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Originally posted by yadda333
I love ATS because there are so many "geniuses" on here. OP did not pull this out of thin air.
www.simulation-argument.com...
Nick Bostrom is way smarter than any of you.
2. Do you really believe that we are in a computer simulation? No
Originally posted by TheSubversiveOne
Every 'simulated universe' that has been possible or even fathomed has been created by man within the confines of the real universe. Every simulated universe needs a real universe to simulate. Without the real universe, there could be no simulated universes to base them on.
Any simulation ever conceived is modelled, at least partially, after reality. If it isn't, it cannot be called a simulation. The word simulation, the idea of a simulation, and all creations of simulations have been done so by man on a planet called earth. How can one fathom the idea of a simulation outside of its context? It cannot be done.
Lets pretend an ant farm is a simulation of an anthill. To the ant inside, the ant farm appears and works much like an ant hill. For all the ant knows, his home is an anthill. But who created this simulation? Every time the answer would be man created it. So unless man is somehow existing outside of our universe, there is no need to believe reality is a simulation. Doing so is an anthropomorphism.
Originally posted by yadda333
I'm well aware of Bostrom's ideas on this and other things--I pointed an ATSer to his paper a couple/few years ago. And him not believing that a posthuman civilization would have any interest in making ancestor machines makes no difference.
My post is just the continued illumination of what I feel is one of the more laughable elements of ATS--arrogant posters who believe they're smarter than experts.
Originally posted by NewlyAwakened
Originally posted by yadda333
I'm well aware of Bostrom's ideas on this and other things--I pointed an ATSer to his paper a couple/few years ago. And him not believing that a posthuman civilization would have any interest in making ancestor machines makes no difference.
My post is just the continued illumination of what I feel is one of the more laughable elements of ATS--arrogant posters who believe they're smarter than experts.
Maybe I have poor reading comprehension]
Originally posted by yadda333
My points still stand.
Originally posted by adjensen
Originally posted by yadda333
My points still stand.
Your points, to date, seem to be:
1) Smart guy at Oxford has weighed in on this.
2) You ATS posters are morons for disagreeing with him.
3) (Oopsies, "smart guy at Oxford" doesn't agree with OP)
Bottom line, as I stated earlier, if it's a crappy line of logic, as the OP's is, it doesn't matter if it comes from Oxford or Frostbite Falls College, it's a stupid argument. The fact that your Oxford lad seems to agree with that, not withstanding.
2. Do you really believe that we are in a computer simulation? No. I believe that the simulation argument is basically sound. The argument shows only that at least one of three possibilities obtains, but it does not tell us which one(s). One can thus accept the simulation argument and reject the simulation hypothesis (i.e. that we are in a simulation).
Personally, I assign less than 50% probability to the simulation hypothesis – rather something like in 20%-region, perhaps, maybe. However, this estimate is a subjective personal opinion and is not part of the simulation argument. My reason is that I believe that we lack strong evidence for or against any of the three disjuncts (1)-(3), so it makes sense to assign each of them a significant probability. I note that people who hear about the simulation argument often react by saying, “Yes, I accept the argument, and it is obvious that it is possibility #n that obtains.” But different people pick a different n. Some think it obvious that (1) is true, others that (2) is true, yet others that (3) is true. The truth seems to be that we just don’t know which of the disjuncts is true.
Originally posted by yadda333
Again, I already pointed out that I know that Bostrom doesn't think we're in a simulation. But it's not because his argument isn't sound (his reason below).
The argument shows that at least one of the following propositions is true: (1) the human species is very likely to go extinct before reaching a “posthuman” stage; (2) any posthuman civilization is extremely unlikely to run a significant number of simulations of their evolutionary history (or variations thereof); (3) we are almost certainly living in a computer simulation. It follows that the belief that there is a significant chance that we will one day become posthumans who run ancestor-simulations is false, unless we are currently living in a simulation.
Originally posted by yadda333
I love ATS because there are so many "geniuses" on here. OP did not pull this out of thin air.
www.simulation-argument.com...
Nick Bostrom is way smarter than any of you.