• noAxioms
    1.4k
    Apologies for slow reply fishfry, but another topic has consumed much of my attention and I didn't even see your notify in my mention list.


    We're simulated biological beings

    Do you mean to say that? It's revelatory. If your position is that the simulators are creating androids or robots, as in Data from Star Trek but perfectly biological.
    fishfry
    I meant to say that 'we are 'simulated (biological beings)'. Your interpretation of those words was 'we are (simulated biological) beings', which is perhaps what Data is. Data is an imitation human in the same world as its creator. The sim hypothesis is that we're biological beings in a different (simulated) world. I've said this over and over, included in the very statement you quoted above your response there.
    No, it's not Blade runner. No robots/replicants. You seem quite determined to paint a very different picture from the one Bostrom posits. Your running with this idea for most of the post seems more designed to disengage than to communicate.

    I say your mind is just your own subjective experiences and thoughts.
    This works.

    I mean, you do have subjective experiences, right? You don't just eat breakfast.
    In my world, I do both. I am not in the GS world, so I don't do either there.

    No mind object. Disagree. There IS a mind object.
    I find 'process' not to fall under the term 'object'. It's not an assertion of ontology, just how I use the language.
  • fishfry
    3k
    Apologies for slow reply fishfry, but another topic has consumed much of my attention and I didn't even see your notify in my mention list.noAxioms

    Ok thanks. I was wondering if perhaps my last post was so far off the mark that you gave up on me (possible); or so brilliant that I thoroughly refuted your argument (unlikely); or you just got bored (also possible. I'm simulated out myself).

    The last thing I remember is that you said the sims have actual bodies, made in the sim factory operated by the simulators. If I understood you correctly, that has massive implications and I find it hard to believe this is what Bostrom had in mind.


    I meant to say that 'we are 'simulated (biological beings)'.noAxioms

    What on earth is a simulated biological being? Like an android with a soul? Like Data on Start Trek, but with a biological body? A manufactured human. What else can you mean? By simulated to you mean manufactured?

    Or are you falling back on saying the simulation exists only in the execution of the computer?

    Your interpretation of those words was 'we are (simulated biological) beings', which is perhaps what Data is. Data is an imitation human in the same world as its creator.noAxioms

    Yes. Just not biological, but that's an implementation detail. More like the replicants in Blade Runner.

    The sim hypothesis is that we're biological beings in a different (simulated) world.noAxioms

    I do not know what that means. I gave a couple of examples. In Westworld (the tv series) the Hosts, as the lifelike bots are called, are geo-fenced within the park. The theme of the show is that they escape.

    But I gather you don't mean that. You mean something else, but I can't fathom what that is.


    I've said this over and over, included in the very statement you quoted above your response there.noAxioms

    I'm sure the fault is in my own understanding, but I have no idea what you're talking about. How would we simulate a physical bot that is not in the same world as us? Explain this point to me because you have lost me completely.

    No, it's not Blade runner. No robots/replicants.noAxioms

    No robots, no replicants. Ok I misunderstood you.

    But when WHAT? There is a factory that rolls sims off the assembly line, imbues them with self-awareness and will (illusory or no) ... but these sims don't live in the world of their makers? Where do they live?


    You seem quite determined to paint a very different picture from the one Bostrom posits.noAxioms

    Not at all. I'm just trying to understand your interpretation of it, which frankly is crashing up on the rocky shoals of a point that you are being terminally vague about. The sims have bodies but the bodies are not in the world of the simulators. Where are they?

    Your running with this idea for most of the post seems more designed to disengage than to communicate.noAxioms

    Not at all. You said the sims have bodies. That's a massive assumption that leads to all kinds of problems for anyone who claims that. I pointed those out.

    (me) I say your mind is just your own subjective experiences and thoughts.
    This works.
    noAxioms

    Yay. You agree. We can talk about minds without discarding physicalism.

    In my world, I do both. I am not in the GS world, so I don't do either there.noAxioms

    Where are you?

    I find 'process' not to fall under the term 'object'. It's not an assertion of ontology, just how I use the language.noAxioms

    You have a very funny way of putting things. You think you have explained to me that the sims have bodies that live in their own world. I can't make any sense of this.
  • noAxioms
    1.4k
    Ok thanks. I was wondering if perhaps my last post was so far off the mark that you gave up on me (possible); or so brilliant that I thoroughly refuted your argument (unlikely); or you just got bored (also possible. I'm simulated out myself).fishfry
    I'll sign off if I feel I'm done. Don't like to ghost a conversation. Your post was way off the mark, which made it very easy to keep the reply short.

    The last thing I remember is that you said the sims have actual bodies, made in the sim factory operated by the simulators. If I understood you correctly, that has massive implications and I find it hard to believe this is what Bostrom had in mind.
    No factory anywhere. No bodies in the GS world. The bodies are in this world. I, like most people, Bostrom included, presume I have a body.

    By simulated to you mean manufactured?
    You're thinking of an android. A simulated anything is the product of a computer simulation. A storm simulator has one simulated storm. The storm is probably not created, but is rather already there, part of the initial state. The purpose of simulating it is to see where it goes, and how strong it gets, and which areas need to evacuate.

    I do not know what that means.
    Then we're pretty stuck. Most people can at least get that much out of Bostrom's abstract. If you can't, but rather insist on this weird replicant track, I don't know how to unmire you.

    You said the sims have bodies.
    You don't think you have a body then? You think perhaps you were created in a factory instead of being born of your mother? I said that nobody (but you) suggests this, but you persist.

    Where are you?
    At my keyboard. Both it and I are in this world, the world that I experience. You seem to find that to be an odd answer.
  • fishfry
    3k
    I'll sign off if I feel I'm done. Don't like to ghost a conversation. Your post was way off the mark, which made it very easy to keep the reply short.noAxioms


    Hope you'll explain where sims with bodies live. The phrase doesn't even make sense.

    I don't have much more to say on all this. If I'm incapable of understanding where the sims live, so be it. To have any idea what I'm talking about I should read the rest of Bostrom, but I may not get to that.

    No factory anywhere. No bodies in the GS world. The bodies are in this world. I, like most people, Bostrom included, presume I have a body.noAxioms

    But our world is imaginary. An artifact of a computation. There is no "sim world" that is a physical world that's created anywhere. Your idea is incoherent. And like I say, I don't have to talk you into that. I can live with agreeing to disagree, pending my reading of the rest of Bostrom's paper, which is way down the to-do list.

    You're thinking of an android.noAxioms

    Yes, that's the only way a sim could have a body.

    A simulated anything is the product of a computer simulation.noAxioms

    Correct. It has no physical instantiation or existence anywhere. When the execution of my Euclid program finds the GCD of two integers there is no matter created anywhere.

    A storm simulator has one simulated storm. The storm is probably not created, but is rather already there, part of the initial state. The purpose of simulating it is to see where it goes, and how strong it gets, and which areas need to evacuate.noAxioms

    It's not a physical storm. I prefer to agree to disagree on this point rather to debate it. Here is where we stand:

    * I think you are expressing an idea that is incoherent;

    * You think I'm far off the mark and failing to understand something very basic about simulations.

    This is not going to get better. I remember at the beginning I asked you if Ms. Pac-Man has an inner life, and you said yes. I believe you are still in this (a) delusion, or (b) funny way of using words that makes it true.


    Then we're pretty stuck. Most people can at least get that much out of Bostrom's abstract. If you can't, but rather insist on this weird replicant track, I don't know how to unmire you.noAxioms

    Mired I am, then. I think you must be reading something into Bostrom that isn't there. What on earth can it mean to simulate a physical body ... somewhere? I don't know if the error is yours or Bostrom's. Regardless, what you are saying is incoherent. In my mired opinion, of course.

    We definitely agree on where we're stuck. I could live with a graceful quiescence of the convo soon.

    You don't think you have a body then?noAxioms

    Not if I'm an artifact of a mind-instantiating algorithm. I'm Descartes, but where even his mind is not his own. A truly horrifying reality.

    You think perhaps you were created in a factory instead of being born of your mother? I said that nobody (but you) suggests this, but you persist.noAxioms

    No, you are saying that. But the factory isn't physical either, it's an executing program. Where is the body? How are bodies created? Or is this Ms Pac-Man's inner life again?

    Do I have a body like Ms Pac-Man? Is that what you mean? I'm in a 3D display of some sort?

    Never mind I don't want to know. I'll stipulate to being mired. I wish I could dispatch a clone to take yet another look at Bostrom's paper, but I probably won't get to it myself, and I'm all out of clones. I'll go with Sabine when she says the simulation hypothesis is pseudoscience. I'm content to leave it at that.
145678Next
bold
italic
underline
strike
code
quote
ulist
image
url
mention
reveal
youtube
tweet
Add a Comment