There is a 20% chance we’re living in a computer simulation

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  1. Rob

    Rob Registered User

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    There is a 20% chance we’re living in a computer simulation

    From the New York Times.


    Until I talked to Nick Bostrom, a philosopher at Oxford University, it never occurred to me that our universe might be somebody else’s hobby. I hadn’t imagined that the omniscient, omnipotent creator of the heavens and earth could be an advanced version of a guy who spends his weekends building model railroads or overseeing video-game worlds like the Sims.

    But now it seems quite possible. In fact, if you accept a pretty reasonable assumption of Dr. Bostrom’s, it is almost a mathematical certainty that we are living in someone else’s computer simulation.

    This simulation would be similar to the one in “The Matrix,” in which most humans don’t realize that their lives and their world are just illusions created in their brains while their bodies are suspended in vats of liquid. But in Dr. Bostrom’s notion of reality, you wouldn’t even have a body made of flesh. Your brain would exist only as a network of computer circuits.

    You couldn’t, as in “The Matrix,” unplug your brain and escape from your vat to see the physical world. You couldn’t see through the illusion except by using the sort of logic employed by Dr. Bostrom, the director of the Future of Humanity Institute at Oxford.

    Dr. Bostrom assumes that technological advances could produce a computer with more processing power than all the brains in the world, and that advanced humans, or “posthumans,” could run “ancestor simulations” of their evolutionary history by creating virtual worlds inhabited by virtual people with fully developed virtual nervous systems.

    Some computer experts have projected, based on trends in processing power, that we will have such a computer by the middle of this century, but it doesn’t matter for Dr. Bostrom’s argument whether it takes 50 years or 5 million years. If civilization survived long enough to reach that stage, and if the posthumans were to run lots of simulations for research purposes or entertainment, then the number of virtual ancestors they created would be vastly greater than the number of real ancestors.

    There would be no way for any of these ancestors to know for sure whether they were virtual or real, because the sights and feelings they’d experience would be indistinguishable. But since there would be so many more virtual ancestors, any individual could figure that the odds made it nearly certain that he or she was living in a virtual world.

    The math and the logic are inexorable once you assume that lots of simulations are being run. But there are a couple of alternative hypotheses, as Dr. Bostrom points out. One is that civilization never attains the technology to run simulations (perhaps because it self-destructs before reaching that stage). The other hypothesis is that posthumans decide not to run the simulations.

    “This kind of posthuman might have other ways of having fun, like stimulating their pleasure centers directly,” Dr. Bostrom says. “Maybe they wouldn’t need to do simulations for scientific reasons because they’d have better methodologies for understanding their past. It’s quite possible they would have moral prohibitions against simulating people, although the fact that something is immoral doesn’t mean it won’t happen.”

    Dr. Bostrom doesn’t pretend to know which of these hypotheses is more likely, but he thinks none of them can be ruled out. “My gut feeling, and it’s nothing more than that,” he says, “is that there’s a 20 percent chance we’re living in a computer simulation.”

    My gut feeling is that the odds are better than 20 percent, maybe better than even. I think it’s highly likely that civilization could endure to produce those supercomputers. And if owners of the computers were anything like the millions of people immersed in virtual worlds like Second Life, SimCity and World of Warcraft, they’d be running simulations just to get a chance to control history — or maybe give themselves virtual roles as Cleopatra or Napoleon.

    It’s unsettling to think of the world being run by a futuristic computer geek, although we might at last dispose of that of classic theological question: How could God allow so much evil in the world? For the same reason there are plagues and earthquakes and battles in games like World of Warcraft. Peace is boring, Dude.

    A more practical question is how to behave in a computer simulation. Your first impulse might be to say nothing matters anymore because nothing’s real. But just because your neural circuits are made of silicon (or whatever posthumans would use in their computers) instead of carbon doesn’t mean your feelings are any less real.

    David J. Chalmers, a philosopher at the Australian National University, says Dr. Bostrom’s simulation hypothesis isn’t a cause for skepticism, but simply a different metaphysical explanation of our world. Whatever you’re touching now — a sheet of paper, a keyboard, a coffee mug — is real to you even if it’s created on a computer circuit rather than fashioned out of wood, plastic or clay.

    You still have the desire to live as long as you can in this virtual world — and in any simulated afterlife that the designer of this world might bestow on you. Maybe that means following traditional moral principles, if you think the posthuman designer shares those morals and would reward you for being a good person.

    Or maybe, as suggested by Robin Hanson, an economist at George Mason University, you should try to be as interesting as possible, on the theory that the designer is more likely to keep you around for the next simulation. (For more on survival strategies in a computer simulation, go to www.nytimes.com/tierneylab.)

    Of course, it’s tough to guess what the designer would be like. He or she might have a body made of flesh or plastic, but the designer might also be a virtual being living inside the computer of a still more advanced form of intelligence. There could be layer upon layer of simulations until you finally reached the architect of the first simulation — the Prime Designer, let’s call him or her (or it).

    Then again, maybe the Prime Designer wouldn’t allow any of his or her creations to start simulating their own worlds. Once they got smart enough to do so, they’d presumably realize, by Dr. Bostrom’s logic, that they themselves were probably simulations. Would that ruin the fun for the Prime Designer?

    If simulations stop once the simulated inhabitants understand what’s going on, then I really shouldn’t be spreading Dr. Bostrom’s ideas. But if you’re still around to read this, I guess the Prime Designer is reasonably tolerant, or maybe curious to see how we react once we start figuring out the situation.

    It’s also possible that there would be logistical problems in creating layer upon layer of simulations. There might not be enough computing power to continue the simulation if billions of inhabitants of a virtual world started creating their own virtual worlds with billions of inhabitants apiece.

    If that’s true, it’s bad news for the futurists who think we’ll have a computer this century with the power to simulate all the inhabitants on earth. We’d start our simulation, expecting to observe a new virtual world, but instead our own world might end — not with a bang, not with a whimper, but with a message on the Prime Designer’s computer.

    It might be something clunky like “Insufficient Memory to Continue Simulation.” But I like to think it would be simple and familiar: “Game Over.”

    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/14/science/14tier.html?ei=5090&en=22bfff4070a81187&ex=1344744000
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  3. MistaK

    MistaK Modulations Staff

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    :eek:


    very scary insight, but really could this be true? i fucking hope not. however its a far better explanation of life than a fucking god existing.

    that would be class!

    i have never believed in an afterlife or anyhting like that for a long while now like, and that would just make the end of the world alot more amusing.

    dont even ask for my opinion on death :lol:
  4. Rob

    Rob Registered User

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    It's a bit of a head fuck.
  5. forks

    forks still not dead

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    substitute 'god' for 'prime designer' and you have religion.
    it just needs an envoy from the prime designer to appear and tell us what it is. moses like. any suggestions for the ten commandments of a prime designer?
  6. MistaK

    MistaK Modulations Staff

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    nah its hardly a religion if nee fucker follows them. he's mainly an entity that exists primarly to support our life (and possibly his). but it opens up the whole "who created him" argument and then people become far too philisophical for there own good and start confusing eachother.

    why cant people accept that we are all a massive biological mistake or accident that happend because we just happen to have a planet in the right place to support our kind of eco system. there is no god, if there was people would be alot nicer and wars wouldent start over the whole "our god's better than your god" but "you have oil, but lets call this a religious thing" war.

    sorry if anyone is religious like, i just think its a load of twoddle.
  7. MistaK

    MistaK Modulations Staff

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    the most widely printed fictional text of our time - the bible
  8. forks

    forks still not dead

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    the bible is 100% fact.FACT
  9. MistaK

    MistaK Modulations Staff

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    show me proof, and i will retract my opinion.

    shame there isnt any.
  10. Rossy

    Rossy . Staff

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    It would still be the equivalent of god though, just not some bloke with a beard, falk and halo but rather a spotty little alien nerdling with glasses and a good pc.
  11. TheSpence

    TheSpence Registered User

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    Re: There is a 20% chance we’re living in a computer simulation

    Got that far then thought of South Park - Cancelled. This episode was shown again on Paramount last week, I wonder if Nick Bostrom watched it.
  12. Rossy

    Rossy . Staff

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    Re: There is a 20% chance we’re living in a computer simulation

    Well you should at least read that bit Spence. :lol:

    Talk about faith.
  13. MistaK

    MistaK Modulations Staff

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    yeah equivilant of a god, however not a religion, because nee fucker knows about him/her!
  14. Rossy

    Rossy . Staff

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    I think that what Forks might have been implying was that it would make the concept of god look rather silly

    I don't think he literally thinks that this is the start of a new religion.
  15. robby_41

    robby_41 Shearer!

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    I believe in science. We are here due to the random make up of elements with factors like the earths distance from the sun aiding to this make up. And the fact that the dinosaurs were killed off 65 milion years ago (lol think that right) allowing for the human race to evolve.
  16. Mad4it

    Mad4it Faster than a cannonball

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    Howay, thats a great opportunity. Let me start

    1) Thou shall not be pwned.
    2) Thou shall LOL when one is amused.

    Please, lets finish this!
  17. Basic Instinct

    Basic Instinct Registered User

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    Thou shall not pay for music.
  18. Jase

    Jase Blue Booked

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    oh well, thats the music industry fucked.
  19. ManofScience

    ManofScience Guest

    3)thou shall go to ALL star trek conventions wearing rubber klingon masks get your picture taken with the bloke who played the hologram doctor in voyager
  20. Basic Instinct

    Basic Instinct Registered User

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    no big loss, music's shit anyway, always has been, infact i don't even think the whole concept of music will ever really catch on.
  21. French William

    French William _________________

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    Music's been doomed from the outset really.

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