Is naturalism = physicalism? Or is there a further distinction?
— fishfry
That's not exactly wrong. But let analytic philosophers loose on an -ism and in a few years you'll have dozens of them. In the first half of the last century, there wasn't a concept of computability, so that issue is undetermined. — Ludwig V
I'm clearly out of date. Apologies to Searle. However, I'm not much reassured. If Searle is positing consciousness as an unknown something-or-other in addition to what is currently recognized as physical, he is positing a consciousness of the gaps, which is at least close to dualism. — Ludwig V
The mistake is to start with "Consciousness is....". We know what consciousness is; we don't know how to explain the physical basis of consciousness - yet. But it is clear that there are many disparate phenomena involved and it is possible that consciousness will not map neatly onto the physical world. (Consider the many complicated physical phenomena that are involved in the emotions, for example). — Ludwig V
I believe in that same lecture (or perhaps a different one) he [Bostrom?] did NOT advocate dualism. ... That is, consciousness is physical, but not computational.
— fishfry
Wait, Bostrom said that mind is not computational, and yet pushes a view that our consciousness is the result of a computation? That seems to be a direct denial of his own paper. Got a link to where this is said? — noAxioms
William Roper: “So, now you give the Devil the benefit of law!”
Sir Thomas More: “Yes! What would you do? Cut a great road through the law to get after the Devil?”
William Roper: “Yes, I'd cut down every law in England to do that!”
Sir Thomas More: “Oh? And when the last law was down, and the Devil turned 'round on you, where would you hide, Roper, the laws all being flat? This country is planted thick with laws, from coast to coast, Man's laws, not God's! And if you cut them down, and you're just the man to do it, do you really think you could stand upright in the winds that would blow then? Yes, I'd give the Devil benefit of law, for my own safety's sake!” — A Man For All Seasons
Suppose that these simulated people are conscious (as
they would be if the simulations were sufficiently fine‐grained and if a certain
quite widely accepted position in the philosophy of mind is correct). — Bostrom
Many works of science fiction as well as some forecasts by serious technologists
and futurologists predict that enormous amounts of computing power will be
available in the future. — Bostrom
too snippy. — scherz0
You don't seem to understand what is being discussed at all. — Michael
So, the terminal state not being defined does not prevent me defining one arbitrarily?
Isn't it the case that there is a requirement - that the terminal state not be defined by the function. — Ludwig V
How could the mind-body problem not be relevant if people are positing that sims might be people (and sometimes asserting that at least some people are sims?)
Yes. Sometimes I find his tendency to present dualism as common sense ridiculous and sometimes annoying. It reminds me of Bishop Berkeley and his wilful refusal to recognize that he is contradicting common sense.
But the rhetoric of that sentence is genius. A mystery created from a commonplace. — Ludwig V
"Naturalism" is used much more widely than that. I've been classified as a naturalist because I reject dualism. — Ludwig V
If my reality is nothing but a "simulation," then I'm not real. There is only the simulation. Meaning that I'm not a simulation, I'm an instantiation.
— fishfry
Better put than I managed. — Ludwig V
You can define the terminal state to be on, off, or a plate of spaghetti and be consistent with the rules of the game.
— fishfry
No you can't. — Michael
I addressed this in my initial defence of Thomson here, and even more clearly below. — Michael
You're claiming that "a plate of spaghetti" is a coherent answer to the question "is the lamp on or off after two minutes?" — Michael
So I think the confusion is yours. — Michael
He discusses the sequence and its sum, but only to show its irrelevancy, hence the earlier quote. — Michael
From his paper:
What is the sum of the infinite divergent sequence +1, -1, +1, ...? Now mathematicians do say that this sequence has a sum; they say that its sum is 1/2. And this answer does not help us, since we attach no sense here to saying that the lamp is half-on. — Michael
I'm sorry. I was talking about the convergent series. Didn't check — Ludwig V
I do not think Michael and I are making the same point.
— fishfry
Perhaps not. But if the last term in the series is not defined, contradictions are likely to follow from the attempt to identify it. Equally, if something gives rise to a contradiction, the definition will be faulty. So, if you are right, I need to ask why it matters. — Ludwig V
My reply was edited since I think I finally grasped what you mean by 'instantiation', as being distinct from 'simulation'. — noAxioms
No they're not. They are using the word in a single consistent manner at all times. You admit that it is you that is finding two different meanings and trying to use two different words to distinguish them. Under naturalism, there is a physical system that is simulated using a model of physical laws. It's completely computational in all cases. — noAxioms
I acknowledged your opinion. It isn't wrong, merely inconsistent with Bostrom's naturalism opinion. — noAxioms
My opinion is that the economy isn't an example of something noncomputational. — noAxioms
I deny that physics is computational, or rather I'm pretty sure it's not.
With that I completely agree, which is why any computation of our physics is necessarily an approximation.[/quoe]
We are 100% in agreement on this point.
— noAxioms
I'm unclear of the distinction between that and simulation. Bostrom says that it is humans (or 'post-humans') running the big computer. Simulation theory in general doesn't require that detail. — noAxioms
Not at all. I am balking at your equating a premise that science in general would find false (2+2=5) with one that science in general accepts as true (naturalism). — noAxioms
Good. Best they could do at the time. Even today, few non-headset games even have a first person perspective. Minecraft and Portal come to mind. I'm sure there are others, but still a small percentage. Earliest one I can think of is Battlezone. Remember that one? It pre-dates pacman I think. Ground breaking stuff it was. — noAxioms
Yes. "Real time". But technically, all computation has this requirement, which is one reason nobody makes real Turing machines. Imagine if you had a 4-banger calculator that took 40 years to add 2+2. Would you use it? Does that make adding 2+2 something more than computational? — noAxioms
A good stance, and I worded it as 'belief' instead of 'opinion', which may have been too hash. The simulation hypothesis can only be considered under the naturalism it presumes, whether or not naturalism is part of one's opinion. — noAxioms
Your opinion then is that we have the secret sauce, and that whatever it is, it isn't computational, although I don't know how you can infer it being noncomputational if you don't have any idea what it is. So probably also another opinion. — noAxioms
There isn't a separate Cartesan "I" thing under naturalism. — noAxioms
Explaining it and defending it are two different things. The abstract is accurate, meaning I find it reasonably valid and sound, although it seems that it has been updated since wiki lists 5 options now instead of the original 3, but the new ones seem to overlap with the old ones. — noAxioms
Much (the majority?) of criticism and support seem to be from people without a reasonable understanding of what it says. You can include me on that list. Don't trust what I say, but I have read the actual paper at least, and I know the difference between it, other sim proposals, and with a VR proposal. Many of the articles discussing it seem not to know the differences. — noAxioms
Is my consciousness part of the simulation?
So says Bostrom, yes. — noAxioms
Naturalism says it is if the simulation is run at a sufficiently detailed level, which is still classical, not necessarily down to the quantum level. — noAxioms
A VR does not produce a second consciousness for the avatar. A sufficiently detailed VR might for an NPC, but nothing like that exists in any current VR system. The current VR immersion (with the 3D headset and all) is barely better than the one for Pacman. — noAxioms
With a good one, there'd be no controller in your hand. You would not have access to say your real body being touched. — noAxioms
No, that isn't needed, but it is needed if the sim is gleaning intent from the physics it is simulating, and Bostrom very much does propose that it is interpreting human intent. Also, that understanding is needed for any human that is not born, but is part of the initial state. So bottom line, yea, it is needed. — noAxioms
A pure simulation of a human from the human's initial state has no need for knowledge of how memory and consciousness works, for the exact same reason that physics doesn't need to know the details of the workings of the things that result from the physics. — noAxioms
Centuries hence, it seems so. Without it, there can be no plausible initial state, unless you go back 3 billion years where the initial states were less complicated — noAxioms
But that goes against the claim that "the video games are so much better now," an argument often given in support of the simulation hypothesis.
No video game claims any understanding of what is referred to as the hard problem. If somebody references a game as an illustration of Bostrom's hypothesis, then they don't understand the difference between a sim and a VR. But they're probably just using games as one way to demonstrate Moore's law, which Bostrom presumes to continue for centuries. — noAxioms
If all this is a simulation, I am still very much real according to my stated definition of 'real' and you've not given yours. SH is very different than BiV and Boltzmann brains. — noAxioms
I don't think there is the sort of free will you're thinking if our world is a simulation. — noAxioms
A simulation like that doesn't have causality from outside the system. If it did, it would probably be a VR. I say this, but I've done chip simulations that get driven from external state. The signals fed to the chip are artificial, not from other simulated circuits since it's only the one chip being tested. Such a chip simulation is hard to classify as a VR. — noAxioms
You are part of the physical evolution of the chosen initial state. That answer pretty much applies to any simulation, including all the ones I've seen done. You want to call it an instantiation and I think I see how you're using that word. A simulation is the execution (instantiation) of a mathematical model, that model itself being an approximation of some hypothetical corresponding reality. Since it is the execution of a model, it is presumably exact, except the model might include randomness, in which case the exactness is wrong since multiple instantiations of the same model will evolve differently. Bostrom does propose some randomness in his model, so not sure how 'exact' it would be. Said randomness need only be apparent, so it can be driven by a pseudo-random mechanism, which restores the deterministic nature of the simulation. — noAxioms
You can't go from "people aren't special in the universe," to "therefore people are computational."
I don't think any physical thing (people or otherwise) is computational. But an approximation can be, and people are no exception to that according to science. — noAxioms
You're not taking down Bostrom's argument. You presume his premisies to be false. I presume them to be true, and I think his conclusion doesn't follow from them. — noAxioms
That's right. BiV is like the video game: an artificial (virtual) experience stream to the real (not simulated) experiencer, effectively a video game for the B in the Vat, whatever its nature. — noAxioms
Very unlikely for the reason's I've stated. Only if you're part of the initial state, and then only if that initial state had some kind of access to the molecular state of everybody on Earth many centuries prior, which they don't because there's no tech today that can do that. — noAxioms
Under Bostrom's view, the universe is a simulation, or at least something that can be seen from the simulation since most of it is just phenomenal. — noAxioms
Yes, our universe is what it is, and that's an intantiation in your wording. But the wording give no clue as to the nature of how it comes to be, since any story fits. — noAxioms
Bostrom gives one possible way that it is instantiated. A deity is another. Both fail to solve the problem of 'why there's something and not nothing', but Bostrom isn't positing a solution to that problem. The deity answer often is such an attempt, and a failed one since it explains a complicated thing by positing an even more complicated thing. — noAxioms
I think I understand your usage of that word, and I don't in any way presume that I am instantiated. — noAxioms
But that's me, being far more skeptical than most. — noAxioms
Being instantiated doesn't solve any problems. — noAxioms
I personally suspect that the sum of 2 and 2 is 4 even in the absence of anything actually performing that calculation (absence of it being instantiated). Apparently I am in the minority in this opinion. — noAxioms
I never said your opinion is wrong. It's just a different one than somebody else's. Different premises. — noAxioms
I think I'm in the minority of being somebody who has opinions X and Y and such, and I also think I'm mostly wrong about them. Some are probably right, but I realize that the odds of me getting most of them right is stupidly low. — noAxioms
God instantiated the universe. You say God is a digital computer.
I say that? — noAxioms
'God' sound like the extra assumption in that statement. Occam says it's better to ditch both the deity and the simulation layers — noAxioms
Surely, the contradiction is the result of the lack of any definition of the terminal state. If the terminal state could be a plate of spaghetti, why couldn't be a lamp that is neither on nor off?
I really cannot see what you two are arguing about. Why does the difference matter? — Ludwig V
The plate of spaghetti is a great dramatic way of making the point that there is no definition. But the series is defined on the basis that its limit is 1. You can't derive 1/2 from a plate of spaghetti. — Ludwig V
My point is that I think that the disagreement between you and fishfry is about different ways to make the same point. — Ludwig V
I'm currently feeling unwell and will reply shortly. Cheers, and thank you for continuing this dialogue. — keystone
Conclusion: set theory is in violation of the law of identity. I've explained to you why this is the case. Do you agree with me? — Metaphysician Undercover
The terminal state isn't just undefined; any proposed terminal state is inconsistent. The lamp cannot be either on or off after two minutes even though it must be either on or off after two minutes. This is a contradiction, therefore it is impossible to have pushed the button an infinite number of times. — Michael
We're discussing the consequence of having pushed a button an infinite number of times, not the limit of some infinite sequence of numbers. These are two different things. — Michael
As Thomson says, "the impossibility of a super-task does not depend at all on whether some vaguely-felt-to-be associated arithmetical sequence is convergent or divergent." — Michael
We need not use the word same if it bothers you.
— fishfry
Great, I prefer the word "equal". It's better suited for that purpose. — Metaphysician Undercover
"Equal" generally allows that the two things which are said to be equal are not necessarily the same. — Metaphysician Undercover
"Same" is defined by the law of identity as indicating one thing only. — Metaphysician Undercover
That is the commonly expressed difference between "same" and "equal". — Metaphysician Undercover
"Equal" indicates a similarity of two things by both sharing an identifiable property, while "same" means that you are referring to one thing only. — Metaphysician Undercover
Generally I disagree with your wording, as indicated above. — Metaphysician Undercover
The axiom of extensionality indicates what is required for two sets to be equal, yet you state this as "the same". That I take as a mistaken use of words. — Metaphysician Undercover
I didn't say that though. I simply gave an example of how fiction is useful, one that was obvious. — Metaphysician Undercover
Many times fiction is used in ways not intended to deceive, like the use of counterfactuals in logic, for example. So, the issue is complex, because mathematics, like fiction in general has many uses. — Metaphysician Undercover
These are broad generalizations which I can't relate to because I do not accept them as valid
generalizations, so I do not reply. — Metaphysician Undercover
For example, you say that language "attempts to...". But language doesn't attempt anything, individual people attempt to do things with the use of language. And, there is such an extremely broad range of things which people attempt to do with language, that it doesn't make sense to make the generalization that what people attempt to do with language is to capture "some aspect of abstract thought". — Metaphysician Undercover
My point has always been that "same" in this context is not consistent with "same" in the context of the law of identity. So, to say " 2+ 2 and 4 symbolize the same set" is to use "same in a way which is in violation of the law of identity. — Metaphysician Undercover
Whether we are talking about "same thing", "same set", "same number", or "same kick in the ass", is irrelevant. The point is that this specific use of "same" is very clearly in violation of the law of identity. — Metaphysician Undercover
If the law of identity indicates that only a thing can be said to be "the same", and you do not believe that a set is a thing, and you want to say that a set is the same, then I suggest that you do not agree with the way that "same' is used by the law of identity. Is this the case? Do you believe that mathematicians have a better definition of "same"? — Metaphysician Undercover
If math is a flagrant fiction, why's it so darn useful?
— fishfry
In case you have never noticed, fiction is extremely useful. I suggest you begin with a look at the obvious, deception. Deception demonstrates that fiction is very useful in convincing others, to help us get what we want from them. And, so is mathematics. — Metaphysician Undercover
You wanted something new so see the above. — Michael
I am not an avatar in a video game, for the usual Cartesian reason. There's a "me" in here having subjective experiences.
— fishfry
I'm agree with fishfry here, but adding that if the "me" in here is having subjective experience, then I must be able to interact with the presented illusory environment, that is, I can cause things to happen in the environment and get appropriate feed-back from the environment. But that would make me a real person, not a simulation (though I might be a clone.) — Ludwig V
(0,1) is the union of (1/n, 1 - 1/n) as n goes to infinity. I just wrote (0,1) as the union of infinitely many open intervals.
— fishfry
Based on your description:
n=1 (1,0)
n=2 (1/2,1/2)
n=3 (1/3,2/3)
etc.
I don't follow. What exactly are you combining into a union? — keystone
I've summarized key aspects of my argument in the following table, where I provide two analogous examples (a fitness gym vs. a path). Can you please tell me which cells in the table you disagree with or do not understand? This will help us identify the confusion and hopefully advance the conversation. You don't have to read the column for the fitness gym. I've only included it to ensure that our thinking is grounded in reality. — keystone
My argument is that the top-down perspective lays equal claim to the irrational points. You can't claim that there are gaps in my intervals just because the non-computable irrational points in my view do not have corresponding numbers. Both of our views of a line involve the exact same 2ℵ0
2
ℵ
0
points. The difference is that my points are bundled together as a single package (thus not needing numbers) whereas your points are independent (thus needing numbers). — keystone
You mentioned that a rational number, which is a point, can also be considered as nested stacks of intervals, essentially an arbitrarily small line. However, no matter how small that line is, it can never truly be a point. — keystone
No real numbers are isolated.
— fishfry
Interesting. It sounds like you might agree that the best one can do is isolate a small bundle around the real number. What is the length of such a bundle - positive rational? Zero? Ever shrinking? — keystone
We don't need to discuss supertasks. They're not relevant to either of our positions. — keystone
You seem to be the one finding two different meanings, one which sounds like how others use 'simulation', and then this other thing which for reasons not spelled out, require exactness, and is perhaps not computational. I have no idea how to simulate something non-computational, let alone doing it exactly. I don't think anybody else is suggesting any such thing. — noAxioms
Well yea, you deny the premise that physics is computational at the necessary levels of precision needed. — noAxioms
No, you're not in the position to say what other people think follows from accepting that 2+2=5. — noAxioms
You said "Then whatever [VR] is doing is not computational.", and now you say it is nothing but.
Perhaps you don't consider pacman to be an example of VR. It's admittedly crude and not deeply emersive, but most action video games are nevertheless a form of VR. — noAxioms
The point seems moot. The subject of the topic is simulation theory, not VR theory. VR examples have little to no bearing on simulation hypothesis, a hypothesis you just plain deny due to your lack of belief that a human is computational. — noAxioms
I don't think I ever said that. This quote is mistakenly attributed to me. Maybe I'm wrong about that. It's a long thread. — noAxioms
You seem to go on endlessly about me somehow disagreeing with the definition of computability. I'm not. Real-time issues don't exist in simulation hypothesis, so those are moot until one starts talking about something other than SH. — noAxioms
Under the simulation hypothesis, you are yourself, which is tautologically true, SH or not. — noAxioms
There is not a different 'more real' or 'less real' fishfry somewhere else. It is an ancestor simulation, not a simulation of a fishfry model. Your maker is still your mother, also part of the simulation. — noAxioms
You are part of one large simulation, and yes, me quoting Bostrom. I don't buy the hypothesis for a moment. — noAxioms
You are not an approximation of anything. The simulation is an approximation of the physics of a system (a planet perhaps). You are part of the state of that simulation. — noAxioms
Probably not, unless the simulation's initial state was very recent (our time) and that initial state included a real person who happened to identify as fishfry. — noAxioms
I seriously doubt the GS people centuries in the future would know almost anything about you except your parental lineage, all of which is only relevant if the initial state was set since your birth. It has to start somewhere, and that means that the people of that time are created in thin air, with memories totally consistent with their nonexistent past. Doing that requires a full knowledge of how memory and consciousness works, not just a model of how physics works. The initial state requires far more work than does the simulation itself, which is fairly trivial if you get the state right.
Such things are easy with weather and car crashes, but a nightmare for something complex. — noAxioms
Probably none of them, unless they are older than the date of the initial state. Anybody conceived after simulation start has zero probability of having a corresponding real person. — noAxioms
No. They're no different, except they have real memories, not fake ones put there by the initial state. Maybe the sim only last 10 minutes and everybody is 'corresponding'. This is presuming that the people of the future know exactly who and where everybody is at some random time centuries prior. They don't. — noAxioms
Why do you harp on this? Of what possible importance would it be to anybody in a sim to have a corresponding person (long dead) in the GS? — noAxioms
I do realize that I am asking this question of a person who thinks people are special in the universe can cannot be computational like everything else. — noAxioms
Bostrom is maybe. You forget who's pushing the hypothesis. It isn't me, but I'm a computer person and at least I understand it enough to see it for the nonsense it is. — noAxioms
SH is not a BiV scenario. VR is, but Bostrom is not talking VR. — noAxioms
An corresponding people from the initial state of the sim would correspond to people centuries dead in the GS world, so nobody can correspond to any living 'real' person. — noAxioms
Sorry, but despite your repeated use of that word, I don't know what you mean by it. — noAxioms
You've mentioned that it needs to be 'exact', and the exact physics of even a small trivial real system cannot be exactly simulated, so there cannot be what you call an instantiation. So we're back only to simulations of the approximate physics of some chosen system. — noAxioms
I have no problem acknowledging that 2+2=4. I have a problem with people who claim that "2+2" symbolizes the same thing that "4" does. — Metaphysician Undercover
And so, I refused to accept your claim to have proven that "2+2" signifies the very same thing as "4" does. — Metaphysician Undercover
Simply put, if the right side of an equation does not signify something distinct from the left side, mathematics would be completely useless. — Metaphysician Undercover
You can say that I have a problem with formalism, — Metaphysician Undercover
because I do. Like claiming that accepting certain axioms qualifies as having counted infinite numbers, formalism claims to do the impossible. — Metaphysician Undercover
That is, to remove all content from a logical application, to have a logical system which is purely formal. If such a thing was possible we'd have a logical system which is absolutely useless, applicable to nothing whatsoever. — My vetaphysician Undercover
Attempts at formalism end up disguising content as form, — Metaphysician Undercover
producing a smoke and mirrors system of sophistry, — Metaphysician Undercover
which is riddled with errors, due to the inherent unintelligibility of the content, which then permeates through the entire system, undetected because its existence is denied. — Metaphysician Undercover
Logical equivalence does not imply "the same as". I have no problem with the axiom of extensionality. — Metaphysician Undercover
I have a problem with people who conflate the axiom of extensionality with the law of identity, to interpret that axiom as saying two equal things are the same thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
..... unless you think of fishfry as an avatar. On the other hand, if I am a simulation that is not aware of the fact, I must be able to act and react in my world. In that case, I am not a simulation of anything. — Ludwig V
I can write (0,1) as the union of arbitrarily many intervals. However, I cannot write (0,1) as the union of infinitely many intervals. — keystone
For example, consider describing (0,1) as the union of N equal-length non-degenerate intervals (plus a bunch of points).
Length of (0,1) = Length of each interval * number of intervals
Length of (0,1) = (1/N) * N
This equation is valid when N is any positive natural number, but it is not valid when N is infinity. — keystone
Therefore, it is not sensible to define the interval (0,1) as the union of infinitely many intervals. — keystone
And what I'm saying is that since we have to pick a finite number, why not just pick N=1? — keystone
I don't have to cut (0,1) at all to give it length. All 2ℵ0
2
ℵ
0
points that you are looking for are there from the start, albeit bundled together in one single object. Cuts don't create length, all they do is divide length. — keystone
We can sensibly devise a plan for arithmetic on rationals, AND we can completely execute arithmetic on rationals.
We can sensibly devise a plan for arithmetic on irrationals, but we cannot completely execute arithmetic on irrationals.
There is a distinction here that gets lost when you give rationals and irrationals the same status. — keystone
Nothing is for free, not even the rationals. When I start with path (−∞,+∞)
(
−
∞
,
+
∞
)
I have no numbers. Instead I have 2ℵ0
2
ℵ
0
points bundled together in a single object. Again, with the fitness membership bundle, there's not a price for every atom (or rather every point) in the gym. There's just a price for the bundle. We don't get the price per point for free. What would that price even be - seriously? $0/point? A bottom-up pricing model is absolute nonsen — keystone
What is a plan if not a form of algorithm? — keystone
I'm not suggesting that non-computable points don't exist within the (0,1) bundle; rather, I'm saying it's impossible to isolate such points. — keystone
Humans have never isolated a non-computable point and never will — keystone
—it's simply unfeasible to come up with a plan to do so. It seems almost as if you're adopting a stance based on faith. But why? What is the need to isolate non-computable points? — keystone
I'm not referring to a verbal description, but rather to isolating it using cuts. For instance, you might attempt to pinpoint Chaitin's number within the interval (0.007, 0.008) for a specific Turing machine. However, this interval has a finite length of 0.001. It is not feasible to devise a plan to successively refine these intervals to confine Chaitin's number within an arbitrarily narrow range. — keystone
A point can never be perfectly represented using a line, no matter how small that line is. — keystone
I see (0,1) as a bundle of 2ℵ0
2
ℵ
0
points. You see (0,1) as 2ℵ0
2
ℵ
0
isolated points. — keystone
cuts. I need to absolutely mince that line until it's made of individual objects that have no length. This requires a supertask. It's not possible. It's not sensical. — keystone
The above two comments seem to contradict each other. By your definition, a simulation isn't one unless it is exact, and then you give examples of simulations that are not exact. — noAxioms
You also said that consciousness is not computational, and therefore the GS cannot simulate via computation, a conscious thing. — noAxioms
That puts you into a position to not dictate whether or not those holding a different opinion would say that exactness is required or not. — noAxioms
So pacman does not involve computation. Hmm....[/quoet]
Pacman ONLY involves computation. No sentience is involved.
The points you're making in this post are trivial and wrong, not up to your usual standards.
— noAxioms
the rate of computation is essential. None of your examples above are VR examples. — noAxioms
Other examples is any other kind of real-time programming such as a self driving car. A car cannot function if its processing uses paper and pencil. A certain minimal rate of computation is required, or the task cannot be done. Computing slowly isn't enough if you take 3 months to see the stop sign. You seem to assert that what a self-driving car does therefore cannot be computation, but it very much is. — noAxioms
What does running an algorithm fast do that running the same algorithm slowly doesn't?
I already told you: It gets it done before the computer ceases computing. A human with a pencil lives maybe 50 years (with the pencil) and accomplishes what a computer can do in under a second, and computers tend to last longer than a second before they fail. A computer can come up with an answer while the answer is still needed. In a simulation, there are no deadlines to meet (except getting something done before the computer fails), but in any kind of real-time programming, it must be completed before the output is needed by the consumer of that output. — noAxioms
If it whistles Dixie, it is computing something different. Both should have identical output. Euclid's algorithm isn't a real-time task. — noAxioms
Only to a real-time task, and none of your examples are one. — noAxioms
There's a model of physics, and any sim is only a computable approximation of that. Bostrom says that a human is a product of physics, and thus can be functionally simulated given a sufficient level of detail, which is still classical. — noAxioms
Same model, different supervenience, if I get my terminology straight. — noAxioms
I don't know what you think it means for a real person to be simulated. — noAxioms
Bostrom suggests a sim of ancestral history, which means that random new people get born, and these people do not in any way correspond to actual people that might have existed in the history of the GS. Much depends on what period of history they choose for their initial state. — noAxioms
That would be something other than 'ancestral history'. You say take a molecular scan of a real person, create a sim model of that exact arrangement of matter, put it in a small environment, and see what it does. That's far more likely than this 'ancestral' thing, but it also would be trivial for the simulated person to realize he's not the original since he's been put in this tiny bounded space, a sort of jail, when he remembers getting into the scanning machine. — noAxioms
Now according to your stated beliefs, that simulation wouldn't work. It is computational and you say a person isn't, so the simulated thing would not be functional at any level of detail. — noAxioms
No, I did not suggest there needs to be a 2nd fishfry that is 'real'. Ancestral history simulations certainly don't produce simulated people that correspond to people in the GS world. — noAxioms
No, not two of you. Bostrom's sim hypothesis would have all of us being in one large simulation, and no real fishfry in the GS world. I apologize if something I posted led you to conclude that I was suggesting otherwise. — noAxioms
What is approximated is the physics. I can simulate planetary motion by modeling Earth as a point mass. That's a super-trivial approximation of Earth that works for seeing where it is 100 years from now, but it needs more detail if you say want to see which way the planet is facing in 100 years. — noAxioms
Yes, but over time, many video games keep getting closer and closer to the sort of reality we'
re used to. Not all of them. Some are still total fiction with deliberate fiction physics, if they have physics at all. They're also video games, which makes them VR, not simulations. — noAxioms
It's low hanging fruit to debunk various videos. There is indeed whole sites dedicated to debunking relativity in all possible ways, and it is a interesting exercise to find the fallacious reasoning in every one of the arguments. — noAxioms
The delayed choice quantum eraser isn't really an experiment having anything to do with relativity theory. — noAxioms
News to me as well. It seems to require at least some level of what would qualify as 'understanding'. — noAxioms
From past experience I understand that fishfry is very slow to accept the reality that some principles employed by mathematicians are incoherent. — Metaphysician Undercover
Now I'm confused. I thought you didn't know what "metaphysics" means - or what metaphysics is. — Ludwig V
I'm puzzled now about "natural". If the terminal state of the lamp is not defined, there is no way to define it - natural or otherwise. Or, possibly better, any arbitrary state will do. Hence the plate of spaghetti. — Ludwig V
Yes, of course - and since it is not defined, Michael can derive a contradiction - two equally possible or impossible states. — Ludwig V
H'm. I would be quite happy with that acceptable usage. But it suggests that 1,1.4,1.41, 1.414... is incomplete, and we are back with the temptation to think that series can somehow be completed. It's probably better to stick with "not applicable". — Ludwig V
I think that's the heart of the problem. My only hesitation is that the lamp is imaginary, so it sits on an ill-defined boundary between the two. I'm very suspicious of the idea that anything anyone can imagine is (logically) possible. Twin Earth is a good example. But there's a raft of others. — Ludwig V
I don't know what to say. Ryle would go on about category mistakes. In poetry (or politics) people sometimes talk of a "tin ear". That's exactly what this is - a rhetorical gesture that confuses "concrete" with "well defined" and with - well - concrete. It's protesting too much. There must be some repressed doubt going on there. — Ludwig V
You are lucky. It will spare you a world of grief and confusion. Modal logic can look after itself. — Ludwig V
The system is telling me that you mentioned me in the context of this comment in the thread on the Fall of Man paradox, but I can't find any mention of me. But the system is doing some weird things anyway, so I'm not going to worry about it. I do regret not having been aware of the thread sooner. I thought it had something to do with theology. — Ludwig V
As far as I can see I've addressed everything you've said. — Michael
In the message you linked to, you concluded:-
So the fact that the status of the lamp at t1 is "undefined" given A is the very proof that the supertask described in A is metaphysically impossible.
— Michael
I think that this is what fishfry was saying. (Substituting "logically impossible" for "metaphysically impossible".) — Ludwig V
You persist in searching for an infinite set made up of tiny fundamental building blocks to assemble, like a mosaic. This bottom-up approach colors your perspective, but it's not feasible to represent the interval (0,1) as a union of such micro-continua—it simply doesn't work. I am seeking a construction that, at least theoretically, could be explicitly written down. — keystone
In contrast, a top-down approach begins with a singleton set that includes a large fundamental bundle to trim, like a sculpture. Each cut can split it into finitely more, smaller bundles. Although we can continue making cuts indefinitely, there is no necessity to complete a supertask and produce an infinite set of tiny micro-continua. Our strategy only needs to involve a finite number of cuts to produce the necessary elements for the computation at hand. Why do you believe it's necessary to have all the intervals? — keystone
Oops, I meant to edit the quote as follows with the underlined part being the part I disagree with: "I mean that the sequence itself IS the number pi". — keystone
In our discussion, I've always acknowledged the value and beauty of irrationals. However, I believe they don't share the same status as rational numbers. — keystone
Rationals correspond to singleton intervals and represent specific points, whereas irrationals correspond to non-degenerate intervals and represent lines, albeit arbitrarily small ones. You're correct, the S-B tree isn't fundamental to my perspective. — keystone
Yes, but let me qualify my position as I think we will disagree on some details. We can execute cuts to isolate rationals within singleton intervals. We can plan to isolate computable irrationals within arbitrarily small intervals. However, even that plan alone is not feasible for non-computable irrationals. — keystone
The best we could plan for is to isolate non-computable irrationals within a finite length interval. I hold this view because any plan we devise must, at least theoretically, be expressible in a finite number of characters. — keystone
Besides, why would we even need to isolate non-computables? They're social creatures that like to live in large communities. — keystone
No, I view rationals as singleton intervals. — keystone
I can devise a plan to target an irrational whose midpoint is arbitrarily close to a rational, but when I actually execute the cut, I must choose a positive epsilon value, and the resulting distance between the point and the resulting line segment's midpoint will necessarily be non-zero. It is for reasons like this why it is critical to distinguish between the plan and the execution of the plan. With the top-down view, there is an inherent approximation in the act of executing a plan - a principle analogous to the Uncertainty Principle in QM. — keystone
But if you mean that a point has length 0, and an interval has a positive length, the unsigned difference of its endpoints, we agree.
— fishfry
Excellent. This is a crucial point that I will revisit as we continue our discussion. — keystone
I acknowledge that most mathematicians are Platonists and therefore see no necessity for supertasks. — keystone
However, constructivist (and people like me) needs supertasks to arrive at the objects that Platonists consider to exist. — keystone
I don't care if there are supertasks or not, but I am driven to straighten out the bad thinking around limits (or die trying, is more like it).
— fishfry
I'm entirely in favour of the project, but, to be honest, I don't think it is worth dying for. — Ludwig V
I think that's the first time I've encountered anyone on these sites who understands the difference between "discrete" and "discreet". Not patronizing, just saying. — Ludwig V
Likewise 1/2 + 1/4 + 1/8 + ... and 1 are two text string expressions for the same abstract object, namely the number we call 1.
— fishfry
Now you have me a bit puzzled. In my book, that means that the equation is about the complete series, which seems at odds with the idea that it can't be completed. — Ludwig V
What does "complete" mean? Or does it mean the sense in which it is "always already" complete? (see below) — Ludwig V
It might be easier to understand if you thought of them as regarding all possible worlds as equally possible. — Ludwig V
I could understand that. I hope they don't mean that all possible worlds are equally actual.... — Ludwig V
But some people tend to think only of one kind of possibility - logical possibility. But there many other sorts - physically possible, legally possible, practically possible, etc. etc. I say that possible means different things in different contexts, but it may be that I should be saying there is cloud of possible worlds for each kind. Or maybe physically possible worlds are a subset of logically possible worlds. It's all very confusing. But I shouldn't get too snooty. There is, apparently, a need to this concept in modal logic, but I don't understand what it is. — Ludwig V
Well, in that case, you are also traversing the infinitely many possible points along the way, as well as the convergent series based on "<divide by> 3" and all the other series based on all the other numbers, plus all the regular divisions by feet or metres. Or maybe you could decide that all these ways of dividing up your journey are in your head, not in the world. Think of them as possible segments rather than chunks of matter or space. — Ludwig V
But in math, 1/2 + 1/4 + ... is added together all at once. And the sum is exactly 1, right now, right this moment.
— fishfry
Yes. Thanks for clarifying that for me. That's what I was trying to express when I started babbling on about "always already" in that post that you couldn't get your head around. The comparison with Loop program captures what I've been wrestling with trying to clarify. All that business about getting (or not getting) to the end... It's important though that it's a physical process which takes time. You can switch it off at the end of 60 seconds, and see how far it got, but it won't have completed anything, will it? — Ludwig V
There's no clear criterion for what is conceivable and what is not, in spite of generations of logicians. It seems pretty clear that some people have a much more generous concept of that than I do. There are famous philosophical issues around that many people seem able to conceive of, but I can't. I don't know what's wrong with me. — Ludwig V
I said it couldn't simulate itself exactly. I didn't say it couldn't simulate itself. — noAxioms
Faster does not help when it comes to computation.
It is necessary for a VR, — noAxioms
but not a simulation, all of which is pointed out in my topic. It's why a sim can be done with pencil/paper and a VR cannot. — noAxioms
Still, Bostrom needs a fast computer because a simulation with paper and such would have humanity go extinct before a fraction of a second was simulated. Bostrom is not making an 'in principle' argument. — noAxioms
Going faster can never let you compute more things than you could with pencil and paper. If going faster makes a difference, then the difference is not computational. It's something else.
True only in principle. — noAxioms
In reality, each number written on a paper will likely rot away before it is needed for the next step. The guy with the pencil will die, as will all of humanity. So will the superfast computer (it cannot run forever in practice), but it will have gotten a lot further than the pencil team, and a lot further than any TM, however pimped out you make it. — noAxioms
That's a different kind of computability: the ability to get it done before the demise of the thing doing the computing. — noAxioms
I agree with all your points on the definition of computability, but I wasn't talking about that. — noAxioms
.
OK. I seem to be blowing it off to semantics, and I made MsPM an extension of me, not an extension of my mind. I consider myself to be conscious, not just a body that contains something that is. — noAxioms
Bostrom's view is that a sim of a person is also the execution of an approximate mathematical model. That this conflicts with your opinion means that your opinion is incompatible with what Bostrom hypothesizes. — noAxioms
If you mean that the thing simualted (us) is exactly the same as us, that is tautologically true, yes. But I'm saying that the simulated 'us' cannot be an exact simulation of a person in the GS world. — noAxioms
Yet again, the thing being simulated is 'ancestral history', whatever that means. — noAxioms
Bostrom does not suggest that there is or ever was a real fishfry in the GS world. You are part of the simulation, and that's it. — noAxioms
The history being simulated is quite different than the one that actually happened way in the past history of the GS world, although the initial state of the simulation presumably had similarities to some actual past state of the GS history. Bostrom gives no indication of when this initial state was likely placed. Last Tuesday? A minute ago? 50000 years ago when humanity just started looking like us? — noAxioms
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.
Again, tautologically true. But our reality is the causal result of an approximation of some past GS state. — noAxioms
Apparently 'because they can' and we don't because we can't. But visionaries have always had a lot of trouble guessing what purposes would be served by future high computing capacity. Anyway, I don't buy that reasoning because it's only there because the hypothesis needs it to hold any water. — noAxioms
And she exquisitely tore apart a lot of the woo surrounding the delayed choice quantum eraser since that experiment is so often billed as an example of reverse causality. The one I tore apart had to do with general relativity, which I don't even know that well, but I know enough to show the assertions in the video to be bunk. — noAxioms
That works great for opening, perhaps for 20 moves even. But eventually it has to get to a position that it hasn't seen in its training data, and then what? — noAxioms
It can't just auto-complete with more text, since the text given would likely not be a legal move. So I'd like to see an article about how it proceeds from a middle-game. Turns out that the LLM is often more capable than I give it credit for. Scary. — noAxioms
The argument form I am using is called modus tollens and is valid: — Michael
You're just proving yourself to be an uneducated person who clearly finds pride in having radical uneducated opinions. — Christoffer
↪fishfry okay so I guess I'm confused why, after all that, you still said
No internal model of any aspect of the actual game — flannel jesus
For full clarity, and I'm probably being unnecessarily pedantic here, it's not necessarily fair to say that's all they did. That's all their goal was, that's all they were asked to - BUT what all of this should tell you, in my opinion, is that when a neural net is asked to achieve a task, there's no telling HOW it's actually going to achieve that task. — flannel jesus
In order to achieve the task of auto completing the chess text strings, it seemingly did something extra - it built an internal model of a board game which it (apparently) reverse engineered from the strings. (I actually think that's more interesting than its relatively high chess rating, the fact that it can reverse engineer the rules of chess seeing nothing but chess notation). — flannel jesus
So we have to distinguish, I think, between the goals it was given, and how it accomplished those goals. — flannel jesus
Apologies if I'm just repeating the obvious. — flannel jesus
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
I think they are chainsaws, not to be trifled with by the untrained masses.
— fishfry
This sounds a lot like gatekeeping. — keystone
Cesàro summations are very simple. Nevertheless, let's set aside Grandi's series for now. It doesn't have any relevance to my position...until further on. — keystone
There are fiber bundles in math. A hairbrush with bristles sticking out is a fiber bundle. Off topic but reminded me of the name.
— fishfry
Wow, I feel like a generation alpha kid trying to come up with an email address - all the good names are already taken! — keystone
Anyway, I'd actually rather call the bundles 'quanta', but to avoid QM-washing this discussion I'll keep calling them bundles. — keystone
Further. bundles have interval descriptions but individual points (within a bundle) do not. In other words, the bundle is the fundamental unit. Sure, we can perform a cut actualize a 0D bundle, such as [0.5,0.5], but that point is emergent. — keystone
I don’t believe that’s the case. It seems there are three factors involved here. (1) I'm refining my ideas—thank you for your assistance with this. (2) I'm improving how I communicate my ideas—again, thanks for your help. (3) You are starting to understand that my perspective doesn’t undermine any established mathematics; it mainly reinterprets it (making bundles fundamental). — keystone
Well sure, every irrational can be identified with a descending sequence of open intervals. I can locate pi in the sequence (3, 4), (3.1, 3.2), (3.14, 3.15), (3.141, 3.142), ... I mean that the sequence itself IS the number pi... Does that idea resonate with you?
— fishfry
ABSOLUTELY (except for the underlined part). — keystone
I did note this 2 days ago when I said that 1D cuts around φ are more true to the Cauchy definition of φ than 0D cuts. I also chose the golden ratio in that message because it has a beautiful description using the SB-algorithm. — keystone
Look at the figure below. — keystone
I've never denied the significance of irrationals. My view is simply that because irrationals are always encompassed within bundles, or rather are the bundles themselves, they differ distinctly from isolated points/rational numbers. — keystone
Wait, I'm not proposing that an irrational is a descent down to a point. Rather, I'm proposing that irrationals are infinite descents involving arbitrarily smaller intervals. — keystone
The interval never has a length of 0 whereby a single irrational point is isolated. — keystone
Ah, okay, so you don't require a point at pi. Awesome. It seems like we're making progress. — keystone
Once we're completely aligned, I'd like to explore what I believe are the unseen and surprising consequences of this perspective with you. — keystone
Distinguishing between planning and execution is paramount. The inability to differentiate between them is precisely why there are so many infinity cranks. Cranks reject the concept of completing a supertask. — keystone
On the other hand, mathematicians refuse to reject supertasks (or ideas implicitly associated with them) because they carry profound aesthetic and practical value. — keystone
I find myself in the middle ground. What I suggest is that mathematicians would find complete satisfaction in merely planning the supertask, without concerning themselves with the imperfections of its incomplete execution. — keystone
There’s a lot wrong with the world today, but would you really want to live an Amish or Mennonite lifestyle? — keystone
Personally, I appreciate living in the most interesting of times, despite the uncertainty of our future. — keystone
I simply do not understand why you jump to saying that means it's metaphysically impossible.
— fishfry
Because it leads to contradictions as shown by Thomson's lamp, defended here and expanded on here. — Michael
Also because it's the conclusion of this sound argument:
P1. If we can recite the natural numbers at successively halved intervals of time then we can recite every natural number in finite time
P2. It is metaphysically impossible to recite every natural number in finite time
C1. Therefore, it is metaphysically impossible to recite the natural numbers at successively halved intervals of time — Michael
I justify P2 with this tautology:
P3. If we start reciting the natural numbers then either we stop on some finite number or we never stop — Michael
Metaphysical impossibilities are things which are necessarily false; e.g. see Kripke's Naming and Necessity in which he argues that "water is H2O" is necessarily true even though not a priori (i.e. logically necessary). — Michael
Because it leads to contradictions as shown by Thomson's lamp, defended here and expanded on here. — Michael
Also because it's the conclusion of this sound argument: — Michael
Thanks for clarifying that. I find it quite hard to remember what everyone's position actually is. It gets lost in all the detail. — Ludwig V
One might say that one cannot complete such a series. I'm not sure of my ground here, but I think you will find that everything depends on what is meant by "complete" and it won't mean completing a recitation of all the steps in the series. — Ludwig V
I would be very grateful if you could help me clarify this. When you say:-
When a mathematician says that 1/2 + 1/4 + 1/8 + ... = 1, they don't mean that you can perform this calculation with pencil and paper before lunchtime. They mean that the two expressions on either side of the equal sign denote the same real number.
— fishfry
That's not quite as simple as it looks. The left-hand side will never equal the right-hand side as long as I try to make them equal by adding further steps in accordance with the same rule (...1/16, 1/32...). That's what it means to say that 1 is the limit, not the last step. But if I add 1/8 again, the two sides will be equal. Does that count as completing the sequence? — Ludwig V
Whether possible worlds count as real depends entirely on what you mean by "real". For some people, "real" comes down to true. If it is possible that it will rain tomorrow then possible worlds are real because it is true that it will rain tomorrow. For others, a possibility is not actual, so cannot be real. — Ludwig V
Quite so. But I think there is a confusion going on here. If you'll allow a temporary and artificial distinction... Roughly, it's the difference between an analysis, which doesn't change or affect its object, and a division or separation which does. That's the difference between measuring a plank of wood as 10 cm long and cutting it into 1cm lengths. The first is an analysis, the second is a division.
There are infinite ways in which I can mark out the plank, and they are all true at the same time and the physical object that is the plank is unaffected by any of them. True, the marks will be physical objects, so there will be limits to what I can do. But the system allows me infinite possibilities, including a convergent series. None of these makes the slightest difference to the plank. So when you visit Zeno for a beer, the fact that there are infinitely many analyses of your journey does not make the slightest difference. It's all in your head. — Ludwig V
(Here's a thought. When you drink your beer, you have to drink 1/2 of it and then 1/4 of it and then... Your beer will never be finished. :smile: But then, a similar argument would show that you can't even start drinking it. :sad: ) — Ludwig V
You could probably help me out by clearly defining metaphysically impossible.
— fishfry
It simply isn't clear. "Metaphysics" is a word looking for a meaning. There is some connection with logic, but what differentiates the two is a mystery. — Ludwig V