Vera Mont
You didn't understand the argument. — Hallucinogen
Hallucinogen
supposing simulation is true. Which you can't prove. — Vaskane
Hallucinogen
Point out the exact statement I made that is "god of the gaps". — Hallucinogen
Your thread title!!!! and most of the statement made in your opening! — universeness
Hallucinogen
The holographic principle is a reductio ad absurdum as proven by Nietzsche — Vaskane
Vera Mont
would have to simulate a world that physically exists; a hologram is digital representation of a physical object. All the rest follows from the impossibility of 'simulating' a holographic space into existence out of a mind that consists of nothing. Might as well go back to "In the beginning was the Word." (and the word was either 'quantum' or 'abracadabra'.)Any simulation of a world — Hallucinogen
Philosophim
L'éléphant
Clearly you do not understand what you're talking about.Firstly, it should be obvious that we can read, understand and interpret bits. Second, our perception is literally composed of what a bit is - a binary distinction. You either see an object or your don't. You either distinguish something from another, or you don't. Our perception is completely dependent on binary distinctions. — Hallucinogen
Hallucinogen
without first contrasting what a simulation is vs what a non-simulated world is, its mostly circular. — Philosophim
JuanZu
Philosophim
without first contrasting what a simulation is vs what a non-simulated world is, its mostly circular.
— Philosophim
A world is a set of objects in a space. The decision of whether something is simulated versus non-simulated would rest on whether something emerges from information processing.
I haven't spotted the circularity, could you point it out to me? — Hallucinogen
Hallucinogen
What I meant is that without defining what a non-simulated world is — Philosophim
its turned out like:
A. Its given that the world is simulated.
B. Therefore the world is simulated. — Philosophim
Philosophim
What I meant is that without defining what a non-simulated world is
— Philosophim
But I just did this? A world is a set of objects in a space. The question is whether it emerges from information processing or not. — Hallucinogen
1. Any simulation of a world either operates mechanically in physical space (e.g., in a computer) or is the result of information processing in a mind (e.g., a programmer’s mind). — Hallucinogen
2. The success of digital physics and the holographic principle imply that physical space is an emergent 3D representation of information processing. — Hallucinogen
4. From (2) and (3), the information processing from which physical space is emergent is scientifically indistinguishable from the information processing that occurs in a mind. — Hallucinogen
5. Restating (1) in terms of (4), our world is either scientifically indistinguishable from the result of information processing in a mind, or it is the result of information processing in a mind. — Hallucinogen
Hallucinogen
A non-simulated world is a set of objects in space. But if that's the case, then a simulated world is not a set of objects in space. — Philosophim
A world is a set of objects in a space. The decision of whether something is simulated versus non-simulated would rest on whether something emerges from information processing. — Hallucinogen
These really aren't separate issues though. — Philosophim
A mind is not itself a simulation right? Meaning that it is a non-simulated bit of reality that simulations can run in. — Philosophim
An accurate simulation of a non-simulated world can be applied to a non-simulated world without difficulty. — Philosophim
That doesn't mean the world is simulated, it just means that simulation of the actual world is accurate. — Philosophim
All that we can conclude from this is that our simulations of the world accurately reflect how our minds function. — Philosophim
The only way you can validly claim 4 is based on one is to state, "A simulated world is either..." Because that's what you stated in 1. — Philosophim
There has to be something non-simulated to simulate right? — Philosophim
Otherwise there isn't a non-simulated world — Philosophim
and thus the simulation cannot be accurate or inaccurate, it just is. — Philosophim
But if it is an accurate simulation, it is not indistinguishible — Philosophim
because it lacks the key property that you defined a non-simulated world as being: A set of objects in space — Philosophim
If a simulated world is a set of objects in space, then it is not a simulated world. — Philosophim
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