kwlyon wrote:Darrel wrote:
a) anything simulated, down to the atomic level, is actually that thing, not a simulation
b) computers will be so powerful in the future they will be able to simulate all possible past events down to the spin of each electron
c) the people in the future will want to do this and thus resurrect all of us via computer simulation
Thought I would play the devils advocate yet again and address the physical plausibility of these as I understand them.
a) This may actually have some credence to it. However I would say this lies in the realm of philosophy more than physics.
DAR
I agree, it has some plausibility to it in some aspects, that's why he uses it. But realize, he is not just saying that this would be a very accurate simulation but rather that if you were simulated to this degree of fidelity, it is not a copy of you, it IS, completely, utterly, you. Consciousness, all of it. Hello, how have you been? I think our memories were included too.
If it quacks like a duck and farts like a duck, it is, by definition, a duck.
DAR
Right, but he is saying you are 100% THE very same duck. Not a a copy! THE, duck.
b) Okay this is just silly... not possible unless we find a way to LEAVE this "universe" and construct a computer with more bits than this "universe" has quanta.
DAR
The whole thing is silly. He just takes Moore's law of computational power increasing exponentially and runs it out way into the future. This is retarded. When Skeptic mag interviewed him the first thing they asked was if he was pulling our collective legs. I think he said no. I think it's great for teachers to think outside of the box, and these assertions bring up interesting questions, but really, this book is astonishingly absurd and he tries to make a real case for this, his "Omega point" and to provide the math for it too. I see now he has written a book "The Physics of Christianity." I think he just wants to sell books. Point being, these guys will just say things to be provocative and sell books. Fundies read too much into their selective quotations from some of these physicists.
c) when such complicated computing would be possible (i.e. creating an artificial intelligence) the information of who and what we were will have been utterly lost to chaos. Some information can never be retrieved.
DAR
I think that's safe to say.
It is an interesting idea--would such a re-rendering really be "us".
DAR
Tipler argues yes. You should see the assumptions he stacks to get there. His conclusion (after assuming his assumptions and forgetting about that)? We will certainly be resurrected!
Better than Lee Strobel's fate, however. He will be forever trapped in a Packard Bell!
DAR
Considering the depth of his sentience, I think you could run Strobel's software quite nicely on a Commodore 64.
D.
"I'm not a skeptic because I want to believe, I'm a skeptic because I want to know." --Michael Shermer