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by __MatrixMan__
790 days ago
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See that's hard because I do call it physics, and I do not call it a simulation. I am here in this world, and from where I stand it's as real as anything will ever be for me. My point is that I don't think there's any sense in entertaining counterfactuals that, if true, will be impossible to come up with evidence for, and I think the assertion that our world is a simulation is one such counterfactual. That is, unless the physics gets so absolutely insane that "it's just physics" fails to scratch the itch. One example would be if we discover an artifact that lets us see each particle's corresponding unique ID such that, once we have that ID, we can then type it into a console and arbitrarily set properties like its mass. If simulated entities gain control over the parameters that govern the simulation itself... well is it really a simulation anymore? |
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As far as we know, our "physics" does not show any possible imperfections, or we didn't thought of all imperfections which could arise in simulation.