Should famous people conclude it’s more likely than not they are at the center of a simulation? Thanks for your post! "Fame is not necessarily an indicator of center" is a great response because I think it gets further to the heart of the philosophical question here. The key word to me is "necessarily". I agree it's not necessarily an indicator of being at the center of a simulation.
What would be the appropriate conclusion if someone thinks there's just a slight chance that fame indicates one is the center of a simulation? There is a 7,999,999,999 in 8,000,000,000 chance a person would not be the most famous person in the world if they are not the center of a simulation (99.9999999875%). Would the most famous person have to be at least 99.9999999875% sure that fame is not an indicator of being at the center of a simulation? If they can't get to that confidence level (which seems inevitable), would they then have to accept it's more likely than not they are the center of a simulation?
I'm thinking there is a hole to poke in that logic but I can't pinpoint what it is.