Simulation, Baudrillard claims, is the current stage of the simulacrum: all is composed of references with no referents, a hyperreality. Baudrillard argues that this is part of a historical progression. In the Renaissance, the dominant simulacrum was in the form of the counterfeit, where people or objects appear to stand for a real referent that does not exist (for instance, royalty, nobility, holiness, etc.). With the Industrial Revolution, the dominant simulacrum becomes the product, which can be propagated on an endless production line. In current times, the dominant simulacrum is the model, which by its nature already stands for endless reproducibility, and is itself already reproduced.
Experience is created when the result of computation is presented to our mind. — pfirefry
Experience is created when the result of computation is presented to our mind. Thus, we can imagine something and experience it internally, or we can delegate imagination to the AI technology but keep experience to ourselves. — pfirefry
This is the inception of hyper-reality. It blows my mind. Automatically generating virtual realities — Josh Alfred
The problem I see with all of it, old fogey that I am, is that it becomes impossible to distinguish image from reality. Reality is, apart from anything else, painful. It is bloody, it is treacherous, it changes continually, and the pain that accompanies it is real. Whereas in the VR and AI worlds, there is no possibility of real pain, only simulation, and the difference is fundamental, but apparently not discernable to a great many people. — Wayfarer
Personally, I think that this technology replicates the 'mindless' parts of the human brain.
— pfirefry
Evidence? — T Clark
There is nothing computed in the brain — Raymond
Litterally every physical process has a potential analogue on the neuron network, which can run around autonomously or resonate with a physical process. — Raymond
How is it that every physical process has an analogue on the neuron network? Are you referring the neuron network of the brain, or the artificial neural network, or both? — pfirefry
Reality is, apart from anything else, painful. It is bloody, it is treacherous, it changes continually, and the pain that accompanies it is real. Whereas in the VR and AI worlds, there is no possibility of real pain, only simulation, and the difference is fundamental, but apparently not discernable to a great many people. — Wayfarer
Heaven could be an anticipation of virtual reality (some aspects of it). — Agent Smith
I'm saying “replicates <…> brain” because the fundamental mathematical model was influenced by how brain neurons work (each neuron receives multiple inputs and then emits own signal). — pfirefry
Personally, I think that this technology replicates the 'mindless' parts of the human brain. — pfirefry
it would model the whole brain — T Clark
I can't tell if you say "mindless" because you want to leave a door open for consciousness to be something else. — T Clark
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