Yes, but the same can be said for anything one calls "information" and "data," including the ones and zeros on your computer.
So why aren't you complaining about that?
You have gotten me, and Pixy, and a whole bunch of other people all wrong -- we aren't conflating abstraction and reality, we are pointing out that abstraction is nothing but another feature of reality. All there *is* is reality. There is no "abstraction" floating around. "Abstraction" is just a label that intelligent entities like ourselves might apply to the behavior of a system of particles. But guess what -- everything in reality is just behavior of systems of particles.
That makes abstraction no different than anything else. It is all real.
There isn't really any data or information in my computer, either, I hate to have to tell you.
I know that will seem patently false to you, but that's the way it is.
I mean yes, of course, there is, but only in the sense that there are talking animals in the Winnie the Pooh stories. They are definitely there when you read the story and look at the pictures, but you can examine what's physically real about the apparatus and you'll never find talking animals there.
You're right that there's no "abstraction" floating around. No argument from me there.
But let's take a simple simulation of a bridge collapsing from overload.
Say a father is explaining the concept to his son, and he draws a bridge with cars on it, and says "Let's assume each car weighs a ton, and the bridge can hold 100,000 pounds, and there are 45 cars on it right now. How many more cars can drive on?"
Then he writes down 90,000 and they begin to add "cars" by adding 2,000, getting the sum, then adding another 2,000 to the sum.
When the 51st car gets on the bridge, they shout "Oh no!" and scribble all over the bridge.
That exercise didn't create any real bridge or any real collapse.
And no matter how good your sim is, it won't either. Because the bridge and the collapse
require our imaginations, just as the talking teddy bear does, and just as the "information" and "data" in our computers does.
These things are not just as real as anything else, because they're not real at all.
You
are confusing reality and abstraction.
And this confusion is causing errors in your thinking.
Our simulated human will NEVER cause an actual instance of consciousness, for the same reason that a simulated power plant will never generate energy.
As for your simulated entities in their simulated oil spill, if our time-bomb virus were triggered and all life on earth instantly died, there would be no entities, there would only be the workings of the computer (which is not doing any learning) as it changed states and pixels lit up and changed color.
The abstraction would have utterly ceased to be, because abstractions require imagination.
Abstractions do not exist in reality and cannot do the things that real stuff does, like leak oil, generate power, or be conscious.