argument. The suggestion that we may one day be able to simulate reality has some empirical support. The rate of growth in computer processing power, the development of existing technologies that already simulate reality and our increased understanding of how to directly stimulate the human brain indicate there is a reasonable chance simulated reality that is indistinguishable from reality may someday be achieved.
So in refuting argument that "we are most likely in a simulated universe," it is relevant to point out that even if the technology is likely to be possible, we have to make a number of further assumptions to arrive at the conclusion that a simulated universe is actually probable.
How do you know it would be expensive to run the simulations. Technology could be good enough so its affordable. We may not knowhow ppl existed, but if we inputted the exact conditions for just when the universe began, everything in this universe should pop up the same, so they dont need to know our brains at all.zimmerman8k said:It seems like a huge expense to try and see the past. For such a simulation to work you would have to create beings in the artificial reality that think identically to the people that existed in the past time being simulated. This seems impossible because the brains of the people in the past have disintegrated into nothing and can never be replicated.
If you have understood me then we will have to agree to disagree.zimmerman8k said:Yes it does make it clearer. I still dont agree. They have presented some evidence, just like there is some evidence for God. For instance, so called miracles. However the evidence in both cases is extremely weak. So as I said, attack the theory by pointing out the lack of evidence, but also use O's razor to point out the unecessary complexity of their theory.
Probably because I am a victim of an intellectual tradition which is strongly influenced by Aristotle / analytic philosophy (alas!). There is some merit in allowing concepts to be more fluid (in the right circumstances) but I find that debates tend to fall apart if we abandon precision - it leads people to talk past one another. Also, it's not just a matter of me being rigid about the application of Ockham's razor - I am also arguing that your extension of Ockham's razor lacks good logical/philosophical grounding.zimmerman8k said:I'm not sure why you insist on categorizing things so rigidly.
It's quite possible. As far back as 50-60 years ago, no one could even imagine computers fitting in the space under our desks, or even laptops. There's also something called Moore's Law, which basically says that every 18 months the processing power of computers double and the production costs halve. (Corollary: computers are getting smaller)zimmerman8k said:To contruct a universe with the level of detail ours has would take more time and effort than one human being could afford to expend.
The idea that each human could have their own simulated universe doesn't make alot of sense. It's actually quite possible.
This is the same as someone who buys a generic computer from Dell/HP compared to a tech enthusiast who buys his own parts and has an interest in software development etc.zimmerman8k said:Perhaps humans could purchase pre programed universes and then customize them and run their own simulations.
In software development circles there is something called unit testing, where the program is tested for glitches against every user input that the programmer can think of. But if the universe is actually a fairly large and open computer simulation, it would be impossible to test for every possible case (event occuring) - there would be too many glitches happening. Considering this, there are either many restrictions in the simulation and some facets of the simulation are scripted, or, assuming we're AI, we have been simply programmed to ignore the glitches.However, once you have a lot of unverses running and people don't have much time to supervise them closely, you'd have high chances of glitches occuring that would give clues to the subjects that they are in a simulated reality.
I think it would be in the interests of the accuracy of the simulation. You'd want the AI to be as close to human as possible: self-deterministic.zimmerman8k said:For instance, if you want people in your simulation to respond realistically to pain, why not just program them to do this. Is it necessary or even possible for them to actually feel pain?
Yeah fair enough, but if I suddenly disappear off the face of the universe for posting in this thread, I wouldn't be surprised.zimmerman8k said:Good point. I suppose if you were going to create a simulated universe you'd make barriers. Not allowing us to leave our solar system would make sense. However, the fact that this suggestion fits is still a long way off proving that we actually live in a simulated universe.
1. I dont know though its highly probable if Q2 is right.zimmerman8k said:how do you know that:
1) It would be possible at all?
2) If it is possible that human civilization advances to the stage where it is actually invented?
3) People would want to?
4) People could afford to if they did want to?
5) The technology would not be banned for ethical reasons?
6) The technology would be so widely used that more beings would exist in the simulated reality than have ever existed in the physical reality?
How could we know the exact conditions of the begining of the universe? In fact there is strong evidence that it is impossible to observe the moment when the universe was first created?
The simulation could be paused if there is a glitch. It could even be rewinded, though we wouldn't know.zimmerman8k said:However, once you have a lot of unverses running and people don't have much time to supervise them closely, you'd have high chances of glitches occuring that would give clues to the subjects that they are in a simulated reality.
Can anyone cite evidence that could indicate glitches in a simulated universe? If not, we are left with the difficult to reconcile position that simulated realities have been perfected or very near perfected.