Knowledge of something like this serves the purpose that it is probably true or simulation theory is untrue in which case it informs people not to worry about it either way. — Mark Dennis
Except pop culture got it from plausible interpretations of the multiverse theory backed up by evidence from experiments in physics and quantum mechanics. Pop culture gets all its inspiration from culture up to and including the culture of science itself. They don’t call it science fiction for nothing. However this one, Simulation theory is still plausible as per the evidence and it is yet to be known if it is pure fiction or not.It's bad philosophy drawn from pop culture.
So you are aware that the multiple universes interpretation lacks any testable outcomes.
- @“banno”A better ancestor to the simulation hypothesis is Descartes's daemon.
Does the simulation hypothesis also apply to those running the simulation?
If it does, then they are just as likely as the sims to be in a simulation, as are the ones running their simulation, and so on to infinity. It’s simulations all the way down. — NOS4A2
Thanks for that point, but I don’t quite understand. Do you mean that the simulation hypothesis only applies to sims because sims came up with it, and therefore is limited to that specific simulation? — NOS4A2
The simulation hypothesis is a new take on an old question: is what I experience real. You can't ask that question for other people, because you only have access to your own experience. In that sense, it's not about whether "the world", or some part of it, is being simulated, but rather about whether you can trust your senses.
I suppose I hold a different conception of self. I think it’s more about reality in general, basically wether what we experience is real. I can access reality directly by virtue of the fact that I am also my senses, and there is no buffer between sense and reality. — NOS4A2
Isn't what we experience always simply in our heads? Our experience is real whether or not we are being simulated.
I don't quite understand what you mean by "buffer" between the senses and reality. Do you mean that the senses directly inform us of "objective" reality, without any distortions, additions etc.?
What I mean is I do not believe I am some little being in the head viewing my experience, or that I am viewing any experience at all, but that I am also the senses, the entirety of the body, and I am directly interacting with the world. By “buffer” I mean the assumption that there is some distortion, veil or other barrier between me and reality. — NOS4A2
Right. I can see why the simulation hypothesis wouldn't make any sense to you from that perspective.
But, even if you are your senses, you can still get things wrong. Maybe you're missing some channels (like extra spatial dimensions) or you're constructing patterns that aren't really there. From an epistemological perspective, there is therefore still a difference between your experience and whatever that experience is based on. If it were otherwise, you'd not experience the world, you'd be the world.
True, my senses do not receive all the data and my brain is equally as fallible. But when I give primacy to direct interaction it becomes more about how I experience than what I experience, more about experiencing reality than experiencing experience. To me, the notion of experiencing experience is a form of solipsism and seek to avoid it. — NOS4A2
Does it really make sense to call them "simulations" because "simulation" only makes sense if there is a "reality" to compare it to.Does the simulation hypothesis also apply to those running the simulation?
If it does, then they are just as likely as the sims to be in a simulation, as are the ones running their simulation, and so on to infinity. It’s simulations all the way down. — NOS4A2
We could reformulate the simulation hypothesis as "your sensory input is modified by some intelligence outside of yourself".
I’m skeptical of terms like “sensory input”, “experience” or “phenomenon”. I think leaving it at “reality is a simulation” suffices to make sense of the argument. — NOS4A2
I hold that there is only one reality, and anything “subjective” is merely the point and position from which it is viewed. — NOS4A2
I still can’t see how the argument would not apply to the original people, however. — NOS4A2
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