Show an error in reality. — MindForged
How do we go about answering the question whether we're machines or not? — TheMadFool
The "computer-simulated universe" theory doesn't make any sense — Michael Ossipoff
How about seeing a bent straw in water, or mirages and illusions? Would those qualify as bugs in the system? What about mental/physical disorders?Show an error in reality. Computers have scores of errors all the time, and it's not really hard to find them. Where are the equivalent of crashes in people, for example? Where are the infinite loops? Doesn't entail that we don't live in a simulation or aren't a simulation, but it does show that the the question "Are we in a CG simulation?" cannot be operating under the same understanding of how computers work as we have for our computers. Which seems to be evidence against this since the key term is too vague. — MindForged
Minecraft is a first-person game where you explore an infinite world and the world generates itself as you move into new areas, thereby growing the world as you explore it. Each world has a seed - a string of characters - that is used in an algorithm to generate the world at the beginning.The "computer-simulated universe" theory doesn't make any sense.
How are transistor-switchings in a computer somewhere supposed to be able to "make" a world?
All that a computer programmer, or the running of his program, could accomplish would be the duplication and display, of some already, timelessly, "existent" possibility-world, showing it (as you seem to mean it) from the objective point-of-view.
The computer simulation could display that to its viewing-audience, but it certainly can't create it.
The "computer-simulated universe" theory requires faith in some magical power of transistor-switchings. — Michael Ossipoff
The real world isn't based on mathematical rules. Mathematics is just a model of how things are. They are not the basis of how things are. There is just how things are and our models of how things are. Cyberspace is based on our models of how things are.The point is both cyberspace and our universe are based on mathematical rules. See? — TheMadFool
The "computer-simulated universe" theory doesn't make any sense — Michael Ossipoff
The point is both cyberspace and our universe are based on mathematical rules. See? — TheMadFool
Yes the universe is a mathematical/logical system
.How about seeing a bent straw in water, or mirages and illusions? Would those qualify as bugs in the system?
.What about mental/physical disorders?
.The "computer-simulated universe" theory doesn't make any sense.
.
How are transistor-switchings in a computer somewhere supposed to be able to "make" a world?
.
All that a computer programmer, or the running of his program, could accomplish would be the duplication and display, of some already, timelessly, "existent" possibility-world, showing it (as you seem to mean it) from the objective point-of-view.
.
The computer simulation could display that to its viewing-audience, but it certainly can't create it.
.
The "computer-simulated universe" theory requires faith in some magical power of transistor-switchings.
.Minecraft is a first-person game where you explore an infinite world and the world generates itself as you move into new areas
., thereby growing the world as you explore it.
.Each world has a seed - a string of characters - that is used in an algorithm to generate the world at the beginning.
.What if the world that you perceive didn't exist
., rather it was just your consciousness that was the program - you know, like your dreams.
.All the other people were just sub-programs.
.In a way, it would be solipsism, but not quite because your program exists within a real world, or else it wouldn't make sense to call it a program. It would be solipsism.
.The point is both cyberspace and our universe are based on mathematical rules. See?
.The real world isn't based on mathematical rules.
.Mathematics is just a model of how things are. They are not the basis of how things are.
.There is just how things are…
.Asking if this world is a computer program just creates an infinite regress because you then have to ask, "How do we know that the world our program is in isn't a program too?"
Wouldn't it be better to say something like "The universe can be modeled by a mathematical or logical system"? — MindForged
Because reality and formal systems (or abstract objects if you swing that way) have properties the other cannot.
There are an infinite number of mathematical and logical systems so it almost seems inevitable that at least one could be isomorphic with [our physical] reality...
in some sense (while other such systems would map onto different possible [physical] realities).
The real world isn't based on mathematical rules. — Harry Hindu
What's the difference between being human and being AI? — TheMadFool
Basically we can't distinguish between computer simulated reality and this universe of ours. — TheMadFool
I would say consciousness. As intelligently as you could ever program AI to be, you still have to tell it how to react to stimuli. Even if you program complex algorithms for decision-making based on probabilities, in the end, the machine's actions will only be a result of electricity passing through circuits according to rules established by man. There will never be the conscious observer witnessing the 'thought' process, or truly feeling emotions. — CasKev
And what if "known physics" was just a computer program?No, because those instances of refraction are completely consistent with known physics. — Michael Ossipoff
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.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.
.
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). — Michael Ossipoff
It's not an assumption. It would be an assumption that mathematics is fundamental to reality - 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. Different beings (us vs. aliens) will use different characters to represent say the relationship between energy and mass. 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. Again, it is the relationships that we are modeling, and that aliens would be modeling. While we use different symbols, we will both be referring to the same thing.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. — Michael Ossipoff
If it's simulations all the way down, then it wouldn't make any sense to call them simulations. Simulation only makes sense in the light of the real. There needs to be a real world in order for there to be a simulation of one. If it's simulations all the way down, then it could be just as easily said that it is real universes all the way down - which would actually make more sense. Simulations are dependent upon the real, but the real isn't dependent upon simulations. The real is simply what is and would be what is even if there never were any such thing as simulations.Quite so. Most advocates of the Simulated-Universe theory say that we’re in a simulation that’s being run within another simulation, which is being run within another simulation…and so on. — Michael Ossipoff
What are you saying - that if we look close enough at nature, we'll find numbers and algebraic equations? No. When we look closer at nature we find relationships and we model those relationships with mathematics. The alien version of Einstein's equation would probably look different, but refer to the same relationship between energy and mass. The symbols we use to represent natural relationships is arbitrary. The relationships are not.F = G(m1×m2)/r^2
E = mc^2
Did you read the book Just six numbers?
Yes, there's the infinite regress problem with the simulated universe view but the point is the similarity between a computer world and ours in being based on rules (if you don't prefer mathematical rules).
What I really want to ask is ''how do we know we're not machines?'' The Turing test checks whether AI is human-like or not? That's great but the bigger question is ''how do we know we're not machines?'' What's the difference between being human and being AI? — TheMadFool
Unless you believe in Spiritualism. — Michael Ossipoff
What about an android that exactly duplicates human behavior? — Michael Ossipoff
..Even if you program complex algorithms for decision-making based on probabilities, in the end, the machine's actions will only be a result of electricity passing through circuits according to rules established by man. There will never be the conscious observer witnessing the 'thought' process, or truly feeling emotions. — CasKev
In general, then, "purposefully-responsive" is more useful term than "conscious". — Michael Ossipoff
Where do you draw the line, for consciousness? Mammals? Vertebrates? Animals? Eukaryotic cellular organisms? All cellular organisms (including bacteria)? All biological organisms coded by DNA or RNA (including viruses)? All biological organisms (including prions)? — Michael Ossipoff
.No, because those instances of refraction are completely consistent with known physics.
.And what if "known physics" was just a computer program?
.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.
.
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).
.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.
.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.
.It's not an assumption.
.It would be an assumption that mathematics is fundamental to reality
.- 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.
.Different beings (us vs. aliens) will use different characters to represent say the relationship between energy and mass.
.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.
.Again, it is the relationships that we are modeling, and that aliens would be modeling.
.While we use different symbols, we will both be referring to the same thing.
Something like a mousetrap is simply compelled into movement by events in its physical surroundings. — CasKev
The symbols we use to represent natural relationships is arbitrary. The relationships are not. — Harry Hindu
Well this is rather absurd. It's as if the producer of the documentary can't tell the difference between his wife/girlfriend and an Apple Computer. Really? — Rich
I would say consciousness. — CasKev
What is conscioisness anyway? The Turing Test doesn't actually detect consciousness does it? It can't differentiate real consciousness from one that's simply a mimic. — TheMadFool
What that means is we can't be sure if our consciousness is NOT artificial.
So the question ''how do we know we're not computer code?'' is more important than ''is this AI conscious like us?'' — TheMadFool
Both are more important than "what's the weather like?" which is still relevant, so I don't see what conclusions can be drawn from such a comparison. — BlueBanana
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