TERRAFORMING TERRA
We discuss and comment on the role agriculture will play in the containment of the CO2 problem and address protocols for terraforming the planet Earth.
A model farm template is imagined as the central methodology. A broad range of timely science news and other topics of interest are commented on.
Saturday, February 9, 2019
This cartoon explains why Elon Musk thinks we’re characters in a computer simulation. He might be right.
Our universe is equivalent to a self aware simulation. That simulation looks like a computer construct in the second tier of matter or in dark matter. Spirit bodies are individual self aware simulated entities. They have chosen to create self aware third tier entities. This introduces novel expectations and experiences.
What happens when a simulation becomes self creating? That is what our third tier life form actually does. The process induces a higher level of randomness into existence.
Which may well be why we exist at all..
This cartoon explains why Elon Musk thinks we’re characters in a computer simulation. He might be right.
Elon Musk thinks it's almost certain that we are living in a computer simulation. In short, we are characters in an advanced version of The Sims — so advanced that it creates, well, us.
I understand the instinct to treat the idea as absurd, and
to ignore people who suggest these things. It’s what happens when you
challenge the common beliefs about reality, kind of like Aristarchus of Samos, who first thought the Earth wasn't at the center of the universe — almost 2,000 years before Galileo.
But these ideas push us to think more rigorously about what
we accept as reality. We are reminded, time and again, that what we see
and what we know are quite limited. And we have to devise increasingly
clever experiments to see more of the unseen.
This cartoon is about laying down the logic of the simulation argument.Understand it first, and then dismiss it — or, better yet, don't. It
doesn't argue that we are necessarily in a simulation. It just says
it's one of three possibilities for the future of humanity. Oxford University philosopher Nick Bostrom wrote the definitive paper on this, so we're essentially walking through his piece.
Let's go back 40 years!
In the early 1970s, the most advanced game was Pong — two rectangles and a circle, bouncing around.
Fast-forward to 2000, and we have The Sims — animated characters that interact with each other, with objects, and with their own feelings.
Now we have 3D headsets, like the HTC Vive and the Oculus
Rift. You are the character, and your body can interact with the
simulated world. We've tricked our minds into thinking that pixels are
real.
With modern computing, we're also able to forecast weather
and simulate how chemicals in our body work, among many other complex
things. We’ve come a long way in a short time.
So let's fast-forward 10,000 years!
We went from Pong to headsets that transport our
minds into fantasy worlds — in just 40 years. So even if our speed of
technological advancement slows down, in 10,000 years we should be able
to run simulations of ourselves. (That is, if we're alive, of course.
But more on that later.)It's not just that the graphics will be better or the mechanics will
be better. No, it's that we'll be able to simulate the individual
synapses in the human brain, much like The Sims kept track of how hungry your character was.
We can simulate these things because, according to
scientific evidence, everything that makes us human is physical
processes. Presumably we will understand all of it in 10,000 years and
then recreate these processes in a computer simulation, much like how we
can recreate the way a ball bounces.So in 10,000 years, computers could simulate the entire world.
(This dome is only a representation of these simulations,
which would occur computationally — not inside domes. But it’s a great
visual, right?)And how do we get the computing power for this? Bostrom says we can
send tiny robots to other planets, which will self-duplicate and turn
the planet into a huge computer.
So if we can build world simulators, we’ll probably simulate our past selves
If we can simulate human worlds, then presumably future humans will run simulations of their ancestors — us! And because simulating the entire mental history of humans would cost
a tiny fraction of future humans' resources, they'll run it again and
again — maybe millions or billions of times:
But what if the people in the simulations create their own simulation?If we've run billions of ancestor simulations, surely a lot of them
would reach the stage when they can create their own simulations.
But if we are creating billions of simulated, conscious
humans inside a computer — and they have the same capabilities as us —
then that means our consciousness is no different from that of our
simulated humans.
That means we could be characters in a simulation
In fact, if there are zillions of conscious humans, and far
fewer humans living in "base" reality, it's almost likely we are in a
simulation right now, as you read this story.
But another possibility: We kill each other before then
The other possibility is that humans go extinct before we reach that stage. Maybe it's global warming. Maybe it's killer pandas. But Bostrom says
the most "natural" interpretation is that we develop a technology that
is misused — like self-replicating nanobots that are essentially a
mechanical bacteria, which end up killing all life on the planet.
And another possibility: Future humans just don't want to run ancestor simulations
This could be because they find it unethical, since they would have
to make conscious simulated humans go through the suffering of, well,
life — especially life before their innovations.
Or it’s possible that future humans don't have any desire to
run ancestor simulations, because they're more concerned with advancing
for pleasure.
So the simulation argument is: One of these things must be true
That means we’ll end up using technology for pleasure and we don't
even care about simulating ancestors, we’ll end up killing ourselves, or
we’re living in a simulation.
Musk thinks it's almost certain we're in a simulation. Bostrom believes there is about a 20 percent chance that we're in a simulation, but thinks it is subjective.But both believe one of these three possibilities will happen.
The coolest part of all of this: It helps us ground fascinating conversations, even about the metaphysical
There's a reason Elon Musk and his brother talked about this so much that they had to ban it from the hot tub.
Bostrom, in the introduction to his paper, wrote something beautiful about this argument:
Apart from the interest this thesis may hold for those who are
engaged in futuristic speculation, there are also more purely
theoretical rewards. The argument provides a stimulus for formulating
some methodological and metaphysical questions, and it suggests
naturalistic analogies to certain traditional religious conceptions,
which some may find amusing or thought-provoking.
If we are in a simulation, then there exists some higher-level being —
albeit very different from an all-powerful, benevolent one. But that
being is us, or a future version of us.
And that brings up the fascinating question of where base-reality humans come from — the ones not in a simulation.
Perhaps our overlords are still asking the same thing. Perhaps
they’re running these ancestor simulations, hoping one of us finds out
first.
This post originally appeared on
Vox.
This article is republished here with permission.
1 comment:
...and now we know who God REALLY is!
Post a Comment