Or it might be simulated. And the world in which the simulation of the simulation exists might as well be a simulation.My original point was that if this is a simulation, there's very little we can deduce from within the simulation about the world in which the simulation exists. It might be similar - or it might be entirely different.
Or it might be simulated. And the world in which the simulation of the simulation exists might as well be a simulation.
I'm looking at this discussion, but haven't found out why that should be a useful assumption. Why should it?
How does that follow from what I said ?
Really ? That's odd. I see a clear contradiction as well.
Nice try, 'prog. I was simply answering your question.
I'm not basing my opinion on programming experience. In fact, I don't see how that would help me about the "nature of the universe".
I see. So you haven't been using the Matrix as support for your argument ? Why the hell did you mention it, then, if it has no bearing on the issue ? Or worse, if it hurts your argument ?
Oh, absolutely you can't know that all who make such claims are not sane. That's why I don't dismiss their claims out of hand, just as I don't dismiss the claims of those who experience god or claim to have seen bigfoot. OTOH, if no such claims exist, and as far as I can tell they don't for things such as the easter bunny, little green men, the IPU or the FSM, it's reasonable to say there is no evidence for those things and draw a distinction between them and things like aliens in general, bigfoot and god.
That's perfectly reasonable when, in fact, the claims are not reconcilable with reality as we know it. Not all god claims fit that description.
If it would be easy to spot whether the universe was a simulation, then presumably there must be some kind of experiment we could perform to detect it.
There's no contradiction in a universe without physical law.
So where do you derive your view that a simulation would have bugs in it, and that these would manifest themselves as observable anomalies?
How can it hurt my argument when my argument doesn't depend on it in any way?
Disputants are normally concerned with the usefulness of their argument. I just try to get your argument. Say I agree that we might as well be part of a sufficiently sophisticated simulation. Then what?Metaphysics is not usually concerned with usefulness.
As I've said before, Yes - provided they are a credible witness.Again, IF someone made the claim that they've seen the easter bunny, you'd consider that to be evidence ? A yes or no will do.
I know of none that don't.
Yet you neglected to respond to my previously posted definitions of the deistic and pantheistic beliefs on that question. As near as I can tell, their beliefs have no conflicts with reality as we know it.
I must've missed them, because I've just looked back a few days and found nothing.
By the by, did my point come across better with Gandalf ?
Disputants are normally concerned with the usefulness of their argument. I just try to get your argument. Say I agree that we might as well be part of a sufficiently sophisticated simulation. Then what?
Yes, not playing up to a so-called god all the time, saying things in just the right way not to offen it, like "I want to thank Jesus for letting me win this race" "winning the game", not being "killed in the plane crash" etc.Then you figure out how to live your life.
Again, IF someone made the claim that they've seen the easter bunny, you'd consider that to be evidence ? A yes or no will do.
Hi to this thread.....great rational discussion. Not seen a bunny tho.
Surely a building is proof that there has to of been a Builder.
A painting is evidence there was a Painter.
A banana is evidence and natures proof of a designer. It has colour-coded on outside telling of freshness inside, easy to open it, easy to hold in the hand- the outside is 5 sided and snuggly slots into the thumb & first finger, etc...it is even bio-degradable waste too !
Rationally speaking then, creation evidences a Creator.
It seems to me that the concept of God is more akin to wormholes than Gandalf since we (humans as a whole) are far more certain that Middle Earth and Gandalf exists nowhere except in the minds of people who are familiar with the novel and/or movies of LOTR than we are about the existance or non-existance of god or wormholes.
Interesting. How did you come to this conclusion? I have no idea how to discern what a universe created by a god would look like as opposed to a universe that wasn't.
In pantheism the Universe, or nature, and God are equivalent. More detailed definitions tend to emphasize the idea that God is better understood as an abstract principle representing natural law, existence, and the Universe (the sum total of all that is, was, and shall be) than an anthropomorphic entity.
Deism holds that God does not intervene with the functioning of the natural world in any way, allowing it to run according to the laws of nature that he configured when he created all things.
I think our disagreement then is simply on the degree of certainty that we each individual hold that some god exists. You put quite low. I put it about 50% for concepts such as the deists or pantheists hold.
Surely a building is proof that there has to of been a Builder.
A painting is evidence there was a Painter.
A banana is evidence and natures proof of a designer.
It has colour-coded on outside telling of freshness inside
easy to open it
easy to hold in the hand
Can theists be rational?
When it comes to a so-called god, and making it work into their universe, it is a flat out NO.
Paul
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When did I say it would be "easy" to spot those ? I said that we could, that's it. The fact that the physics of said simulated universe are inconsistent (i.e. akin to dreams) is certainly something that would affect us. If the laws of physics aren't constant across the entire simulation then someone is going to spot it.
Of course, if you're going to argue that they modify our memories to make us forget those, then there is no point in any discussion on the matter.
Physical laws, westprog, in case you aren't aware, allow things to behave in a predictable way. Without them, patterns can't form and be sustained. Ergo, there can't be intelligent beings, because those would require said patterns. In other words, the idea of intelligent beings in a universe without physical laws is contradictory.
A single post ago you said "nature of the universe", and now we're back at bugs. Would you please be careful about the words you use ?
...as we learn more, via a quest for rational explanations using rational methods. Sure, our concept has changed, but your examples are merely showing the death throes of a priori reasoning.
No. We're going to presume that there might be a problem with a priori reasoning, and that seeking rational explanations through rational methods is our only hope.
Then you figure out how to live your life.
Wouldn't our lives pretty much be the same? Is there any meaningful difference between a world that's a simulation, and a world that's real, from our point of view?