westprog
Philosopher
- Joined
- Dec 1, 2006
- Messages
- 8,928
And yet simulated things are interacting in the simulation. Some imaginary world, eh ?
I've had to come up with my own definitions of many of the terms used here. So for a simulation, I suppose I would say that a simulation of a physical system is another physical system which has patterns of behaviour which are comparable to some degree. I dare say someone else could come up with an alternative, but that's close enough to work with.
So, we could consider (as I've mentioned before) the Earth-Moon system as a simulation of the Sun-Earth system. It's not perfect, of course - but it's quite close, and it has the advantage that it uses the same physical forces as the system being simulated. Certainly one could examine the Earth-Moon system and draw conclusions about Sun-Earth.
Now, are we to consider that there's an actual alternate world where the Earth is the Sun and the Moon is the Earth? And since the simulation works both ways, a world where the Sun is the Earth and the Earth is the Moon? And since any planetary system is a simulation of any other planetary system, they all have layers of simulated worlds which all include each other.
IMO, this is nonsensical. There are no "worlds of the simulation". There are similar patterns of behaviour. We can't say that the Earth is the Sun "inside the simulation". There is no "inside the simulation". If the Earth is to stand in for the Sun, it does so in our imagination.