Sorry to jump in, Ich_wasp -- Beth and others are posing some excellent questions and I'm having fun just following along as someone who's not convinced either way by the simulation arguments -- but I'm curious on a couple of points that you keep coming back to [hilited above] in your replies; how much does your conviction in the 'reality' of the simulated consciousness depend on:
-- electrons passing through gates? Would it matter if we replaced them with some other mechanism, like the push-pegs or gear-teeth in Babbage's jacquard looms and analytical engines?
-- one-to-one correspondence? Would it matter if the computer program used compression algorithms to store information (so that an array of 1000 neurons say, all in the same 'zero' state, was stored as "1000" (9 bits, 9 switches), rather than "000... rpt 1000 times ...000")?
-- ignoring the computer overhead that a simulation requires (as in "The Matrix", or "The Wizard of Oz" for that matter, when you pull back the curtain of the simulation, there's a massive machinery that generates it; so within the computer generating the simulation, some instructions will be 'assembly instructions' to tell the computer machinery what to do to generate the switch sequences which will be interpreted as the data for the simulation, thus simple state changes will require more operations: in physical reality, changing '1' to '0' seems a single operation; for virtual reality, the simulating program may have to translate a higher-level instruction like "change_state(quantum_string[1234567890])" into machine code to eventually locate the address of the bit tracking that state and direct the computer to mechanically change it from '1' to '0'; iow, there's a lot going on "behind the scenes" with virtual reality we needn't assume with physical reality)...
...to encapsulate the above point better (or worse): is there an inevitable ontological difference between virtual reality, which is prescribed by the computer program; and physical reality, which isn't -- necessarily at least, as far as we know (the universe itself may be a quantum computer, who knows? but not everyone is ready to abandon basic substance for "turtles all the way down" just yet) -- where the physical laws we observe are situated in a pre-existing spacetime vacuum that doesn't have to be described and to which things seem to conform, which seems to form things -- that's just the way the cookie crumbles / quanta fluctuate, so to speak -- rather than rule-following -- where the "physical laws" are specified by a computer program; that is relevant to consciousness? Even briefer: are relations really sufficient for consciousness, or must there be something there to relate?
Note: I don't have a clue, as usual; just asking...