I’d said:
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No, because those instances of refraction are completely consistent with known physics.
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You replied:
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And what if "known physics" was just a computer program?
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My objection to Simulated-Universe didn’t have anything to do with proving Simulated-Universe false by observational evidence. My objection to Simulated-Universe is an objection in principle: A programmer and the running of his program can’t create what already timelessly is.
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I’d said:
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In my proposal, your life-experience possibility-story isn’t being generated as your experience unfolds. That story is already timelessly there. The time that you experience is within that story-system, and that story is across its own time, not generated in time.
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The complexity of your experienced world, and its self-consistency, make it difficult to explain how a person could write that story on-the-fly during his/her first day of life, immediately after being born (and in late fetal life, for that matter).
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You replied:
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Like I said, the world is generated at the beginning based on a seed. So the world is already there as an algorithm that is then used to create the landscape as you move. The landscape is created on the fly based on the seed. The seed is what you would refer to as what would be timelessly is. So we're are both talking about the same thing.
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Alright, but that seed would have to already encompass and be the whole life-experience possibility-story, with nothing new being created in time, because all that’s happening in time is the
individual’s perception of unfolding events--with the whole experience-story (or maybe a suite of similar ones—we don’t know exactly what story we’re in) already there.
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I’d said:
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That’s a big assumption. You’re assuming that, for some reason, there’s that brute-fact world, and we just model it by logic and mathematics.
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You replied:
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It's not an assumption.
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That you’re in a world isn’t an assumption.
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That that world is fundamentally existent and, in some meaningful metaphysical sense, more than the complex logical system whose events and relations it duplicates is a brute-fact assumption.
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You said:
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It would be an assumption that mathematics is fundamental to reality
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Mathematics isn’t fundamental to Reality.
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(Using the word “reality” without a modifier, I capitalize it as “Reality”, because, without a modifier it refers to all of Reality.)
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And have I been saying that mathematics is fundamental to metaphysical reality? What I’ve been saying is this:
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Among the infinity of complex systems of inter-referring abstract if-then facts about hypotheticals, there inevitably is one whose events and relations are those of your experience.
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There’s no reason to believe that your experience is other than that.
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I can’t prove that Materialism’s fundamentally existent physical world that is, somehow, more than that, doesn’t superfluously exist, as a brute-fact, and an unverifiable, unfalsifiable proposition, alongside of, and duplicating the events and relations of, that complex logical system that I referred to above.
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The main requirement for your life-experience possibility-story is that it be self-consistent, non-contradictory.
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That’s because I consists of facts, and there’s no such thing as mutually contradictory facts.
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Where mathematics comes into it is: Physical laws are at least often mathematical. As I’ve said, a physical law is a hypothetical relation among a set of hypothetical physical quantity-values. As a relation among quantity-values, of course a physical law is, by definition, mathematical.
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- as if we could only look closer at quarks, we'd find numbers and algebraic equations. We don't. We find relationships and we model those relationships using numbers and characters.
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We “model” physical quantity values with numbers because they’re quantity values, and numbers denote quantity values. Relations between numbers are, by definition, mathematical.
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When physicists examine and investigate the physical world they find mathematical relations among physical quantity values. They suggest theories that propose certain relations among those quantity values. That’s what a physical theory is. Sometime they’re wrong, but sometimes such a theory keeps being confirmed and is never refuted. Sometimes a physical theory turns out to need refinement, in order to be consistent with the latest complete set of observations.
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As relations among quantity-values, yes those physical theories are mathematical.
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But of course a person’s ordinary daily experience isn’t entirely mathematical. The mathematical nature of physical reality is only experienced when someone examines, investigates the physical world more closely.
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That’s why I don’t emphasize mathematics, as does MUH. I speak, instead, of a system of inter-referring abstract if-then facts about hypotheticals. As I said, that story’s main requirement is self-consistency, non-contradiction.
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You said:
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Different beings (us vs. aliens) will use different characters to represent say the relationship between energy and mass.
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We’d speak different languages too. That doesn’t mean that our physical and metaphysical reality doesn’t consist of a system of inter-referring abstract if-then facts.
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An alien equal sign will probably look different. Because the numbers and characters we use are arbitrary, then it should be obvious that we won't find mathematics as a fundamental part of reality.
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Mathematics isn’t a fundamental part of Reality. Mathematics is a fundamental part of physical reality.
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No one’s saying that when examining matter with an electron microscope, the physicist will observe an algebraic formula written out on the surface of a piece of matter.
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But yes, physicists do find relations among physical quantities. Quantities are numbers. Relations among numbers are, by definition, mathematical.
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So yes, physicists find mathematical relations among physical quantities.
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As I’ve been saying:
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A set of physical quantity-values, and a relation among them (called a “physical law”) are parts of the “if “ premise of an if-then fact.
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…except that one of those physical quantity-values can be taken as the “then” conclusion of that if-then fact.
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Obviously any particular physical quantity-value can be part of the “if “ premise of some if-then facts, while also being the “then” conclusion of other if-then facts.
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I’ve also given an example of the fact that any fact about our physical world implies and corresponds to an if-then fact.
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“There’s a traffic roundabout at 34th & Vine.”
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“If you go to 34th & Vine, then you’ll encounter a traffic roundabout.”
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And, as I said, there’s a complex system of such inter-referring if-then facts, whose events and relations are those of your experience.
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Again, it is the relationships that we are modeling, and that aliens would be modeling.
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Yes, it’s the relationships that are fundamental, physically and metaphysically. Relationships among physical quantities (such relationships are mathematical). Relationships and inter-reference among abstract if-then facts. You could word it by saying that physical and metaphysical reality are all about relationships, consisting of abstract-facts, and inter-reference among them.
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The Materialist’s “stuff “ for the if-then facts to be about, is a brute-fact belief of his.
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Contrary to popular belief, there needn’t be concretely objectively existent and real “things” and “stuff” for if-then facts to be “about”.
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“If there were ____, and if there were ______, and if ___________ were _____, and if ______ were ______then _______ would be ________”.
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An if-then proposition of that form could be one that is inevitably true regardless of whether there are really any material things at all.
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As for what “exists”, the word “exist” isn’t metaphysically-defined, and causes many completely unnecessary arguments.
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While we use different symbols, we will both be referring to the same thing.
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Yes, we’d all be referring to the same mathematical relations among physical quantity values, because we all live in the same physical universe (let’s assume that your aliens live nearby enough so that the physical constants have the same values that they have here).
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Newton’s approximate dynamical laws would have been discovered by those aliens. If they’re as advanced as our physicists, then they’d have found special-relativity too. Maybe they’d have worked out general relativity better than our physicists have, or something else with more reliable predictive value. Maybe they’d have a consistent physics that explains the acceleration of the recession of the more distant galaxies.
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They’d know about Galileo’s kinematic equations.
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If they were interested in investigating the matters that Lagrange and Hamilton investigated, then they’d know about Lagrangian and Hamiltonian dynamics.
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Likewise with all of physics. If they investigated the same things, they’d find the same things, because they’re in the same physical universe (and assumed to be near enough to us that the physical constants are the same for them as for us.)
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And yes, they’d probably use different symbols.
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As for the Simulated-Universe theory, I don’t advocate it.
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Michael Ossipoff