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by axlee
552 days ago
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The difference between this concept and, let's say, Descarte's evil demon, is not the philosophical skepticism but its explicit grounding in physics and thermodynamics. It basically attempts to answer the question "Where would that evil demon come from?". It materializes Descarte's thought experiment and shows that it could actually happen within the confines of our scientific knowledge, unlike malicious demons. |
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Descartes/Hume are saying that to even bootstrap our understanding of reality, we have a hard dependency on sensory perception. (I mention Hume because he points out that even Descartes' singular ground-truth can't lead anywhere else without linking sensory perception back into the mix.) And when I say "nearly anything" it includes our notions about the laws of physics. (Which, btw, cannot be derived from Descartes' singular ground-truth.)
At best, BB is a restatement of what I wrote with the philosophically irrelevant detail that the BB hypothesis relies on all the same laws of physics we have in common with our universe. But I imagine it's really meant commonly as a weaker claim-- one which takes the laws of physics as epistemological ground-truth to derive an ambiguity about the nature of our reality within that universe.
My speculation is that science-minded people think BB is the most potent thought experiment for the same reason non-musicians might think Pachelbel's Canon in D is the best ever-- they've heard it a lot at places filled with people they admire.