Don't understand. As I said, once existing (as I define it), it can't cease to exist. — noAxioms
Only the capability of a future AGI/ASI can answer this, alongside whatever directives it has established at the time.but there are a lot of species and it's unclear how much effort it will find worthwhile to expend preventing all their extinctions — noAxioms
I agree, but there is much disagreement on what constitutes anecdotal evidence, have a look at this recent TPR exchange regarding Ian Stevenson's work.Struct [Strict] scientific conditions does not include anecdotal evidence. — noAxioms
I don't think Jimmy himself, had experienced being 'held/possessed by demons/angels with accompanying hallucinations, whilst being unable to move.' He reported that he suffered from sleep paralysis on occasion, as you do, but Jimmy also talked about various cases, all over the place where scientific investigation, into such claims as demon possession or divine communication, turned out to be the effects of the more extreme cases of sleep paralysis.That sounds weird. Mine is nothing like that. I wake up and am aware of the room, but I cannot move. I can alter my breathing a bit, and my wife picks up on that if she's nearby and rubs my spine which snaps me right out of it. — noAxioms
Yes, exactly that. Same thing, different wording. Spacetime doesn’t cease to exist, so a line traced through it isn’t something that goes away.Well, firstly, I just mean that a 'worldline' is a scientific term, invented by a scientist.
From Wiki:
The world line (or worldline) of an object is the path that an object traces in 4-dimensional spacetime. — universeness
One fluctuation (the creation and destruction of a virtual particle pair say) has a very short worldline.Secondly, What is the worldline of a quantum fluctuation?
I didn’t claim any particular virtual particle existed. To say so is usually a counterfactual statement, and not being a realist, I don’t hold to the principle of counterfactual definiteness. Sure, the cumulative effect of all fluctuations is definitely measurable, but that effect doesn’t define a worldline of any specific thing.When such 'quantum existents' pop in and out of existence 'continuously,' then how can you claim that 'once existing, it can't cease to exist?
I’m not familiar with extreme cases. Don’t think mine is all that bad. It’s hard to describe. It’s definitely a mental sort of switch that turns off your motor control while asleep. If you have a defective switch stuck in the on-position, you sleepwalk and such. Mine gets stuck in the off position when its supposed to come on when I wake. You can mentally expend some serious effort to break the barrier in place but it’s hard to do and takes multiple attempts sort of like taking a battering ram to the castle door.turned out to be the effects of the more extreme cases of sleep paralysis. — universeness
I don't assume that. "Other worlds" themselves are not "vital resources" to spacefaring thinking machines, but are only repositories of indigenous remnants or fossils of parent-species. For instance, countless stellar masses and the vacuum / inflation energy of expanding spacetime itself are not scarce to intelligences which know how to harvest them as computational resources. Instead I assume that astronomical (i.e. relativistic) distances – not resource-extractive territoriality – will mostly keep ASI & ETIMs in their respective galactic and intergalactic lanes.Why do you assume they will not need to visit other worlds to 'secure,' vital resources ... — universeness
Yes, exactly that. Same thing, different wording. Spacetime doesn’t cease to exist, so a line traced through it isn’t something that goes away. — noAxioms
I think we’re getting off topic, no? Just chatting at this point. — noAxioms
An additional constraint in the special case of the "dark forest" is the scarcity of vital resources. — universeness
I don't assume that. "Other worlds" themselves are not "vital resources" to spacefaring thinking machines, but are only repositories of indigenous remnants or fossils of parent-species. For instance, countless stellar masses and the vacuum / inflation energy of expanding spacetime itself are not scarce to intelligences which know how to harvest them as computational resources. Instead I assume that astronomical (i.e. relativistic) distances – not resource-extractive territoriality – will mostly keep ASI & ETIMs in their respective galactic and intergalactic lanes. — 180 Proof
and spacefaring thinking machines may well need to replenish their energy resources by whatever means they can, including via planetary resources, some of which may contain life. A prime directive may not be as unlikely as you suggest, in the case of interstellar spacefaring intelligent machines.An additional constraint in the special case of the "dark forest" is the scarcity of vital resources. — universeness
Sure, or perhaps they will be as confused about the whole thing, almost as much as we are.As for being "aspirational", universeness, we cannot know what spacefaring thinking machines will aspire to other than that their aspirations will be (almost) completely incomprehensible to biospheric intellects (e.g. much much more than 'our merely atavistic territorial expansiveness'). My wildest guesses are that, like gods, they might progressively aspire to (A) simulate 'pocket universes', (B) merge themselves with spacetime itself and (C) extend their intellects to 'the bulk between branes'. — 180 Proof
No idea what you're talking about. I made no mention of perceptions, and I have no idea what an 'overwritable event' might be.But that's what makes the 'worldline' nothing more than a 'perception of a container of overwritable events.' — universeness
A point in space is an abstract worldline itself, and yes, it can intersect the worldlines of physical things. I hate to use an electron as the example since it isn't classic and hasn't a classical worldline like say a potato, but then a potato at a given moment doesn't occupy a single point in space either. It has a wider worldline.So every physical 3D coordinate, which represents all the places where an electron (for example) existed can be involved in the 'worldline' of many, many other electrons, many many times.
Again the 'overwritten' term. I have no idea what you mean by that. It makes it sound like worldlines change, which they don't.The container called spacetime continues to expand and 'worldlines' are being constantly 'overwritten.'
It affects my consciousness in the sense of the definition "conscious vs unconscious, or awake/asleep". I suppose that waking up in the morning qualifies as consciousness emerging, but I didn't think that's what you meant by the thread title.sleep paralysis is an aspect that affects consciousness, and emergence is an aspect of consciousness, so there are lot's of valid side paths on a thread titled emergent.
No idea what you're talking about. I made no mention of perceptions, and I have no idea what an 'overwritable event' might be. — noAxioms
It affects my consciousness in the sense of the definition "conscious vs unconscious, or awake/asleep". I suppose that waking up in the morning qualifies as consciousness emerging, but I didn't think that's what you meant by the thread title. — noAxioms
Ive been trying to figure out if what you describe as a worldline is the same thing that say Minkowski would call a worldline.What I describe as a worldline ... — universeness
Yes, with my addition inserted.The path an object takes [through spacetime] from its beginning to its end can be called a worldline.
Maybe a pair of photons can do this, but I can't think of anything with proper mass that can. It would require the two objects to be at the same place at the same time. So no overwrites.So, basically any path though spacetime is a worldline, and many objects can take the same path.
Yes, but Minkowski was not talking about points in space when describing worldlines.and as I suggested, many objects pass the same points in space
Yes, but your description of Minkowskian spacetime in incorrect. You seem to be mixing 'space' and 'spacetime'. The state of a location in space changes over time, but an event in spacetime includes a time coordinate, and thus any time after that is a different event, not an overwrite of the first event in question.All this stuff is covered in the notion of Minkowski space
You seem to be mixing 'space' and 'spacetime'. — noAxioms
Thanks for pointing that out, since what I quoted was the normalized version. The square root doesn't really belong there either. The less normalized version is:Minkowski coordinates measure the interval between events as
√() .
— noAxioms
c=1? — jgill
That's right. Imagine the DVD is a digital copy of your wedding video made in 2005 and overwritten by a spongebob episode by your kids in 2020. So given that the existence of the '0' on a certain spot has a different time coordinate (events from 2005 to 2020) than when it has the 1 on it (2020+). Since those events have different time coordinates, none of them overlap and no event was overwritten.When you overwrite memory locations on a DVD, it will happen at a different time, to when the previous data was placed there. — universeness
No. The wedding video still exists from 2005 to 2020. That 15 year worldline cannot be overwritten. Mind you, there are movies depicting such an overwrite where Marty McFly overwrites his loser family with a less loser one, except for himself. That's an example of overwriting of events, but it's fiction and physically impossible.The older data no longer exists in those locations, it has been overwritten, yes?
I'm talking about spacetime locations (events), not spatial location.Why would real space locations act any differently?
No. Points in spacetime are events, not locations. The difference is 4 coordinates for an event vs 3 coordinates for a location.I put a carton of milk in my fridge and that location becomes part of it's worldline, yes?
No, I'm saying that you were present at your birth, and nobody else can ever be present at your birth, that is, to be exactly were you were and not just absurdly close by like presumably your mother. Some other person can be present at that spatial location (like the cleaning guy 30 minutes later), but that's a different event with different coordinates, not an overwrite of your birth event which has an earlier time coordinate.It seems to me that you are simply saying, that when I throw the carton in the bin, the space it occupied in the fridge, still exists, and by making such a trivial observation, you say worldlines never cease to exist.
Spacetime isn't contained by time, so it would be meaningless to talk about it coming into or going out of existence. Spacetime contains time, and there isn't a special moment that is the present (presentism). Einstein's (and Minkowski's) theories do not posit such a thing. Lorentz did, but a generalized theory of a universe contained by time was never published until this century. Spacetime is denied in it, as are black holes and the big bang, all replaced by other things with similar properties, testable only with fatal tests.To me, that's like saying spacetime will never cease to exist.
Events don't occupy coordinates. Events are objective: the state of affairs at an event is the same regardless of frame choice or point of view. The coordinates assigned to that event however are entirely abstract and dependent on the coordinate system of choice. So I find it backwards to assign events to coordinates rather than the other way around.I use the term 'overwrite,' to indicate, that the suggestion that space 'memorialises' every event that has ever occupied spacetime coordinates, is fanciful.
True only under presentism. Relativity theory isn't a presentist theory. Strictly speaking, the image very much does exist since you're viewing it. But a presentist would say that the star (or your friend in the next seat for that matter) is no longer in the state that you perceive.When we look at a star, we know that image no longer exists.
I don't see how we could "merge with" AGI —> ASI —> ??? and not be(come) "posthuman" – another species completely (e.g. nano sapiens). Are butterflies just 'winged caterpillars' after the chrysalis? — 180 Proof
I think you're hung up on semantics. — 180 Proof
Until they can perceive time, i.e. they develop a temporal mind, they're stuck with a built-in clock calibrated to coincide with the time zones. Math and/or computing is non-temporal. This is the sad reality.Biological computing, combined with genetic engineering may make great advances in the future, especially with AI's help. — universeness
Math and/or computing is non-temporal — L'éléphant
No, by progress, I refer to two possible emergents, as a result of the current path of biological computing.I'm presuming that by "advances", you mean they become humans. If not, I stand corrected. — L'éléphant
Humans are still debating what time is, so I can't comment on how a future orga/mecha sentient might perceive time. They will face the same concepts we do, relative time, individual time, proper time etc.Until they can perceive time, — L'éléphant
Expound on this. I've no idea what you mean by "perceive time" or "temporal mind".Until they can perceive time, i.e. they develop a temporal mind — L'éléphant
I think "self-awareness" (i.e. real-time self-modeling) has to be built into an artificial system, it's not an emergent (i.e. "becoming") property or capability – and isn't necessary for intelligent performance (e.g. large language models). Why do you assume machines (or synthetic organisms) can, in effect, "wake-up sentient"?... becoming self-aware/conscious/sentient. — universeness
Why do you assume machines (or synthetic organisms) can, in effect, "wake-up sentient"? — 180 Proof
are devoted entirely to helping a human being avoid tripping over as they walk, keeping the heart and lungs properly synced up, constantly searching incoming sensory streams for threats, — Count Timothy von Icarus
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