westprog
Philosopher
- Joined
- Dec 1, 2006
- Messages
- 8,928
You think theories are not constructed based on experience ?
They can be, but in the field of computing, theory is something that doesn't need experience. It's the same in any field of science and maths. Indeed, theory is how we get past bare experience and start to make what-if predictions.
Why so ? Wouldn't said estimate be an extrapolation of pase experience ?
There's no valid way to estimate what the field of computing might be like after ten thousand years, from what we've learned in the first sixty.
Maybe, but as I said, a "simulation" would still have to render all those particles for that to work. And still, THEIR laws of physics would limit what they could do with the simulation.
I fail to see why a simulation of a galaxy millions of light years away would need to simulate every particle in that galaxy. Indeed, since we already have programs which simulate the galaxy without needing to render every particle. We don't experience every particle in the universe directly.
Well, that's because you seem to forget that without physical laws there wouldn't BE inhabitants.
There's no reason to assume that. If a universe existed without physical law as we know it, there might be some other organising principle which would permit intelligence to arise.
Okay, you missed it. I meant that it contradicted your claim that we couldn't spot the bugs. Your new contention that we could be some sort of bug monitor species kinda demolishes that.
Actually, the matrix made it fictional, but people think that's how it'd work. Here's a tip: don't trust movies.We would monitor the bugs by noticing anomalies in physical law, and assuming that it was a gap in our knowledge. The people operating the simulation would come up with a patch, and we'd find with further research that there is a theory that fits.
There's absolutely no way we can tell whether the laws of physics are eternal, or are being retrofitted as we look for them.
That The Matrix is fictional is beside the point. It shows how even using technology little advanced from today, it would be possible to produce a convincing simulation. That the film is full of gaping plot holes is irrelevant.