1. The fraction of human-level civilizations that reach a posthuman stage (that is, one capable of running high-fidelity ancestor simulations) is very close to zero, or
2. The fraction of posthuman civilizations that are interested in running ancestor-simulations is very close to zero, or
3. The fraction of all people with our kind of experiences that are living in a simulation is very close to one
...
Bostrom goes on to use a type of anthropic reasoning to claim that, if the third proposition is the one of those three that is true, and almost all people with our kind of experiences live in simulations, then we are almost certainly living in a simulation.
Boltzmann proposed that the state of our observed low-entropy universe (which includes our existence) is a random fluctuation in a higher-entropy universe. Even in a near-equilibrium state, there will be stochastic fluctuations in the state of the system. The most common fluctuations will be relatively small, resulting in only small amounts of organization, while larger fluctuations and their resulting greater levels of organization will be comparatively more rare. Large fluctuations would be almost inconceivably rare, but inevitably occur if a universe lasts infinitely long. Even if the universe does not have an infinitely long past, modern cosmological theories of the Big Bang do suppose that the latter occurred via stochastic fluctuations in a larger meta-universe; the paradox is retained by incorporating our brief-but-finite past into the random fluctuation.
Furthermore, there is a "selection bias": we observe our very unlikely universe because those unlikely conditions are necessary for us to be here. This is an expression of the anthropic principle.
If our current level of organization, having many self-aware entities, is a result of a random fluctuation, it is much less likely than a level of organization that only creates stand-alone self-aware entities. The number of self-aware brains that spontaneously and randomly form out of the chaos, complete with memories of a life like ours, should vastly outnumber the brains evolved from an inconceivably rare local fluctuation the size of the observable universe.
Two different arguments that try to show that a "brain in a vat"-type situation is more likely than a common sense realism situation. Unlike traditional skeptical arguments, these don't simply try to argue that a situation like this is possible, but that we could have more reason to believe that a situation like this is in fact the case. — Michael
Any thoughts — Michael
There are vastly more Boltzmann brain scenarios that are inconsistent than there are that are consistent. — Jake Tarragon
Tegmark suggest, for example, if our memories recall a famous piece of music as white noise then we might well have reason to believe we are a BB. Otherwise, not.
Given the above, I don't think so. We only have reason to believe that we are not in an inconsistent Boltzmann brain scenario. — Michael
Given you agree that an inconsistent BB is far more likely than a consistent one, we should expect to live in an inconsistent one, regardless of whether BBs outnumber non BBs. — Jake Tarragon
Sure, but we don't. — Michael
And there's the rub ....
I think you would struggle to show that there are more consistent BB scenarios than there are suitable variant universes of all the physical constants, say.... — Jake Tarragon
His argument (from physics) isn't just that spontaneous brains are more likely, but that spontaneous brains with memories of a life like ours are more likely. — Michael
Or you could reject a physicalist account of consciousness and argue that simulated consciousness is impossible. — Michael
As philosophical arguments for skepticism, the two arguments are plainly incoherent. It doesn't make sense to doubt our knowledge of the external world (or its existence) by appealing to aposteriori premises that themselves could be known only if we presuppose that we do have knowledge of the external world (or that it exists). — Fafner
As philosophical arguments for skepticism, the two arguments are plainly incoherent. It doesn't make sense to doubt our knowledge of the external world (or its existence) by appealing to aposteriori premises that themselves could be known only if we presuppose that we do have knowledge of the external world (or that it exists). — Fafner
Where did I make such claims? — Fafner
You completely misunderstood my argument (from that other thread on skepticism). I didn't assume that we have knowledge, or that there is a world, but I made an internal criticism of the skeptical argument, and that's a different thing. But I don't want to go into details since I already explained the main idea in my OP, and I don't think it's appropriate to discuss it here. — Fafner
What's "Agrippa's Trilemma"? Would you mind explaining? — Fafner
When you claim something, you ask yourself how you know that. Then you make a reasoned argument about that — Mikkel
The obvious answer is to say that not all knowledge is based on arguments with premises. You can know many things non-inferentially, say by basing your beliefs on a perceptual experience which you take to reveal to you directly how things are in the world (and that means that there's another horn to the trilemma). — Fafner
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