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> I think Maursault has thoroughly demonstrated their lack of serious thought When you can't beat the argument, pull out the ad hominem fallacy and attack the man. Fallacy, of course, is faulty reasoning. > So if you encode only one bit per cube of this fm cubic lattice, and you manage to encode this into single atoms of silicon, you need a volume of silicon 8,000,000,000,000,000 times larger than the system you model. This explanation is indicative of linear thinking. Apparently Google Earth is not possible, as it would require a computer the size of the planet. Digitizing the Library of Congress apparently requires a memory stick the size of Congress. Seriously? You just can not comprehend how things could ever get better than your current understanding of how things are right now? Consider that if you lived in 1500BC, were an expert at the time in farming, and a plough was described to you, you would mock the person describing it, and insist that tilling soil was impossible. |
And your second paragraph is amply demonstrating this. I pointed out the physical implications of encoding your femtometer cubes at atomic scale. Nothing more. Encoding the Library of Congress has nothing to do with that. You are proposing to simulate at subatomic scale so obviously encoding it into atoms will make the simulation larger than the object similated.
To engage with your argument directly: You have none. All you repeat is that the past has seen technological breakthroughs, therefore the specific fantasy you propose makes sense. Non sequitur. That some breakthroughs have happened doesn't mean that any random breakthrough will happen. And your ideas are pushing hard against the limits of physics.