• Lionino
    2.7k
    I don't know who you are referring to nor do I understand what you are trying to say in your second sentence.Janus

    I am referring to this, which I referred to previously as "argument from language". Your argument is different from that because it includes language but does not use it centrally. I acquiesce to your argument, just like I acquiesced to one of Banno's arguments (though I had to steel-man it), but the post I was referring to was barely an argument — which again is why I said the arguments given in this thread were thus far poor.

    You gave it as a justification for your belief.Janus

    My belief that it is a worthwhile issue. It is pretty common sense: if several smart(er than me) people work on something, is it not rational to conclude that there is something to it? It is not an argument from authority because the authorities are not saying it is a worthwhile issue, it is their steady engagement of the topic that makes me incredulous that the issue can be brushed aside.
    To assume that only my individual investigation of the matter can decide whether the issue is worthwhile seems to put my judgement above the judgement of people smarter than me, which I think is unwise.

    Reason is nothing without its basic presuppositions, which are not themselves arrived at, or justified by, reason.Janus

    And do we not come to understand the world through reason?
  • RogueAI
    2.9k
    Science seems to be self-defeating re: Boltzmann Brains: our best theories imply we're probably BB's, but that's "cognitively unstable" (aka "I really don't want to believe that"), so we're probably not BB's and we can't trust our best theories.

    Just ditch this idea that minds can come from mindless stuff. It just creates problems. You're not a Boltzmann Brain, you're not a brain at all. There. Now we have cognitive stability.
  • Michael
    15.8k
    I get that, but if we are BBs then our scientific theories are incorrect; this is straightforward paradox, it has something in common with the "Liar' sentence.

    If our scientific theories are correct, we are most likely to be Boltzmann brains.
    If we are Boltzmann brains our scientific theories are incorrect.

    Do you not see the problem?
    Janus

    If we are Boltzmann brains then our scientific theories are almost certainly incorrect.

    Yes, I see the problem. But still, as I said:

    If our scientific models entail that we are most likely Boltzmann brains, and if our scientific models are correct, then we are most likely Boltzmann brains.

    If our scientific models entail that we are most likely Boltzmann brains, and if we are not most likely Boltzmann brains, then our scientific models are incorrect.
  • Michael
    15.8k
    Science seems to be self-defeating re: Boltzmann Brains: our best theories imply we're probably BB's, but that's "cognitively unstable" (aka "I really don't want to believe that"), so we're probably not BB's and we can't trust our best theories.

    Just ditch this idea that minds can come from mindless stuff. It just creates problems. You're not a Boltzmann Brain
    RogueAI

    So, regarding the argument here, your claim is that we can dismiss (4) a priori?
  • Michael
    15.8k
    The probability of our being a normal observer is 100%. Here we are.

    ... The Big Freeze has not happened.
    creativesoul

    You're begging the question.

    The Boltzmann brain problem is that given that our scientific theories entail the eventual formation of an exceptionally large number of Boltzmann brains with experiences like ours, it is exceptionally probable that the Big Freeze has happened and that we are Boltzmann brains having the illusory experience of being normal observers before the Big Freeze.
  • Michael
    15.8k
    Is there something that you disagree with in Carroll's conclusion?wonderer1

    I'm not denying that there are scientific models that avoid the Boltzmann brain problem. I'm simply explaining that, as per the words of cosmologists like Carroll, the current leading scientific model entails that we are most likely Boltzmann brains.

    I'm then questioning his suggestion that we can dismiss the conclusion that we are most likely Boltzmann brains a priori, as that then entails that we can dismiss some empirically well-supported scientific model a priori. For example, as per @RogueAI's comment above, one supposed solution is to dismiss (4) a priori. Is that really rational?
  • Michael
    15.8k
    But moving on from Boltzmann brains, although slightly related, there is perhaps something else to consider.

    If there is an infinite multiverse and if every metaphysical possibility is realized in some universe then it would seem to follow that there are an infinite number of universes in which solipsism1 is correct, an infinite number of universes in which idealism1 is correct, an infinite number of universes in which common sense external world realism1 is correct, an infinite number of universes in which monotheism1 is correct, an infinite number of universes in which polytheism1 is correct, an infinite number of universes in which atheism1 is correct, and so on.

    1 When considered as making a limited claim only about the nature of the universe in which they are an inhabitant.

    And given the cardinality of infinite sets, the probability that we are in one type of universe rather than some other empirically indistinguishable (to us) universe is equal.

    So if it is rational to believe in an infinite multiverse in which every metaphysical possibility is realized, and if your metaphysics is a metaphysical possibility, then it is no less rational to believe in it than in any other.

    Which would make all of these arguments rather pointless. You'd be as equally likely to be right as wrong, and either way entirely by accident.

    As for whether or not it is rational to believe in such a multiverse:

    Is it more rational to believe that this is necessarily the only universe? Is it more rational to believe that there are necessarily a finite number of universes? Is it more rational to believe that even an infinite multiverse necessarily only realizes some subset of all metaphysical possibilities? Is it more rational to believe that an infinite multiverse in which every metaphysical possibility is realized is less probable?
  • Lionino
    2.7k
    (assuming that it is rational to believe in an infinite multiverse in which every logical or metaphysical possibility is realized).Michael

    And even, would there not be laws that rule this multiverse? It is pushing the issue one step back.

    If the latter then it is rational to believe in an infinite multiverse in which every metaphysical possibility is realized.Michael

    There are four ifs there, so, giving equal likelihood to each, we end up with a 6,25% chance of being in an infinite multiverse in which every possibility is realized.
    We are likely not in one, but if we are, then the same thing that applies to Boltzmann brains applies here: we have no reason to believe in any reasoning we do — which bears no weight on whether it is true or not, but still.
  • Michael
    15.8k
    There are four ifs there, so, giving equal likelihood to each, we end up with a 6,25% chance of being in an infinite multiverse in which every possibility is realized.Lionino

    That's not how it works.

    We are likely not in one, but if we are, then the same thing that applies to Boltzmann brains applies here: we have no reason to believe in any reasoning we do — which bears no weight on whether it is true or not, but still.Lionino

    With Boltzmann brains there are a finite number of brains, with more of them having incorrect scientific theories than correct scientific theories, and so if we are Boltzmann brains then we are more likely to have incorrect scientific theories than correct scientific theories.

    In an infinite multiverse there are not more universes in which we have incorrect scientific theories than correct scientific theories. Given the nature of infinity, there are an equal number of each universe, and so we are equally likely to have incorrect scientific theories as correct scientific theories.

    Besides, this line of reasoning does not depend on scientific evidence at all. It is a priori reasoning: is it more rational to believe that an infinite multiverse in which every metaphysical possibility is realized is less probable?
  • Janus
    16.5k
    My belief that it is a worthwhile issue. It is pretty common sense: if several smart(er than me) people work on something, is it not rational to conclude that there is something to it?Lionino

    Certainly, in relation to science or mathematics or any subject where much information has to be incorporated into a coherent understanding of the field. Not so much in relation to philosophy, which is potentially a pursuit for everyone, and the questions are naturally accessible to any intelligent and thoughtful person.

    Is a question without a decidable or even satisfying answer worth pursuing? Perhaps is would be better, once one has become aware of and thought about such questions and their possible answers enough to realize they cannot be definitively answered, to move past them.

    And do we not come to understand the world through reason?Lionino

    I'd say we come to understand the world via the background presuppositions that underpin human life and reason itself and that understanding may be elaborated and augmented by reason. In any case is not the world presupposed in any attempt to come to understand it?

    Is it more rational to believe that an infinite multiverse in which every metaphysical possibility is realized is less probable?Michael

    What determines what is metaphysically possible? Is it merely what is logically possible? Are they the same? is any possible universe governed by logic?
  • Lionino
    2.7k
    That's not how it works.Michael

    It is how powers of 2 work at the very least. But my point was not that there is a 6% chance, but that, differently from Boltzmann brains, there is no theory, understanding, or reasoning that tells us that we are most likely in such a multiverse. Surely, it is a possibility that we live in such a multiverse, but

    is it more rational to believe that an infinite multiverse in which every metaphysical possibility is realized is less probable?Michael

    how likely is it?


    What I really want to ask is: what are the rules of the multiverse? Is it a multiverse where every possibility is realised in some universe? But when does it stop, or rather, what institutes every possibility? If we are admitting of a multiverse that is beyond things such as non-contradiction and excluded-middle, we have universes where the LNC applies, one where it doesn't apply, and infinite others for each one of the infinite truth-values. And how big is the infinity of truth-values? Is it as big as the set of natural numbers or the set of real numbers? There must be something that institutes that. It is just a very troublesome thought experiment, especially since we are wrestling with things that enable rational thoughts and pondering about scenarios where they would not apply.
  • creativesoul
    12k
    Boltzmann brains don't involve disembodied cognition. Cognition embodied much differently than ours for the most part, but not disembodied.wonderer1

    Thanks for that. I'll take your word for that. I shouldn't get involved in some of this, I've neither the time nor the knowledge to be said to "know enough" to join in such discourse.

    There's much of this stuff I outright reject due to some other commitments I have.
  • creativesoul
    12k
    The probability of our being a normal observer is 100%. Here we are.

    ... The Big Freeze has not happened.
    — creativesoul

    You're begging the question.
    Michael

    Proudly.

    I'm stating the case. If you reject the brute fact that we are normal observers, then all bets are off.
  • creativesoul
    12k
    The Boltzmann brain problem is that given that our scientific theories entail the eventual formation of an exceptionally large number of Boltzmann brains with experiences like ours, it is exceptionally probable that the Big Freeze has happened and that we are Boltzmann brains having the illusory experience of being normal observers before the Big Freeze.Michael

    How do you get from

    "given that our scientific theories entail the eventual formation of an exceptionally large number of Boltzmann brains with experiences like ours"

    to

    "it is exceptionally probable that the Big Freeze has happened"



    The Boltzmann brain problem is that given that our scientific theories entail the eventual formation of an exceptionally large number of Boltzmann brains with experiences like ours...Michael

    That's not the only possibility entailed by our scientific theories.




    How long does instantaneous existence last? I've been chatting with Banno for over a decade. Jeep/Wayfarer too. Sam 26 even longer.
  • Banno
    25.3k
    I did suspect that you may have dissipated in a quantum puff for a while, but here you are, making it less likely that heat death has already happened.

    Seems to me the difference between and others here is that he is pretty convinced by the Boltzmann discussion, while the others are more comfortable acknowledging that it is interesting but very far form conclusive.
  • Patterner
    1.1k
    How long does instantaneous existence last? I've been chatting with Banno for over a decade. Jeep/Wayfarer too. Sam 26 even longer.creativesoul
    I believe the idea is that, if you are a BB, no, you have not been chatting with anyone for any amount of time. Rather, you, a BB, have existed for only a moment. The gigantic number of particles needed just happened to drift into the exact arrangement needed to give you all the "memories" you have, which only seem to have taken place over long periods of time.

    All nonsense. But a very fun idea.
  • Michael
    15.8k
    Seems to me the difference between ↪Michael and others here is that he is pretty convinced by the Boltzmann discussion, while the others are more comfortable acknowledging that it is interesting but very far form conclusive.Banno

    You seem to misunderstand what I am saying. I don't believe that I am a Boltzmann brain or that I am most likely a Boltzmann brain.

    I am simply explaining that, as per the words of the cosmologists who know better than me, our best scientific models entail that we are most likely Boltzmann brains.

    Therefore, either we are most likely Boltzmann brains or our best scientific models are mistaken.
  • Michael
    15.8k
    How do you get from

    "given that our scientific theories entail the eventual formation of an exceptionally large number of Boltzmann brains with experiences like ours"

    to

    "it is exceptionally probable that the Big Freeze has happened"
    creativesoul

    Because we ought reason as if we are randomly selected from the set of all possible observers with experiences like ours, and the set of all possible observers with experiences like ours contains exceptionally more post-Big Freeze Boltzmann brains than pre-Big Freeze normal observers.

    That's not the only possibility entailed by our scientific theories.creativesoul

    It's what cosmologists say is the most likely consequence of our best scientific theories. This is precisely why the Boltzmann brain problem is seen as a problem. It's not just some crazy hypothesis by some crazy philosopher.
  • Banno
    25.3k
    ok, good. And the next step is to agree that there is something fishy here. Which is what I am saying. It’s incomplete.
  • Michael
    15.8k
    And the next step is to agree that there is something fishy here. Which is what I am saying. It’s incomplete.Banno

    See the argument here.

    If we can dismiss the claim that we are most likely Boltzmann brains a priori then we can dismiss the possibility of heat death a priori, or we can dismiss the possibility of quantum fluctuations a priori, even though we have a posteriori evidence in favour of them.

    So sure, something is fishy here, but there appear to be no good solutions.
  • Lionino
    2.7k
    1. Assume that we are most likely Boltzmann brains
    2. Most Boltzmann brains do not have accurate scientific knowledge
    3. Therefore, we most likely do not have accurate scientific knowledge
    4. Our scientific knowledge entails that we are most likely Boltzmann brains
    5. Therefore, our scientific knowledge that entails that we are most likely Boltzmann brains is most likely inaccurate
    6. Therefore, we are most likely not Boltzmann brains

    He then uses this to reject (1).

    I then simply offered an inverse of the argument:

    1. Assume that we are most likely ordinary humans
    2. Assume that we have accurate scientific knowledge
    3. Our scientific knowledge entails that we are most likely Boltzmann brains
    4. Therefore, our scientific knowledge that entails that we are most likely Boltzmann brains is most likely accurate
    5. Therefore, we are most likely not ordinary humans

    I then use this to reject either (1) or (2).
    Michael

    In Carroll's argument, all the statements ultimately follow from 1, but 1 ultimately leads to a contradiction. In your argument, there are two assumptions, and the statements all follow from 1 and 2, 1&2 leads to a contradiction. You say you use that to reject 1 or 2, but if you reject 1, you go back to Carroll's argument. The only choice is then to reject 2.

    Still, I feel there is something fishy with Carroll's argument or perhaps with the dichotomy of these arguments and I think it is in the phrase "most likely". I will try to put it rigorously some time later.

    With Boltzmann brains there are a finite number of brainsMichael

    There is an infinite amount of Boltzmann brains though. And if your argument for the multiverse follows, the same can be applied for the Boltzmann brains. So Carroll is wrong and we are as likely to be Boltzmann brains with accurate as with inaccurate scientific knowledge. Thoughts?

    All nonsense. But a very fun idea.Patterner

    Unfortunately it is not nonsense but follows from our scientific theories.

    If we can dismiss the claim that we are most likely Boltzmann brains a priori then we can dismiss the possibility of heat death a priori, or we can dismiss the possibility of quantum fluctuations a priori, even though we have a posteriori evidence in favour of them.Michael

    Or perhaps we don't need to reject either heat death or quantum fluctuations, but just the possibility of quantum fluctuations generating a macroscopic object — which is against our scientific theories but not as harshly so. And even if we don't want to do so, by your footnote here, it can be that the time after the heat death is neither infinite or sufficiently large to make it so that there are more Boltzmann brains than ordinary brains.
  • Michael
    15.8k
    The only choice is then to reject 2.Lionino

    Which is why I keep saying: either we are most likely Boltzmann brains or our scientific theories are incorrect.

    There is an infinite amount of Boltzmann brains though.Lionino

    Well, this ties into my rejection of an infinite past. Even though we can say that if the universe will last forever then the number of Boltzmann brains will increase to infinity, it must be the case that the time from the Big Bang to now is finite, and so that as of now there have been a finite number of brains (whether normal or Boltzmann).

    And if your argument for the multiverse follows, the same can be applied for the Boltzmann brains. So Carroll is wrong and we are as likely to be Boltzmann brains with accurate as with inaccurate scientific knowledge. Thoughts?Lionino

    Yes, that would seem to follow if we allow for infinite "parallel" universes (as my reasoning against an infinite past wouldn't hold).

    Or perhaps we don't need to reject either heat death or quantum fluctuations, but just the possibility of quantum fluctuations generating a macroscopic object — which is against our scientific theories but not as harshly so. And even if we don't want to do so, by your footnote here, it can be that the time after the heat death is neither infinite or sufficiently large to make it so that there are more Boltzmann brains than ordinary brains.Lionino

    This would be one solution. However, this still entails that we can dismiss some possible empirical fact a priori:

    1. If quantum fluctuations can form macroscopic objects then we are almost certainly quantum fluctuations
    2. This conclusion is silly/cognitively unstable
    3. Therefore quantum fluctuations cannot form macroscopic objects

    Of course, it may be true that quantum fluctuations cannot form macroscopic objects, but there's something less-than-rational about the suggestion that we can dismiss such a possibility a priori, especially given that "we are quantum fluctuations" isn't a contradiction.

    An a priori but non-necessary truth is peculiar.

    Perhaps the simplest solution is to reject scientific realism in favour of instrumentalism. The mathematics of quantum fluctuations are just a useful tool, not something to be taken so literally.
  • Patterner
    1.1k
    Therefore, either we are most likely Boltzmann brains or our best scientific models are mistaken.Michael
    Unfortunately it is not nonsense but follows from our scientific theories.Lionino
    What are these models/theories? What predictions do they make? How are they tested?

    I am aware of the idea that, in an infinite amount of time, an infinite amount of matter will eventually be arranged in every possible configuration. I don't see that as a model/theory. It's just an idea. Something to contemplate. We can't test it. It's speculation. RougeAI has twice (that I've seen) asked:
    How would you calculate density for a infinite number of things (e.g., Boltzmann brains) in an infinitely large space?RogueAI
    The answer is, you couldn't. A crazy large number of particles need to come together in exactly the right way at same time to make a BB. But, since there is infinite space for these infinite particles to be spread throughout, we can't know that that number of particles will ever touch even a single other particle.
  • Michael
    15.8k
    What are these models/theories? What predictions do they make? How are they tested?Patterner

    There's the Lambda-CDM model which entails eternal expansion (and eventual heat death), and the energy-time uncertainty principle which entails quantum fluctuations.

    Given enough time (which there will be with eternal expansion), quantum fluctuations can generate macroscopic objects, including human-like brains. And given enough time (which there will be with eternal expansion), the number of human-like brains generated from quantum fluctuations will outnumber the number of ordinary human brains that ever existed.
  • Lionino
    2.7k
    Which is why I keep saying: either we are most likely Boltzmann brains or our scientific theories are incorrect.Michael

    That is a true dichotomy. My point was that, as by Carroll's argument and your subsequent argument, the dichotomy dissolves as we have to believe that our scientific theories are incorrect — which sounds fishy to me as I said because of the "most likely", and there seems to be some sort of self-reference involved in the argument too, as I will think more deeply about later, rejecting empirical theories a priori is always iffy.

    Even though we can say that if the universe will last forever then the number of Boltzmann brains will increase to infinity, it must be the case that the time from the Big Bang to now is finite, and so that as of now there have been a finite number of brainsMichael

    Surely that is true. So your argument seems to be, there has been finite time T between now and the beginning of the universe, there has been finite Boltzmann brains, therefore we are likely to be a brain with incorrect scientific theories.
    I don't know what to make of this, but it seems that you are restricting the pool of possible Boltzmann brains we could be by establishing the upper time limit as the time where the entity we are now lives in. I don't know how to feel about that, it seems circular.

    but there's something less-than-rational about the suggestion that we can dismiss such a possibility a priori, especially given that "we are quantum fluctuations" isn't a contradictionMichael

    This is what I mean about the whole thing being iffy.

    Perhaps the simplest solution is to reject scientific realism in favour of instrumentalism.Michael

    How would that come into play with Boltzmann, especifically?

    But, since there is infinite space for these infinite particles to be spread throughout, we can't know that that number of particles will ever touch even a single other particle.Patterner

    Pretty sure that the size of space does not factor in it. If you take one m³ of space it will have the same density of particles popping in and out of existence as one cm³ — assuming same conditions. So having more space increases the likelihood of a Boltzmann brain forming if anything.
  • creativesoul
    12k
    I believe the idea is that, if you are a BB, no, you have not been chatting with anyone for any amount of time. Rather, you, a BB, have existed for only a moment. The gigantic number of particles needed just happened to drift into the exact arrangement needed to give you all the "memories" you have, which only seem to have taken place over long periods of time.

    All nonsense. But a very fun idea.
    Patterner

    Regarding the idea...

    What would it take to even be able to physically reconfigure a normal human observer? All the necessary parts. What do all normal observers have in common such that that's exactly what makes them normal human observers? That's a matter of necessary elemental constituency and existential dependency. There's a bit of work involved there.

    Or...

    I don't know for sure, but my impression of Witt leads me to think that ideas such as Boltzmann Brains would count as bewitchment.

    Given that the sheer number/quantity of particles necessary for reconfiguring me involves reconfiguring everything that I am existentially dependent upon(everything that effected/affected me either directly or indirectly), and I am a normal human observer.

    Normal human observers have been affected/effected and/or otherwise influenced, whether directly or indirectly, by all sorts of things. Some of those things are external to us, some of those things are parts of us, some of those things are a combination thereof.

    You'd need to recreate the entire universe according to a strict determinist(causal) account. Boltzmann Brains are supposed to come from that... aren't they? Do they presuppose that all it takes to recreate an observer is to recreate and rearrange just the biological components?
  • Patterner
    1.1k
    Do they presuppose that all it takes to recreate an observer is to recreate the biological components?creativesoul
    That is my understanding. If the memories of all the stimulus we take in and actions we perform are stored physically in our brains, then there's no need to actually take in the stimulus and perform the actions. We can just arrange the physical brain in the way that it would come ro be arranged at the end of all that.
  • Patterner
    1.1k
    There's the Lambda-CDM model which entails eternal expansion (and eventual heat death), and the energy-time uncertainty principle which entails quantum fluctuations.

    Given enough time (which there will be with eternal expansion), quantum fluctuations can generate macroscopic objects, including human-like brains. And given enough time (which there will be with eternal expansion), the number of human-like brains generated from quantum fluctuations will outnumber the number of ordinary human brains that ever existed.
    Michael
    Pretty sure that the size of space does not factor in it. If you take one m³ of space it will have the same density of particles popping in and out of existence as one cm³ — assuming same conditions. So having more space increases the likelihood of a Boltzmann brain forming if anything.Lionino
    It looks like you two are talking about the same thing. How many virtual particles have been observed in the same place at the same time? Because quantum fluctuations need to account for something like 1.4 x 10^26 atoms (I don't know how many particles that is) coming into existence all at the same time in the space that takes up a brain in order to make a Boltzman Brain. Not just that number, of course, but also the variety.
  • creativesoul
    12k


    Talking as if memories are distinct entities, things that can be stored, seems mistaken to me. Without a tree there is no memory of one. Our memories of trees are existentially dependent upon trees, regardless of their meaningful content, regardless of their veracity. Our memories of trees cannot be reconstructed in any other manner other than series of physical and mental events from whence they emerged.
  • wonderer1
    2.2k
    It looks like you two are talking about the same thing. How many virtual particles have been observed in the same place at the same time? Because quantum fluctuations need to account for something like 1.4 x 10^26 atoms (I don't know how many particles that is) coming into existence all at the same time in the space that takes up a brain in order to make a Boltzman Brain. Not just that number, of course, but also the variety.Patterner

    :up:

    And not just the number and variety but also the complexity of the arrangement.
bold
italic
underline
strike
code
quote
ulist
image
url
mention
reveal
youtube
tweet
Add a Comment

Welcome to The Philosophy Forum!

Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.