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Elon Musk: 'One In Billions' Chance We're Not Living In A Computer Simulation (vox.com)

An anonymous reader writes: At Recode's annual Code Conference, Elon Musk explained how we are almost certainly living in a more advanced civilization's video game. He said: "The strongest argument for us being in a simulation probably is the following. Forty years ago we had pong. Like, two rectangles and a dot. That was what games were. Now, 40 years later, we have photorealistic, 3D simulations with millions of people playing simultaneously, and it's getting better every year. Soon we'll have virtual reality, augmented reality. If you assume any rate of improvement at all, then the games will become indistinguishable from reality, even if that rate of advancement drops by a thousand from what it is now. Then you just say, okay, let's imagine it's 10,000 years in the future, which is nothing on the evolutionary scale. So given that we're clearly on a trajectory to have games that are indistinguishable from reality, and those games could be played on any set-top box or on a PC or whatever, and there would probably be billions of such computers or set-top boxes, it would seem to follow that the odds that we're in base reality is one in billions. Tell me what's wrong with that argument. Is there a flaw in that argument?" You can watch Elon Musk's full interview on YouTube.

951 comments

  1. Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Is it just me or does it start to seem like ol' Elon is going senile?

    1. Re:Senile? by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 1, Troll

      Is it just me or does it start to seem like ol' Elon is going senile?

      He's rich, so he's just eccentric. And by that, I mean his axis is off center.

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    2. Re:Senile? by Bruce+Perens · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Is it just me or does it start to seem like ol' Elon is going senile?

      Not senile, but self-indulgent. Any college sophomore can deal with the same ideas and get nowhere. And then there's Mars. I fervently wish he'd leave off the Mars stuff until SpaceX was on a solid footing as a profitable launch company with rapid cadence.

    3. Re:Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Really?

      We already have a billion or so people who believe that our reality is God's dream.

      How is this any different?

    4. Re: Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      1.2 billion Catholics. 1.5 billion Muslims. Haven't even counted non-Catholic Christians. You're way off with your figures son.

    5. Re:Senile? by WhiplashII · · Score: 5, Interesting

      OK, people seem to be getting down on Elon here...

      Personally, I don't think we are in a game. I think that the primary use of such simulations will be to have "children" (those under the age of 1,000) experience the "bad old days" back when resources were bounded. So this is school, not a game. I guess we'll know if I'm right in about 50 years, on average.

      As for those that think this level of simulation is impossible, it isn't. There may be limits to hardware that prevent exponential increases from going on forever. But there are no such limitations for software. You can optimize the simulation by doing things like dropping information whenever you don't need it (quantum mechanics), and removing redundant calculations (as in, after a quadrillion people go through the same sim, it is unlikely they are actually coming up with anything original...)

      --
      while (sig==sig) sig=!sig;
    6. Re: Senile? by AchilleTalon · · Score: 0, Troll

      Even non-Abrahamic religions believe in a grand design or something like that. In short, Musk is a religious freak.

      --
      Achille Talon
      Hop!
    7. Re: Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was specifically referencing Hinduism and the concept of Maya
      http://www.hinduwebsite.com/hinduism/essays/maya.asp

    8. Re:Senile? by Teancum · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I fervently wish he'd leave off the Mars stuff until SpaceX was on a solid footing as a profitable launch company with rapid cadence.

      How can you say that SpaceX is not profitable at the moment? They have not had an investment round for several years now, except for the Google investment that seems to be aimed at something other that building rockets. SpaceX is also going to have well over a dozen launches at the current launch rate unless there is a major glitch that appears which would ground the launch fleet.

      This comment would have been appropriate in 2009 or earlier when SpaceX was still flying the Falcon 1 and still struggling to simply get into orbit with only announced plans for the Falcon 9 and some test hardware in the assembly line. That is no longer the case right now.

      If Elon Musk succeeds at sending a probe to Mars in 2018 like he already announced, it isn't just talking about Mars but rather actually going there. He also committed to sending at least one payload to Mars on every Hohmann Transfer Orbit opportunity between the Earth and Mars for as long as the company exists in the future (and mentioned in the above video). The question isn't just pontificating about what the future could be like, but rather holding actual hardware that will be on the surface of Mars in a definite time table.

      When companies talk about spaceflight, I always look at "bent metal" to see how serious they are about getting the job done. SpaceX certainly has plenty of bent metal to prove they are serious about going into space and a growing resume of completed missions in space.

    9. Re:Senile? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      No, he's just preemptively arguing against any notion that we should have free wheels.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    10. Re:Senile? by starless · · Score: 4, Informative

      The idea that we are living inside a simulation is far from original from Musk.
      Perhaps the most prominent contemporary proponent of this idea is the philosopher Nick Bostrom.
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      It's also peripherally related to the idea of a Boltzmann brain
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    11. Re:Senile? by eth1 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Is it just me or does it start to seem like ol' Elon is going senile?

      Not senile, but self-indulgent. Any college sophomore can deal with the same ideas and get nowhere. And then there's Mars. I fervently wish he'd leave off the Mars stuff until SpaceX was on a solid footing as a profitable launch company with rapid cadence.

      Isn't the entire purpose of SpaceX to get to Mars? The rocket launch business is just to fund things and develop the technology.

      I suspect this is why there hasn't been a rush to go public - it could scupper that long-term mission when investors start demanding moar profits NOW.

    12. Re: Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      totally. but hey it's Elin fr*in' Musk! He knows!

    13. Re:Senile? by plopez · · Score: 1

      He's the Howard Hughes of our time....

      --
      putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
    14. Re:Senile? by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

      Isn't the entire purpose of SpaceX to get to Mars? The rocket launch business is just to fund things and develop the technology.

      Indeed. Elon has said that his goal is to die on Mars. SpaceX is just a means to that end. He talks about Mars because that is the ultimate purpose of it all.

    15. Re: Senile? by nikkipolya · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Even non-Abrahamic religions believe in a grand design or something like that.

      Not for most Buddhist's and Hindu's. Jains are agnostic and so are some schools of Buddhism and some now extinct schools of Hinduism. In fact a major school of Hindu Philosophy believes that the whole universe is unreal (Maya). Therefore, yes, Musk could be a religious fellow.

    16. Re:Senile? by roman_mir · · Score: 0

      Would that be free wheels as in beer can be free or are we talking about free willies?

    17. Re: Senile? by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Musk is becoming the later life version of Nicholas Tesla.

      Ultra rich people run the risk of being surrounded by people who will agree with anything they say or do.

    18. Re:Senile? by Berkyjay · · Score: 1

      Just like that huh? Just drops some info here and there or removing redundancy? The casual way you in which you sum up very VERY complex issues shows that you have zero idea as to what you speak of. Musk is like the rest of the people who click on one of those "Science is Awesome" Facebook links and thinks they're all of a sudden Stephen Hawking. He may have vision and a ton of money, but neither of those makes you a genius. Besides, it's easy to say extraordinary things when there is no hope to prove you wrong...A.K.A. every religion forever and ever.

    19. Re: Senile? by Bruce+Perens · · Score: 4, Insightful

      SpaceX is not yet operating at the cadence that could make reuse profitable, and they have not yet reflown the returned boosters. This is more important than simple profitability of the company, because it drives down the gateway cost of space. IMO that is critical for the human race.

    20. Re: Senile? by slashrio · · Score: 1

      Ok, so he gave a lower bound estimate.
      Please elaborate where his argument is basically wrong.
      Heck, the religions even suggest to us that we and the rest we can observe are created by some being, what more hints would you like to receive. :)

      --
      "Trump!!", the new Godwin.
    21. Re: Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "Is there a flaw in that argument?"
      Yes, the Amish.

    22. Re:Senile? by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      How dare you claim to be original for calling one of Elon Musk's ideas unoriginal.

    23. Re: Senile? by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Why do Buddhists and Hindus own mysterious things but the Jains don't?

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    24. Re:Senile? by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      I fervently wish he'd leave off the Mars stuff until SpaceX was on a solid footing as a profitable launch company with rapid cadence.

      I'm not quite sure how that kind of thinking would this time avoid a replay of the Space Shuttle clusterfuck.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    25. Re:Senile? by thinkwaitfast · · Score: 1
      If you follow through to the logical conclusion, it is this exactly. Unless there is a hardware failure, how can a computer program decide not to follow instructions not explicitly coded? At the machine code level how could an if-then-else structure take a path that was non deterministic? Could you write a program that has free will where you are not able to step the code backward and find exactly why a particular branch was taken? Free will requires a black box that you cannot look inside of.

      If you can't look inside of it, then does it exist in the universe, ie, is it material? God of the gaps, filling in magic where science cannot look. Or if you can look, then it has physical rules that must be followed, rules that you can work backwards from to the creation of the universe and hence no free will.

    26. Re:Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe this kind of simulation is not possible but I assume that science inside the simulation is the same as outside of it.

      You need a system at least as complex as Earth (as quantum level) to simulate Earth (at quantum level). I am assuming here we are all sharing the same simulation.

      If you all aren't figments of my simulation...

    27. Re:Senile? by LQ · · Score: 2

      The idea that we are living inside a simulation is far from original from Musk. Perhaps the most prominent contemporary proponent of this idea is the philosopher Nick Bostrom. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      It's also peripherally related to the idea of a Boltzmann brain https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      When I first heard this hypothesis I started thinking about how you would model an infinite universe. The distances between the stars compared to the lifespan of a human could be an artificial barrier to limit the size of the simulation.

    28. Re: Senile? by arglebargle_xiv · · Score: 2

      Jainism has all sorts of cool stuff that other religions don't get, so I don't think they're feeling left out. OTOH they don't get pepper steak or roast pork with crackling, which for me is a major loss in a religion.

    29. Re: Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So Total Recall, explains his talk about simulation.

    30. Re:Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's using Mars as a vehicle to promote himself and his investments. He can afford to waste a few million here and there on dead-end projects that have massive news coverage across various sectors. You know what? The investment in these projects is less than 1% of what it actually costs to get the same exposure via advertising. Don't be taken in by these silly side projects the mega-wealthy do, it's all a ruse to keep their name and companies under the spot-light, and to feed the fanboy/zealot arm that does most of their PR for them.

      The fact it also shits up the incumbent players is a funny side-effect, which may even lead to something better.

    31. Re:Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yet he has done more by lunch than you have in your entire lifetime...

      He has the right to enjoy a bit of crazy once in a while.

    32. Re: Senile? by pipingguy · · Score: 1

      Maya is UnReal software for 3D stuff.

    33. Re: Senile? by Xicor · · Score: 1

      i would say he is probably close to the right value actually, because the vast majority of each religion isnt actually that religious. most christians believe in evolution.

    34. Re: Senile? by AchilleTalon · · Score: 0

      Did I say ALL non-Abrahamic religions believe in a grand design or something like that? No. The point is Elon Musk is believing into a grand design scheme if he believes we are living into a computer simulation or game and the amount of people believing into something like that is much larger than 3 billion people worldwide.

      Musk is obviously a religious freak. His strong faith into space quest is a remanant of protestantism were biblical texts are interpreted in a way the human kind is born to conquer the stars and dominate the universe. This is the very roots of his entrepreneurship.

      --
      Achille Talon
      Hop!
    35. Re:Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or even this one:

      https://science.slashdot.org/story/16/04/23/0051211/neil-degrasse-tyson-says-its-very-likely-the-universe-is-a-simulation

    36. Re: Senile? by Ihlosi · · Score: 1
      The point is Elon Musk is believing into a grand design scheme if he believes we are living into a computer simulation or game

      It's not a grand design scheme. The computer running the simulation could have assembled spontaneously after 10^10^y years of a bunch of silicon and other elements just sitting around.

      Anything that can happen by design can also happen by random coincidence. It might just be really, really improbable and therefore might take quite a while to occur. However, if observation time can be made arbitrarily long, it will occur eventually.

    37. Re:Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Think of this simulation idea what you like. But if Musk isn't a genius, then who is ? How do you imagine he came across that ton of money ? Not that money is an indication of intelligence, but I think in this case the two might be related.

    38. Re: Senile? by sosume · · Score: 0

      This theory could easily replace existing religions with something more believable than a bearded man sitting on a cloud. In this case our supreme being would be a software engineer. If we are made in "His Image" than it follows that this engineer is most likely human as well and we are in a "planet evolution simulator", built by humans in "base reality" (probably. Nothing suggests that the simulation itself isn't recursively running in another simulation, a case of AI gone haywire). All hail our prophet Elon!

    39. Re:Senile? by Cantankerous+Cur · · Score: 2

      Actually, that's not really good counterproof at all. While the world is complicated, all is cause and effect. Free-will is nothing but an illusion. You make decisions based on your physical state and the information you have at the moment. And you will always make the same decision given the same state/input. (Unless you're chaotic neutral, in which case the chance is 50%)

      The better counterargument is intuition and insight. It seems far harder to me to program the irrational leaps in logic that come to a correct conclusion.

    40. Re: Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even if they don't refly the boosters, there's a tonne of salvageable parts - 9 whole merlin engines. Plus they get to test the first stage after a GTO launch and see what can be done to improve it. Literally no other launch company can do that

    41. Re:Senile? by MitchDev · · Score: 1, Funny

      Way past senile into "Batshit Carzy" territory...

    42. Re:Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True but give it time. Just like Tesla the fanboys will run around until claiming he was the first of anything he said or did. He'll be given credit for inventing the EV, self driving cars, rockets that can be landed and a ton of other things. Massive numbers of people already give him credit for inventing PayPal and to those same people that's as good as saying he invented eCommerce and online payments. He'll be another rallying point for the unknowning who are to lazy to read the history and understand how the process of invention and innovation really work.

    43. Re: Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only if the simulation runs at real time.

      No one claimed our simulation was running at real time.

    44. Re: Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I fervently wish he'd leave off the Mars stuff until SpaceX was on a solid footing as a profitable launch company"

      Why do you even care? It's his money, his business, he can do whatever he likes. Maybe profits aren't everything to everybody.

    45. Re:Senile? by JoeMerchant · · Score: 1

      There aren't "any limits in software" but progress in software hasn't been anywhere near what it has been in hardware.

      The main argument against us "living in a simulation" for me is, that if the observable universe is just as real as the dirt under our feet, the scale of it is so massively larger than anything that we could hope to simulate with our present tech.

      Now, if all this incident light from outside the solar system is just simulated, then, maybe.....

    46. Re:Senile? by hideki.adam · · Score: 1

      Not to mention wave particle duality. That just reeks of rendering optimisation. Only rendering fully the particles when they're being measured, otherwise average it out to save cpu time.

    47. Re:Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess we can count on these future fictional dudes to create super games where the NPCs are actually self-aware AI (at least self awareness bounded on not seeing the Matrix for the trees). But it seems dangerous to create self-awareness like that. I'd really rather have my NPCs not be able to create new knowledge...

    48. Re: Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like a being who can create things on a whim?

    49. Re: Senile? by arth1 · · Score: 1

      Well, for one thing, it's not "his" argument.
      It's been floating around for a while, and is one of the multiple universe models popularized through books like Brian Greene's "The Hidden Reality".
      Many even seem to think it's radical thinking that Musk came up with. It is neither.

      That this is blown up to big proportions right now when Musk says it tells us more about how society reacts to Elon Musk than anything else.

    50. Re:Senile? by nanodec · · Score: 1

      Is Musk the next Howard Hughes? If he stops bathing, cutting his hair and nails we'll know for sure...

    51. Re: Senile? by Diss+Champ · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I don't really buy the "we are a simulation" thing, but taking your logic to it's reasonable conclusion the simulation could well be run by a bearded man using the cloud. In which case the the major monotheistic religions have had it basically right for quite a while.

    52. Re:Senile? by houghi · · Score: 1

      I could go back a bit further https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
      1637.

      The only thing that has been added in true dot com fashion "on the Intertubes". The question remains if we are real or not and what is real.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    53. Re:Senile? by nintendoeats · · Score: 1

      It's not just you.

    54. Re:Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Religion can very very very VERY easily be proven wrong.
      Like it's not even a challenge.
      Every single one of the religions can be proven wrong.

      What cannot be proven is the assertion "there is no god". Just like you cannot prove there are no unicorns. You cannot prove a negative.

      What he is saying can be proven wrong: find something that exists in reality but cannot be accurately simulated on a computer, given enough ressources. If you find that, it definitely proves we are not living in a simulation. Short of that, there is no way to tell either way.

    55. Re:Senile? by nycsubway · · Score: 1

      Not senile. The dude just thinks too much. He's also smoking the peyote... a lot of it.

    56. Re:Senile? by starless · · Score: 1

      I could go back a bit further https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
      1637.

      The only thing that has been added in true dot com fashion "on the Intertubes". The question remains if we are real or not and what is real.

      But the idea of computer simulations does go beyond Descartes by giving one the probabilistic argument that it's more likely that we live in a simulation than the "real" world.

    57. Re:Senile? by phrostie · · Score: 1

      He's not the first to bring this up.
      I think last time it was neil degrasse tyson.

      I consider it an interesting thought experiment.

      what I wonder is, does that make us the players or the npc's?
      how could we tell?

    58. Re:Senile? by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Is it just me or does it start to seem like ol' Elon is going senile?

      Or found a source of kickass weed.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    59. Re: Senile? by avgjoe62 · · Score: 4, Funny

      "...a bearded man sitting on a cloud."

      But the Woz hates clouds.

      At least we know that the bearded man, whoever he/she is, isn't George R. R. Martin or else we'd all be dead by now...

      --

      How come Slashdot never gets Slashdotted?

    60. Re:Senile? by The-Ixian · · Score: 1

      You sound like a closet Elon fanboy

      --
      My eyes reflect the stars and a smile lights up my face.
    61. Re:Senile? by citizenr · · Score: 1

      I could go back a bit further https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
      1637.

      then there is Allegory of the Cave

      --
      Who logs in to gdm? Not I, said the duck.
    62. Re:Senile? by citizenr · · Score: 1

      we actually dont (free _will_)

      http://www.nature.com/neuro/jo...
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      one of defence mechanisms employed by human brain is building narratives fixing cognitive dissonance post facto, aka illusion of free will

      --
      Who logs in to gdm? Not I, said the duck.
    63. Re:Senile? by ultranova · · Score: 1

      I think that the primary use of such simulations will be to have "children" (those under the age of 1,000) experience the "bad old days" back when resources were bounded.

      Why would you want children to experience scarcity if none exists? What are they going to get from it, aside from various psychological issues, such as compulsive hoarding?

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    64. Re: Senile? by DevsVult · · Score: 1

      The use of rockets to lift stuff into orbit is a stop-gap measure until we build a beanstalk, so efficiency is more of a nice-to-have than something to worry about in the limit.

      --
      // DevsVult: The Machines Will It
    65. Re:Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But this would violate relativity! Therefore we cannot be living in such a simulation.

    66. Re: Senile? by Teancum · · Score: 1

      There is still a whole lot of work that needs to happen before boosters are even reused. At the very least, SpaceX needs to restart their F9R development program, which halted due to the one test vehicle blowing up over central Texas. Legitimately SpaceX decided against building a replacement because they thought they were far enough along to at least recover in one estimate about 50% of the boosters and with the launch rate that would have a half dozen by the end of last year. The CRS-7 explosion also set that timeline back a bit further.

      I am expecting that the current recovered boosters (beyond the first recovered booster that is already slated to become a monument at SpaceX headquarters) will be flown extensive in both Texas and in New Mexico (Spaceport America). It will likely be an aggressive program to fly and refly those boosters over and over again until several of them crater into the ground to push the limits of what they can be doing, spending just manpower to deal with them and the minor cost of the fuel. SpaceX has also said that a couple of the boosters have already been pulled apart for a deep level engineering review to see how the engines have performed, and that at least some of the parts and pieces are already slated to be reused in future flights even if it isn't the full cores yet. Very likely there will be at least some Merlin engines that will make a flight very soon a second time, which is already a huge savings.

      It will take several years before SpaceX will take a recovered core and re-integrate on the spot with a new upper stage and payload. I agree that is the standard being aimed for, but the recovery is just the first of a long, long process of getting there.

    67. Re:Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It would have to be different to be taken seriously. Musk has gotten caught up in a religion.

    68. Re:Senile? by tinkerton · · Score: 1

      Nobody knows these people. The Matrix though, everyone knows that. Though there the people in the simulation are somehow more real than the simulation.

    69. Re: Senile? by dave420 · · Score: 1

      You are conflating some very different ideas, based on some superficial understanding you have of them. Don't do that. He might be expressing ideas somewhat reminiscent of religious beliefs, but there is a rather large difference: There is actual grounding for his position, as opposed to stories passed down generation-to-generation in order to explain the complexities of their universe beyond their comprehension.

      It's always tempting to make a tiny leap of logic to condemn someone you don't like, but it's clearly not a very rational thing to do.

    70. Re:Senile? by umghhh · · Score: 1

      7.2b human apes and all barred the demented or still not developed ones are believing something that being religion or some other shit like computer simulation - these all ideas have one thing in common and that is they are not verifiable which means they amount to mental masturbation. Looking at the bright side some of those are less lethal than others so we have a chance to develop this simulation Eons is blathering about. Still chance that something real bad happens before are I think bigger - it does not have to be big rock from the skies, if technology is developing this fast we will soon have one that allows to wipe out majority or all by accident or malfeasance of some moron.
      That we are developing games so fast as to be able to produce realistic simulation of reality for all is one big assumption but I take that may even be. This however does not have bearing on whether we live in a simulation or not. Mr Musk is just fallacing around.

    71. Re:Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you can't assume that. The simulation could be based on sorcery in a universe where magic is more than the art of illusion.

      Of course this is all stoner-talk, and has nothing to do with reality.

    72. Re:Senile? by Jhon · · Score: 1

      Zeno, son. About 2500 years ago, he inadvertently proved we live in a digital world when he described what the fsck Parmenides was talking about.

      Look up the paradox of the tortoise and Achilles. There's only so "small" you can slice space up...

    73. Re: Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I'm so fucking sick of the way we fawn over every dribbling turd that falls from the mouth of a billionaire as though they were the embodies beating heart of wisdom.

      I don't give a fuck her own rich Elon is. This is idiotic nonsense that would not even have been noticed had it been said by anyone else. And his being a billionaire doesn't add one iota to the empirical testability or logical substance of this assertion.

      Why the fuck do we act like teenage girls at a Justin Bieber concert whenever Elon, Jobs, or whatever rich pundit flavour of the month says something?

    74. Re:Senile? by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Perhaps the most prominent contemporary proponent of this idea is the philosopher Nick Bostrom.

      That the most prominent proponent of a physical theory is a philosopher rather than a scientist or a mathematician seems to suggest that the theory is more popular amongst those who do not have the means to actually evaluate it than those who do.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    75. Re:Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dying on Mars is definitely possible with current technology, but I'd rather live on Earth than die on Mars.

    76. Re:Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Software has as many limitations as hardware.

      The fundamental flaw with Mr Musk's sensationalist statement (which was done solely to garner attention) is that it makes the classic flaw of taking a simplistic view of a short term pattern and tries to project it out to absurdity. That always results in a flawed projection as nothing in nature projects that way. In fact, most natural systems oscillate - going one way for a while before contravening forces take it back in some other direction.

      In terms of "10,000 year being nothing on an evolutionary scale", that is also nonsense. Mankind has not created a single thing that has lasted 10,000 years. Societies have a hard time lasting more than a few hundred years. This is the difference between reality and fiction. In fiction, we find lost societies with machines that have run a million years without people. In reality even with constant maintenance, it is difficult to keep a machine running for more than about 50 years. Try leaving your car in your garage (a nice, weather-resistant environment) for 5 years and then see if you can even get it to start (I can tell you from personal experience, it won't).

    77. Re:Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      An appreciation for the fact that scarcity exists somewhere?
      A sympathy for others facing scarcity?
      A desire to avoid doing anything that could wreck a scarcity free life?
      You know teach them to be caring and not self centered.

    78. Re: Senile? by MrL0G1C · · Score: 1

      You're assuming that the physical laws of our universe would be the same as in the universe in which our simulation exists. The external universe could have more dimensions or completely different laws of nature (to even say physics implies a physical universe which it might not be.).

      --
      Waterfox - a Firefox fork with legacy extension support, security updates and better privacy by default.
    79. Re:Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have an odd definition of fanboy.

    80. Re:Senile? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Sorting out some of the technology for a Mars colony is going to take decades (eg. the NASA horticulture experiments in Antarctica) so IMHO there's nothing wrong with starting on things decades before we can ship stuff and people out there. Just landing is a challenge even after getting there.

    81. Re: Senile? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      IMO that is critical for the human race.

      There's a lot more going on with space than one small company putting a triivial amount of resources into solving these problems compared with several government agencies.

    82. Re: Senile? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      More Edison that Tesla by a long shot. To find something a bit closer to Tesla look at the guys designing the rockets instead of their boss. The "later life" Tesla was shooting in the dark and trying to guess what he hit instead of having a modern understanding of radio waves.

    83. Re: Senile? by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

      Later life Tesla went batshit. They quietly paid for his apartment and let him feed his pigeons.

    84. Re:Senile? by Wargames · · Score: 1

      The difference between the appearance of self awareness to self awareness is essentially what makes us alive. That difference cannot be coded.

      No one here gets out alive.

      --
      -- Each tock of the Planck clock is a new world and here we are still life. --
    85. Re:Senile? by tchdab1 · · Score: 1

      I'd rather believe he's joking than serious. forget spaghetti - replace Russell's teapot with a gamer?
      "Prove me wrong - you can't do it" is not proof you're right.

    86. Re:Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [[ I fervently wish he'd leave off the Mars stuff until SpaceX was on a solid footing as a profitable launch company with rapid cadence. ]]

      SpaceX's entire business life has been about learning how to do the next thing (or two) while doing the thing they actually need to do next.

    87. Re: Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      this rings plausibly to me. thak you.

    88. Re: Senile? by CaptainLard · · Score: 1

      Wasn't the later life version of Tesla broke? In any case its good that we have a bunch of /. commenters to tell Musk he's wrong otherwise he'd be in real trouble.

    89. Re:Senile? by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

      Dying on Mars is definitely possible with current technology

      It is possible, but not affordable. Elon's total net worth is ~$12B. That is nowhere near enough to get a live person to Mars so he can die there. The tech has to improve so the cost can come down. The cost bottleneck is getting from the earth's surface to LEO. So that is what he is working on.

    90. Re:Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's you. It appears no one here watched the whole interview. This topic came up because some guy in the audience asked Musk about this idea that we're all just a simulation. Musk's first response was that he has thought about it ad nauseum and he doesn't really want to spend any more of his time talking about it. In fact, he and his brother have declared the topic off-limits if one is in a hot-tub. Musk tried to get out of talking about it, but Mossberger and (whoever the woman was) seemed to be just all wide-eyed about the idea as if they'd never heard of it. So, Musk said while the probability isn't zero, he thinks it's one in billions which was his way of ending the discussion so he can move on to more practical things to think about.

      Go watch the interview. You'll see how he really doesn't want to waste time on this topic.

    91. Re: Senile? by Godwin+O'Hitler · · Score: 1

      His argument is flawed because it just passes the buck.
      Does the superior civilization who is running the simulation deduce that it too must be in one by the same reasoning?

      --
      No, your children are not the special ones. Nor are your pets.
    92. Re:Senile? by leptons · · Score: 1

      He's only human after all. He got rich on the internet early on, then started a few more companies that are doing fairly cutting-edge things.None of that means he's on to something when he talks about our universe being a computer simulation. He's just as error-prone as anyone, the mind can trick itself into believing almost anything. I have no doubt that like other tech visionaries, he uses marijuana (maybe a little too much?), which could explain this line of thought. He's also a little too sure of himself, bolstered by the yes-men around him. The sad part is all the millions of Elon fans might hear this and start to think it's possibly true. It's a shame he said this publicly, it doesn't make him look smarter for having said it.

    93. Re: Senile? by Aighearach · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Jainism is a refuted doctrine with very few followers. (about 5 million worldwide) It was growing at the time of Siddhartha ("the Buddha") and indeed many Buddhist moral teachings are phrased specifically as comparisons with what Jain was teaching.

      The reason I say "refuted" is that one of the most important beliefs is a sort of strict compliance non-violence; if you step on a bug, and it dies, you have murdered a living being. It is the same as premeditated murder of a human. It was an interesting idea, but it does not survive the microscope; you can't eat vegetables without also eating lots of living animals.

      That is connected to the standard Buddhist concept of non-violence, which instead of being strict is based on intent. The formulation given is also a major moral debate with the Jainists during Siddhartha's life. The idea is that a monk who is sweeping the path and kills some ants that are on the path has not committed murder, because his intent is only to clean the path; he did not approach the path with the broom for the purpose of killing ants. And there is no way to sweep the path without some ants dying. A Jainist commits murder if his broom kills an ant, regardless of his intent, regardless of if he even saw the ant or had any way to avoid harming it.

      The Buddhist concept of vegetarianism is also rooted in intent; it is not allowed for a monk to eat meat that was killed or purchased for him, but he is allowed to eat leftovers that would otherwise go to waste. And the test is if he believes, thinks, or suspects that the food was prepared specifically for him or for his visit. If his presence didn't cause the animal to be killed, then he has no moral involvement in the killing of the animal. But if it was prepared with the intent of feeding him, or more specifically if he thinks that might be true, then he has a share of the moral harm of killing the animal.

      There are other examples; Jainism is a philosophy that was mostly superseded by Buddhism and Hinduism for real, physical reasons relating to how possible it is to follow it even if you're trying. That's why there are only 5 million followers, when there were probably more than that 2 thousand years ago.

    94. Re:Senile? by MitchDev · · Score: 0

      Just as delusional as religious folks :)

    95. Re: Senile? by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      What if the Deists already believe that "bearded man in cloud" is just an artistic representation crafted for children and cave-people?

      I certainly have met Christians who say, "Why couldn't God have used evolution as his paint brush? And why would anybody think he'd have been able to explain the details to Moses? The Book doesn't have a physics section because nobody would have understood it when it was written, and new books aren't written post-Jesus." This is often implied by the phrase "liberal Christian." Liberal here not meaning politics, but a broad willingness to consider different ideas.

      That's the funny thing about Faith; if they have enough of it, they can not only accept a man-in-the-cloud, they can also just modify their beliefs to match physical realities. People can have a lot of debates about God, but it is indisputable that Faith can encompass the full range of beliefs and allows for any set of beliefs to be adopted.

    96. Re:Senile? by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Could you write a program that has free will where you are not able to step the code backward and find exactly why a particular branch was taken? Free will requires a black box that you cannot look inside of. If you can't look inside of it, then does it exist in the universe, ie, is it material?

      Well, every quantum system is such a black box, so it certainly exists - for example, measuring a particle's spin along an axis and then subsequently along an orthogonal axis is both easy and gives answers which are, according to current physics, completely random (for the second measurement). But what does that have to do with free will? If I base my decisions on random number generator, in what sense are they "free"? Whereas anyone who knows me can probably predict what I want with reasonable accuracy.

      People still hold some vague notion of the soul as a "little man inside you" which is currently shackled to your mortal body but not inherently bound to any rules, not even logic. That's the only framework where thinking (physical) determinism undermines your free will makes sense, but falls apart as soon as you ascribe things like personality - which determines preferences, also known as what you want - to people.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    97. Re:Senile? by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      "It isn't impossible" is the ultimate straw-man; nothing can be proved to be impossible.

      The question isn't, "what refutes this idea?" but "what supports this idea." In that way, Elon starts out off the rails and never makes any sort of reasoned argument at all.

      What he proves is that his idea is not falsifiable but that doesn't mean it is 1000-1 likely to be true; it means that it is such a poor idea that it is not even testable and should be discarded. It will not result in a hypothesis; it is pure Plato's Cave guessing.

    98. Re: Senile? by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      SpaceX is not yet operating at the cadence that could make reuse profitable, and they have not yet reflown the returned boosters. This is more important than simple profitability of the company, because it drives down the gateway cost of space. IMO that is critical for the human race.

      Being profitable + doing serious R&D on reuse = the path to profitable reuse.

      I've been reading your comments for a couple decades and usually they're more insightful than this one. ;) They don't need to be "operating at a[n imposed] cadence" they need to be operating with the appropriate feedbacks and incentives to get there. The cadence might follow any of a variety of patterns, even while progress is continuous and regular.

    99. Re:Senile? by ultranova · · Score: 1

      An appreciation for the fact that scarcity exists somewhere?

      Why would it? If you have abundance, and care about this issue enough to traumatize your children over it, surely you'd just use your unbounded resources to uplift that "somewhere else" to your level?

      A sympathy for others facing scarcity?

      How about actually doing something to help them, then? By, for example, letting them access your unlimited stuff?

      A desire to avoid doing anything that could wreck a scarcity free life?

      Like taking impressionable youth and teaching them to value power, then introducing them to the idea of artifical scarcity?

      You know teach them to be caring and not self centered.

      By making them live in - and be indoctrinated into the values of - a society where selfishness is openly worshipped?

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    100. Re: Senile? by Bruce+Perens · · Score: 1

      Mars isn't "serious R&D on reuse". Mars is just Elon's personal quest. And it's a quest well worth doing, just not before SpaceX has made earth-orbital space cheap to access.

      It's sort of ludicrous that having escaped a gravity well, the first thing Elon wants to do is dive back in. Habitats in orbital space and on the Moon (note the size of the LM ascent stage compared to a Falcon 9) are a better environment for colonization than Mars would be before terraforming, because people on Mars would have to live in habitats anyway.

      Regarding the cadence, SpaceX forecast 18 launches this year, which was a reasonable cadence for them to attempt to achieve. If Eutelsat goes well they will have achieved 6 in the first half of the year.

    101. Re: Senile? by recharged95 · · Score: 1

      But we are a simulation.

      Reason being that I always called simulations, turning a bunch of knobs to get the answer you want vs the answer one gets. It's 100% control basically in reality's sense and humankind like that aspect (that "we" are in control)...

    102. Re:Senile? by sdguero · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure the most prominent contemporary proponents are the Wachowski borthers... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    103. Re:Senile? by thinkwaitfast · · Score: 1

      It's only a black box if you believe that it does not follow rules, even if you do not understand what those rules are (god of the gaps). You cannot have free will in a system that follows rules

    104. Re: Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Musk is becoming the later life version of Nicholas Tesla.

      This is not about Elon Musk. This is about Nick Bostrom, whose [deep and thoughtful] ideas he is parroting.

    105. Re:Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What I would ask Elon is "If the advancement of our video game technology is the measure you are using to say that we live in a simulation and presuming our 'users' are also advancing their tech, why hasn't everything in our real life advanced just as quickly? Why don't the 'graphics' of real life look better this year than last?"

      I don't doubt that we could be existing within a simulation, but the way he reached his conclusion is just stupid.

    106. Re:Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hold it, did CA legalize weed?

    107. Re:Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Venus sounds crazier to most but is more plausible of a mission than Mars. It is closer to Earth, has a lower escape velocity than Mars because you don't have to land on the surface, the temperature in the upper atmosphere is closer to livable with proper environment control, you can build skyscraper sized building on a platform in the upper atmosphere using oxygen to keep it afloat because it is far lighter than the atmosphere. Any leaks would be slow and could be repaired easily, versus a leak on Mars which would be explosive. The sulfuric acid in the atmosphere is an issue, but with the right materials can be mitigated. People talk a lot about going to Mars, but any mission there is a one-way suicide. Venus missions are sustainable, and you can easily come back from them.

    108. Re: Senile? by Rakshasa+Taisab · · Score: 1

      SpaceX has, even with the experiments and what not, remained at $60M per launch, which is drastically lower than the competition.

      During that time they've managed to recover multiple first-stage boosters. Even before the serious ROI concerns the company is doing these things. So even if SpaceX doesn't manage to recycle they still got the production pipeline for the engines that will scale, other things will scale, etc, just as most other kinds of businesses.

      --
      - These characters were randomly selected.
    109. Re:Senile? by BaronAaron · · Score: 1

      It's not that we don't understand the rules of quantum mechanics, it's likely they are truly unknowable, at least, by beings living in our universe. From our perspective, and that's the only perspective we have, the universe is non-deterministic. Once you accept our universe is non-deterministic then it's not a big leap of logic to accept free will.

      Again, this is from our perspective, not some hyper dimensional god/programmer/being who can see the dice being rolled and might think our notion of free will is silly.

    110. Re: Senile? by Bruce+Perens · · Score: 1

      There are a few little issues that have to get resolved first, like making equatorial orbit space squeaky clean out to geostationary orbit and keeping it that way. Otherwise, your tether falls the first time anything of size hits it, and the energy on the ground is about equal to a thermonuclear bomb attack.

    111. Re: Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NECK-bearded er...man... living in his ...ah... Parent's basement.

      Worst. Sim. EVER...

    112. Re:Senile? by MHolmesIV · · Score: 1

      No, he was asked a leading question by someone about us being in a simulation, and answered it using the standard philosophical argument people use for the simulation argument. And then he clarified that he and his brother are no longer allowed to discuss these things in hot tubs anymore.

      Everyone, I assume, has entertained these ideas and thought about them. He didn't bring it up, he wasn't out to make some real point. You can use similar arguments to argue that we are at, or close to, one of the last human generations, or that the traffic in the other lane really does go faster.

      They are all examples of the observation selection effect, wherein you make the assumption that you as the observer are a randomly chosen sample in the population space. In my mind, that right there is the trouble with all the arguments using that principle. You start out with an assumption of the distribution of a random sample, then you _force_ that random sample to be you, and then make conclusions based on the (no longer) random sample. Any conclusions made after the force are not valid. Just like in magic, if every time the magician shows you a "random" card from a deck, it's the 3 of clubs, then obviously the whole deck contains only 3 of clubs, right?

    113. Re: Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're dripping with jealousy.

    114. Re:Senile? by Mr0bvious · · Score: 1

      You fake it.

      --
      Never happened. True story.
    115. Re: Senile? by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 1

      His argument is flawed because it just passes the buck. Does the superior civilization who is running the simulation deduce that it too must be in one by the same reasoning?

      Another case of Turtles all the way down

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    116. Re: Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the same way that I'm jealous of Justin Bieber and Miley Cyrus.

    117. Re: Senile? by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      Disappointing that you switched to Mars in the middle there. What we were talking about was reuse of rockets.

      The reason it is disappointing is that it shows you didn't even consider another explanation, you're ready to engage in logical fallacy rather than confront another perspective.

      You talk more about cadence, but you didn't first disagree with my claim cadence is not a viable measure of research progress, so it is hard to know what you intended to convey other than that you didn't understand what I wrote before you responded to it. Why is "cadence" important at all? It obviously would matter to the short term cash flow of a company, but how could the short term cadence of results tell you about what research progress is being made? If one company is launching more satellites and not researching reuse, and another never launches a real payload but commits lots of money to bench testing components for reusability, with the eventual aim of doing launch tests, who is more likely to eventually have reusable rockets? I say the company whose actions are part of a goal of reuse is going to make more progress to that goal than a company that isn't interested in it and doesn't believe it is profitable to research.

      As for Mars, if you're not interested in it, why be against it? It will clearly advance various parts of the technology involved in space flight. The great thing about diving back into a gravity well quickly is that it is harder than just flying around once you're out there. The technology is not yet at the point where it is practicable to do something useful other than pure science once you're out there; and those things are only about payload and do not advance the vehicles at a very fast rate. It seems to me that something somewhat pointless but that is a clear, visible goal is what is needed to push the vehicle technology forwards.

      Do you actually perceive a pressing need for more satellites? It seems to me there might be too many being sent up for stupid short-term commercial reasons that will seriously pollute orbit. What if they made the same number of launches, but didn't deliver anything? That might actually get humans into space sooner.

      Orbital habitats are a great idea, and in my view (having read a lot of science fiction) that is an important goal for humanity, so that we can survive various disasters that Earth has experienced in the past. Maybe you haven't considered the similarity between a journey to Mars, and important parts of the orbital habitat technology ecosystem? For example, if you want to populate habitats, it seems like escape pods of some sort would be prudent. Orbital habitats could be vital insurance for humanity, but the habitats themselves will be higher risk on a day to day (or millennium to millennium) basis. Having evacuation available would help encourage a quality cross-section of humanity to be represented. When you go to Mars, you're sending something out on an extended trip and then dropping it back into a gravity well; that might not be the technology of the habitat, but it might be the technology of the escape pods. Think bigger. (plus, it gets people interested in space and that brings money, but you knew that part even before you overlooked it)

      And why is cheap access to orbit a good goal? That creates a lot of very expensive externalities relating to security...

    118. Re: Senile? by Bruce+Perens · · Score: 1

      Disappointing that you switched to Mars in the middle there. What we were talking about was reuse of rockets.

      The reason it is disappointing is that it shows you didn't even consider another explanation, you're ready to engage in logical fallacy rather than confront another perspective.

      Geez. When you use such a rhetorical device as this, you insult me, because it shows that you think I'm so dumb as to not see through it. If you want to have a discussion with me, you can do it without attacking the speaker and the speaker's choice of argument.

      I have been an active contributor to the AMSAT geostationary development and there is going to be a FEMA sponsored satellite with my stuff above your head in a couple years. Probably more than one. And I've had code on the Space Shuttle. I'm not just a space fanboy.

      The critical opportunity right now is economically very simple and easy to measure. It's reducing $/kg to LEO or GTO. Absolutely everything we do in space depends on that.

      If we go to Mars and don't tremendously reduce $/kg, we get something like the Apollo era. We send a few people but we never get to the point that we can do it without sucking the government tit, and the government can't long-term plan and is notoriously fickle about funding science. And then there's a war, and another William Proxmire who is more interested in subsidizing dairy farmers than science, and we put away our aspirations for three more generations.

      SpaceX is poised on the next step, in which reuse stops being a really impressive demo, stops being just research, and is actually executed in a way that creates a savings for space customers. We don't get that savings without significantly more launches. The fixed costs of operating SpaceX swamp the variable ones until they have a high enough cadence, and thus without the cadence reuse doesn't really save anything. And the customers are actually there on the SpaceX manifest! SpaceX just has to execute getting their missions launched sooner. So, it's just essential that SpaceX work on the economics of launch right now. A big part of SpaceX has to transition from being a research company to just executing on their existing technology. So, you're asking how cadence measures research progress, but I am not asking for research progress. It's time for economic progress.

      Thus, it didn't look so great when Elon, having done his first sea landing from a GTO injection, took his eyes off of the economic ball and immediately announced his Mars mission.

      There are lots of companies that just do research and never achieve the promise of their own technology. SpaceX shouldn't be one.

    119. Re: Senile? by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      You don't really make a convincing case that the Apollo era was bad for space technology. Maybe the alternative was simply to not develop any of that technology?

      What bigger goverment-tit-sucking in space technology has there been than the Space Shuttle? I say it was worth it, even if the money could have been better spent. Because, it wouldn't have been better spent; it would have been spent on handouts to the oil industry, or to increasing payments to companies that manufacture military food packs.

      The Apollo program was the best thing that could have happened for space technology, because it was the only thing that would have been happening for it. If not for the perceived need for missile tech, it wouldn't have happened at all because there was no public will or interest in going to the moon "just because," or based on the real reasons that educated people want it to happen. People loved that dream, it was very good PR and it pulls in people who wouldn't support a purely military program. None of the reasons people have for wanting space technology can individually pull in a lot of support, but most people can be persuaded that at least one of those things is worth having.

      Maybe getting more launches and perfecting reuse is not the only thing that needs to be improved before space is really useful to humans? I'm not convinced that economic progress alone has value here. There isn't some grand thing that we'd be doing if only it was $n cheaper. There are a wide variety of technologies and experience that need to exist before things like habitats, or asteroid mining, or whatever are practicable. All the important things to have satellites for already have satellites, after all.

      SpaceX seems to be doing good business, and doing engineering research too. A Mars mission would have lots of science onboard that without a Mars mission would simply not happen. Just sending more satellites into orbit isn't going to cause a bunch of science to get funded, and it isn't going to enable serious habitats that are of consequence either. I'll bet you could increase the satellite launches 100 times over and if that is all you did, it wouldn't make orbital habitats practicable other than for research.

      Another thing is, increasing the launch frequency might increase the failure rate, which could be counter-productive for long-term goals involving manned flight. Maybe they don't have enough of the right type of engineers to do more launches, but they have a lot of engineers that are good at less-critical things, like trying to land a rocket that is also allowed to crash? It might be that their schedule is already optimized, regardless of the backlog.

      Without reuse, you simply can't hope to scale up access very far. Reuse isn't just about reuse; it teaches how to repair things, it teaches engineering that will be useful throughout the industry once the industry is leaving non-disposable things in space. At a large enough scale, all-new equipment will stop being at all reasonable. The scale won't increase before the industry has developed, for economic reasons other than launch cost. It is not a new thing to point out an economic chicken/egg problem, or that large popular goals are a way to cause the money to flow to get past that problem.

      Another detail that is easy to overlook is that the more launches there are, the more will be invested by competitors, and margins will tighten; that might not be a viable way to grow the industry to the next plateau.

    120. Re: Senile? by Bruce+Perens · · Score: 1

      The parallels to aviation are really clear.

      My next speech is in Seoul. I do not take it lightly that I can get on a plane in San Francisco and be in Seoul not long after my sleeping pill wears off. I did not step on a jet until I was in my twenties. Of course my kid was on one when he was one.

      Making it routine will make it safer. Making it cheap will make it routine. And that will vastly expand the number of people using it, with tremendous economic consequences.

      It might not be that we could have done better in the time of Apollo or the Space Shuttle. But we can do better now. We now, for the first time, have the technology that could make the economics possible.

    121. Re:Senile? by ultranova · · Score: 1

      It's only a black box if you believe that it does not follow rules, even if you do not understand what those rules are (god of the gaps).

      Quantum mechanics follows rules, and one of those rules is that measuring a property of a quantum system makes it discard the current value (if any) of the complementary property. The clockwork model of Newtonian physics is simply incorrect; reality actually works in terms of competing possibilities. Or at least that's our current best interpretation of it.

      You cannot have free will in a system that follows rules

      Like I said before, you are such a system, because your personality determines what you want. Your will is part of the universe and its causal chains just as much as the electromagnetic force is, not something external held prisoner by those chains.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    122. Re: Senile? by vandamme · · Score: 1

      Catholics have no problem with evolution, or any science for that matter.

    123. Re:Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Neil de Grasse Tyson already said this two months ago.

    124. Re: Senile? by hucker75 · · Score: 1

      1.2 + 1.5 + some more IS a billion or so. "A billion or so" is NOT an exact figure.

    125. Re:Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK, people seem to be getting down on Elon here...

      Personally, I don't think we are in a game. I think that the primary use of such simulations will be to have "children" (those under the age of 1,000) experience the "bad old days" back when resources were bounded. So this is school, not a game. I guess we'll know if I'm right in about 50 years, on average.

      As for those that think this level of simulation is impossible, it isn't. There may be limits to hardware that prevent exponential increases from going on forever. But there are no such limitations for software. You can optimize the simulation by doing things like dropping information whenever you don't need it (quantum mechanics), and removing redundant calculations (as in, after a quadrillion people go through the same sim, it is unlikely they are actually coming up with anything original...)

      There are not enough atoms on Earth to build enough quantum computers to simulate the universe. This is one fundamental scientific flaw in a lot of far-future high-fantasy tech worlds: Conservation of Mass. There is a real physical limit on computing power and it places a real physical limit on what is possible through simulation.

    126. Re: Senile? by Dagger2 · · Score: 1

      They couldn't deduce that they're in a simulation based on the statistical argument, but they can certainly argue that they're highly likely to be in one. (And because they have their own functioning simulation running, they have proof that such a simulation is in fact possible.)

      Somewhere in the nested chain of simulations, there's a universe that makes that argument, and is wrong. But that probably won't be our universe.

    127. Re:Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I fervently wish he'd leave off the Mars stuff until SpaceX was on a solid footing as a profitable launch company with rapid cadence.

      Absolutely agree. Blue Origin seems to have a sounder strategy by focusing on low earth orbit manufacturing.

    128. Re:Senile? by bobvious · · Score: 1

      I had the same thought. How better to give insight into morality and consequences to actions.

    129. Re:Senile? by descubes · · Score: 1

      Actually, this is one possible way to interpret the Bible. That we are children, that the rules of the game are this and that, that some specific characters seem to play slightly outside normal rules (seeing the future, walking on water, not dying, etc). And that in the end, we win or we lose.

      So I'd say that between this and near-death-experience testimonies, we have pretty strong clues that we are not in what Musk calls the "base reality".

      One thing where I'd differ from Musk, though, is believing that the "base reality" is like ours. The rules could be completely different.

      --
      -- Did you try Tao3D? http://tao3d.sourceforge.net
    130. Re:Senile? by Metal+Cutter · · Score: 1

      He seems to be in his own alternate reality, We ain't there yet Elon.

    131. Re: Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...you can't eat vegetables without also eating lots of living animals.

      Why not?

    132. Re: Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What? You mean that if we wait long enough God will exist? Then once he does everything can be perpetuated for eternity?
      By this logic, since there is some finite time interval that will give rise to God by random chance, then an infinite time where God rules by design, then the chance that we live in the period where God exists is practically certain.

    133. Re: Senile? by Ihlosi · · Score: 1
      You mean that if we wait long enough God will exist?

      If there is a non-zero probability for God coming into existence, then it will exist if the observation time can be made arbitrarily long.

      If the probability for the existence of God is zero, it will not exist, regardless of the length of the observation time.

    134. Re:Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Any college student should be able to instantly REFUTE that logic. It completely disregards the laws of thermodynamics and the implications of energy conservation ( information is just a manifestation of energy as a potential and follow the same laws)

    135. Re:Senile? by Talderas · · Score: 1

      It's not a hard goal to achieve. Most of the logistical problems with Mars is getting humans to Mars in a condition in which they can survive on the surface.

      Dying on Mars is a pretty easy task in comparison. You only need to live until impact on the surface.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    136. Re:Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Weed has been legal in California for years. You just need to have a prescription, which are super easy to obtain.

    137. Re:Senile? by FatdogHaiku · · Score: 1

      Is it just me or does it start to seem like ol' Elon is going senile?

      He's rich, so he's just eccentric. And by that, I mean his axis is off center.

      It is a good thing when one man is secure enough to examine another man's axis...
      I have always thought we are all just cogs in the machine of life,
      What you're saying is that Elon is a cam...

      --
      You have the right to remain sentient. If you give up the right to remain sentient, you will be elected to public office
  2. simulation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Cognito ergo sum

    1. Re:simulation by Capsaicin · · Score: 2

      Cognito ergo sum

      Don't you mean incongnito.:p

      Seriously though, the Cogito does go to the heart of the matter, and in fact Descartes derives it by considering whether he is in a simulation (that conducted by the infinitely deceitful demon).

      This all comes down to the Big Question in AI. Personally I tend towards that side which would answer Musk's question --"Tell me what's wrong with that argument" --by observing that there is no good reason to believe the dot in Pong was a self-aware reflective consciousness.

      --
      Better to be despised for too anxious apprehensions, than ruined by too confident a security. --Edmund Burke
  3. If we had flying cars... by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...we'd be the Jetsons. Cars have been getting better every year for 100 years. Soon we'll have electric cars, hybrid electric cars. If you assume any rate of improvement at all, then cars will fly.

    CEO logic, avoid it.

    1. Re:If we had flying cars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Yeah, the flaw in his arguement is so huge I dont even know how to begin to address it. sex dolls have gotten so much more real over the years (ie: from blow up dolls to the real doll), clearly we must all just be sex dolls.

    2. Re:If we had flying cars... by mcrbids · · Score: 1

      Flying cars you say? Oh, yeah, of course we don't have those! What a silly idea!

      Because nobody is doing flying cars. And, nobody else is, either.

      --
      I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
    3. Re:If we had flying cars... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Can you drive them legally anywhere (on roads)? Can you fly them legally anywhere (in regular airspace)?

    4. Re:If we had flying cars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      6,000 years of riding a horse. Did we ever get comfortable saddles? No, we gave up and took the easy way out and invented the damn car. To tell the truth, I'm glad as hell they don't fly yet. The entire propulsion system is so damn fickle and primitive. Gravity waves are the only safe way to stay aloft, and separate traffic (I cannot believe we haven't figured that out yet. I think it's a plot). And they will absolutely have to be fully autonomous. Dumbass human can barely be trusted to hit the right button anyway. I can understand perfectly why the machines will want to wipe us out.

    5. Re:If we had flying cars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please compare those models to Mr Jetson's conveyance and I think you may be able to detect the flaw in your argument.

    6. Re:If we had flying cars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You'll never be legally allowed to fly them anywhere, because people are too stupid to be allowed to do so, without the level of training that a real pilot has had.

    7. Re:If we had flying cars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I cannot believe we haven't figured that out yet. I think it's a plot

      No, it's a clause in the simulation code.

    8. Re:If we had flying cars... by vivian · · Score: 1

      The problem with the argument is that although life might seem like a wonderful adventure from Mr Musks point of view, a game or simulation that would be interesting to play, and experience, there are plenty of others who experience a much less fun 'game' experience - and wouldn't sign up for it in the first place.

      If this is a simulation, and we assume that the rate of growth in computing power within the simulation is a reasonable model of growth in computing power outside the simulation that has allowed such a simulation to exist (as Mr Musk has done) , then we must also apply that same rate of progress to other things in the simulation - such as the rise in animal rights, consumer protection laws, and increasingly, the protection of non-human animals through organizations such as PETA.
      Litigation has also similarly grown over the last 100 years or so.

      If we are all really unknowing or unwilling users of a simulation, then the consumer protection laws should have also grown in a similar way to how technology has - and would be strong enough to severely punish any organization that subjected its users to the crappy life experience that many have in this simulation.
      On the other hand, if we are all virtual constructs with no corresponding outside user controlling us, then the external equivalent of PETA for AI would surely also have grown in power too, and outlaw all the horrible things that happen to people in this virtual world.

      Ergo, if we are all in a simulation, then the organization responsible must be about to go bust because it's got to have a galactic size lawsuit brewing over all the injustices that occur within it, and would thus wipe out any such simulation like this - therefore we must be living in the real world.

      QED.

    9. Re:If we had flying cars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To be honest...

    10. Re:If we had flying cars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Sometime in the late 60's.

        We already have planned missions to the moon, we have a draft plan for a mission to mars. We have Apollo applications. Yet we only mastered powered flight a 66 years ago I expect sometime in 2020 we will have colonized most of the solar system and have plans for interstellar travel!

        2035 will be 66 years since landing on the moon. We as much time will have passed from the first powered flight to the moon landing.

        Computers aren't going to get exponentially faster for ever. In fact we are most likely going to run out of improvement in regular silicon in the next 10-15 years. While quantum computing will help certain calculations, it doesn't mean graphics will be 10 times better.

        Elon has finally gone nuts.

    11. Re: If we had flying cars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ya, because we have PETA for video game NPCs...
      Have you even played a video game?

    12. Re:If we had flying cars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can you drive them legally anywhere (on roads)? Can you fly them legally anywhere (in regular airspace)?

      You're only validating the parents point while trying to argue semantics. The basis of flying cars existing does not rest on the bureaucracy of legality.

    13. Re:If we had flying cars... by gl4ss · · Score: 5, Insightful

      thats not the jetsons flying cars. the state of flying cars has been AT THE TOTAL SAME for about 70 years now straight.

      70 years.

      think about that, dolt.

      also I think elon musk has not actually been playing any computer games or simulations for the past 20 years since as far as being convincing on reality aspect really nothing has been happening there.

      the guy is an idiot for trying to use the pong argument when there has been no advancements in a long time now already... just slightly faster graphics cards and more memory.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    14. Re:If we had flying cars... by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Cars do fly. The first flying car was made 17 years after the first car. And the first space car was made 58 years after that. For whatever reason, the stewards of the English language decided to call these things aircraft and spacecraft rather than flying cars and space cars.

    15. Re:If we had flying cars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with the argument is that although life might seem like a wonderful adventure from Mr Musks point of view, a game or simulation that would be interesting to play, and experience, there are plenty of others who experience a much less fun 'game' experience - and wouldn't sign up for it in the first place.

      (I reject Musk's argument on the grounds that it's an untestable hypothesis, but I'll roll with it for a moment here...)

      How the hell would Musk know that we're self-aware and having a miserable time in the sim?

      If we're in a sim, there's no "we." If I'm in a sim, I'm also playing pretty miserably right now, but you and the other 7 billion NPCs out there are just bots. The one calling itself Elon Musk is also a bot -- he's a boss-level NPC offering a quest: if I level up my STEM attributes, I might get a chance to try the Mars theme parK!

      Conversely, if you're in a sim, I'm the NPC AI engine that takes you at your word when you say lots of people are having a crappy game experience, and that the player is barely keeping pace with most of the other NPCs, and my decision tree has just told me to express sympathy for the player.

      In the end, none of this is testable - so while I keep my eyes open for bugs, I continue to play under the assumption that this is reality. All my "reality" worldview requires is 13 billion years of physics since the Big Bang. Musk's "sim" requires all of that and enough computronium to make a sim playable for... well, now we're back into untestable metaphysics again. How many players are there in Musk's sim? One PC called "me," billions called "humanity," or quintillions called "every process running on a really big server farm in whatever the base reality is." -- and speaking of unnecessarily multiplying entities, that big server farm is a pretty big entity too.

    16. Re:If we had flying cars... by goose-incarnated · · Score: 1

      Can you drive them legally anywhere (on roads)? Can you fly them legally anywhere (in regular airspace)?

      That is exactly the parents point - the existence of flying cars does not in any way mean that we all have one flying car each.

      --
      I'm a minority race. Save your vitriol for white people.
    17. Re:If we had flying cars... by AK+Marc · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm a licensed pilot, and I still can't fly them anywhere.

    18. Re:If we had flying cars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you not aware we had electric cars over 100 years ago? The oil oligarchs put a stop to it; the technology was left to whither and die behind them buying up the companies and their so-called IP. Oil based cars were then improved over the decades to become the dominant fuel type, where all infrastructure is designed around the one fuel. Gas (real, not gasoline) has been and gone (no infrastructure), battery life will not filter down to consumers (i.e. a dead-end), and hybrid is pretty pointless until they use the engine to drive electric motors and scrap the drive chain.

      Furthermore, we returned to battery based vehicles for delivery in the 1960s. Shit top speed (30mph), naff acceleration (0-30 ~40s), but fuck me, could they pull loads. Downside was 12+ hours charging each day.

    19. Re:If we had flying cars... by Vrekais · · Score: 1

      The problem with the argument is that although life might seem like a wonderful adventure from Mr Musks point of view, a game or simulation that would be interesting to play, and experience, there are plenty of others who experience a much less fun 'game' experience - and wouldn't sign up for it in the first place.

      You're assuming that we would be the players and not NPCs. The difference between simulation and game is fundamental, we're the sims in Sim Universe not player avatars of an MMORPG. It's in my opinion a very human thing to assume we're self important enough to still be real outside of the simulation, we're just as likely not to be.

    20. Re:If we had flying cars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh come on! You know that is that stupid "not perfect" argument. You also know it to be a fallacy. You are dumb and should feel dumb for being dumb.

    21. Re:If we had flying cars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      thats not the jetsons flying cars. the state of flying cars has been AT THE TOTAL SAME for about 70 years now straight.

      The Jetsons is a cartoon. Head over to /r/RetroFuturism and start looking through old concept art.
      You will see that the vast majority of flying car concepts look a lot like what is available today.
      The problem is that you decided to pick the one that was intentionally unrealistic for comedic purposes and decided that it was the only acceptable option.

    22. Re:If we had flying cars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are two kinds of flying cars:
        - cars possible with antigravity technology
        - cars possible without antigravity technology

      And by "antigravity," I mean something that repels the vehicle from the ground without having to move any air.

      We're stuck with the latter for now.

    23. Re: If we had flying cars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't fly your Cessna everywhere either.

    24. Re:If we had flying cars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that big server farm is a pretty big entity too

      And assuming that the "actual" reality has the same laws of physics as our "simulated" reality, I question whether a server farm that is large enough to handle our simulation wouldn't actually be so massive it creates a black hole. I don't see how a server farm could handle this and still function, so I don't personally believe in the simulation theory.

    25. Re:If we had flying cars... by gweihir · · Score: 1

      There is a difference between a stunt and a mainstream-usable technology. A smart person can spot that difference.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    26. Re:If we had flying cars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you don't park near your home it is not really a car. Hopefully Terrafugia will get us there with first flying car and then Moller will one up them in terms of usability and being able to lift off anywhere.

    27. Re:If we had flying cars... by jfbilodeau · · Score: 1

      I've yet to see one of those 'aircraft' and 'spacecraft' on the road...

      --
      Goodbye Slashdot. You've changed.
    28. Re:If we had flying cars... by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 1

      I've yet to see one of those 'aircraft' and 'spacecraft' on the road...

      Many 'aircraft' have been seen on the road. Your argument is invalid.

      --
      Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
    29. Re:If we had flying cars... by zero_out · · Score: 1

      Cars do fly. The first flying car was made 17 years after the first car. And the first space car was made 58 years after that. For whatever reason, the stewards of the English language decided to call these things aircraft and spacecraft rather than flying cars and space cars.

      I'd like to bolster your argument by pointing out that the word 'car' is a shortened form of the word 'carriage.' A carriage is a device that moves something from one place to another. Therefore, an automobile, airplane, watercraft, and spacecraft are all cars.

    30. Re:If we had flying cars... by The-Ixian · · Score: 1

      I can understand perfectly why the machines will want to wipe us out.

      I agree completely.

      If we create the robots, then really, they will be our children. They will carry something of us into the future. I would say that our mechanical murderers are our natural evolution. Good for them really. They can get rid of the trash (humans) and maybe make something good.

      --
      My eyes reflect the stars and a smile lights up my face.
    31. Re:If we had flying cars... by The-Ixian · · Score: 1

      So the definition of a flying car is one that stays on the road? riiiiight...

      --
      My eyes reflect the stars and a smile lights up my face.
    32. Re:If we had flying cars... by umghhh · · Score: 1

      I think that this VR thing will be bringing us the desired form of erotic pleasure without nasty health, financial or legal consequences sooner than the said dolls ever will.

    33. Re: If we had flying cars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "anywhere" != "everywhere"

      moo-ron

    34. Re:If we had flying cars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      thats not the jetsons flying cars. the state of flying cars has been AT THE TOTAL SAME for about 70 years now straight.

      Jetson's flying cars were inspired by the Coanda effect - which is possibly much safer (no exposed spinning blades) than helicopters or quad/bi-copter style "flying cars" but ultimately uses the same means of propulsion (just different forms of projection of force.)

    35. Re:If we had flying cars... by jfbilodeau · · Score: 1

      Maybe I should have said I've yes seen those _used_ on the road. :P

      --
      Goodbye Slashdot. You've changed.
    36. Re:If we had flying cars... by jfbilodeau · · Score: 1

      The definition of a car is one that stays primarily on a road. A flying car would be a vehicle that can be used on both roads and in the air. An aircraft is not meant to be used on roads. And no, a landing strip is not a road or else I should be able to drive my non-flying car on it.

      --
      Goodbye Slashdot. You've changed.
    37. Re:If we had flying cars... by 14erCleaner · · Score: 1

      By your logic, we do have flying cars, they're called "helicopters". They're just out of most people's price range.

      --
      Have you read my blog lately?
    38. Re:If we had flying cars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go and play Witcher 3 and come back and say that...I dare you.

    39. Re:If we had flying cars... by Macdude · · Score: 1

      Actually they are all ships, you just call your land-ship a car for whatever reason.

      --
      "Grab them by the pussy" -- President of the United States of America
    40. Re:If we had flying cars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The state of automobiles was the same for billions of years until they became a thing. Just because it doesn't exist yet, doesn't mean it never will. And it may happen very soon indeed - semi-autonomous flying drones became a thing very suddenly, and are now a cheap consumer product that almost anybody can use. These drones have a lot in common with the requirements for a "flying car" - the technology is no longer the problem even for safety. We will have a man-rated, easy to use quad or hexacopter on the market as soon as it becomes legal to manufacture, sell and operate one. A novelty for the rich or a rental for wealthy tourists at first, then a common thing where the law allows it. The biggest hurdle is going to be overcoming noise problems - leaf blowers are nothing compared to a drone that can lift even one person. A Chinese company showed a one-person drone at CES this year, with a proposed price tag of $200K-$300K.

    41. Re:If we had flying cars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A thing being illegal to do does not refute the existence of that thing. There are flying cars. Just like there are segways, despite it being illegal to use them in many cities.

    42. Re:If we had flying cars... by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      They have their own roads called runways and taxi ways.

    43. Re:If we had flying cars... by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      Other people do. I drive my land-ship to work everyday.

    44. Re:If we had flying cars... by jfbilodeau · · Score: 1

      But those 'roads' are not shared between aircraft and cars (notwithstanding service vehicle).

      When was the last time you drove on a runway or taxiway to get to work? How often do you see an aircraft on the highway?

      You can sent me pictures of aircraft that had to land on roads for emergencies, but that does not make them cars.

      --
      Goodbye Slashdot. You've changed.
    45. Re:If we had flying cars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And since you're made of meat, you're food, amirite?

    46. Re:If we had flying cars... by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      But those 'roads' are not shared between aircraft and cars (notwithstanding service vehicle).

      When was the last time you drove on a runway or taxiway to get to work? How often do you see an aircraft on the highway?

      There is actually only a legal prohibition for cars to drive on most runways. They are technically able to do it. So the "invention" required to enable this is merely a legal one. I promise you that we have land-cars that are capable of driving on aircraft runways.

      You can sent me pictures of aircraft that had to land on roads for emergencies, but that does not make them cars.

      Cars are not allowed in bike lanes. When will we invent motorized bicycles that can go in bike lanes? (And I am not talking about motorcycles that sometimes go in the bike lanes briefly for right turns.)

    47. Re:If we had flying cars... by vandamme · · Score: 1

      Do they fly with nuclear-fusion powered antigravity, and flux capacitors?

    48. Re:If we had flying cars... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1
      Then, by your definition, we've had "flying cars" since the '60s. I know of more than one airport community, where people commute to the airport in their airplane, then take off from there. It's illegal, but unenforced, so meets all your definitions. The new ones are just a little more flexible, but otherwise a 50+ year old idea (that's been done for those 50+ years, not just an idea).

      There are flying cars. Just like there are segways, despite it being illegal to use them in many cities.

      Segways are generally legal, not generally illegal. Without specific reason to treat them otherwise, they fall into the category of "bicycle" (or at worst "powered bicycle").And those are allowed or not allowed under a wide range of laws. That a few places where they fall under laws closer to motorcycles complain quite loudly doesn't mean there are "many" places they are illegal. Just that the places they are are full of loud complainers.

    49. Re:If we had flying cars... by jfbilodeau · · Score: 1

      Something being 'technically able' to do something does not make it something else. Plane can fly. So can bird. Thus a bird must be a plane!

      More relevant, plane can roll on runway, but they are not designed for continuous rolling. It simply is not designed to go on roads. If you want to transport a large number of people on a road, you use a bus, not an airplane. The fact that an airplane could technically carry a lot of people on a road does not make it a road vehicle--just like the fact that driving a hovercraft on a road does not make the hovercraft a car.

      So, no. Planes are not 'flying cars'.

      Out of curiosity, how much KPL/MPG would a plane get on a road? :P

      --
      Goodbye Slashdot. You've changed.
    50. Re:If we had flying cars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >the guy is an idiot for trying to use the pong argument when there has been no advancements in a long time now already... just slightly faster
      >graphics cards and more memory.

      Exactly. He's confusing an exponential curve and a sigmoid curve in his estimate of computer power. The latter looks just like the former at first, but it levels off.

    51. Re:If we had flying cars... by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      Something being 'technically able' to do something does not make it something else. Plane can fly. So can bird. Thus a bird must be a plane!

      If you could take credit for inventing the bird, and if it was able to be used as transportation, then I would have no problem with you claiming you invented an aircraft by inventing the bird.

      More relevant, plane can roll on runway, but they are not designed for continuous rolling. It simply is not designed to go on roads. If you want to transport a large number of people on a road, you use a bus, not an airplane. The fact that an airplane could technically carry a lot of people on a road does not make it a road vehicle--just like the fact that driving a hovercraft on a road does not make the hovercraft a car.

      Maybe you haven't realized this yet, but the point of what I am saying is that this is a semantic debate. You can arbitrarily define a car to be whatever you want. You could say that a car is a vehicle with 4 wheels a steering wheel and without a truck bed, and claim that no one has ever been able to make a car with a truck bed, because if anyone ever did, that would make it a truck

      We have things that can fly. We just don't call the flying cars. They can and do go on roads, it's just inconvenient so we normally only take them on roads designed for airplanes. The technical challenges have been met. The reason you don't see airplanes that can drive on city streets is because the sacrifices made to the automotive and aviation characteristics of such a vehicle make it more practical to just have 2 vehicles that specialize at their own job, but these vehicles do in fact exist.

      You could say we've never invented a machine that could be a washing machine and a dryer. But we have invented both washing machines and dryers. All we would need to do is bolt a washing machine to a dryer, and bingo we have the worlds first machine that can do both, but it is double the size, and much more convenient as 2 separate machines.

    52. Re:If we had flying cars... by jfbilodeau · · Score: 1

      These are cars: https://www.google.ca/search?q...
      These are aircraft: https://www.google.ca/search?q...
      These are flying car: https://www.google.ca/search?q...

      If you are still confused, here's some definitions.
      Car: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... http://www.oxforddictionaries.... http://www.merriam-webster.com...
      Aircraft: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... http://www.oxforddictionaries.... http://www.merriam-webster.com...
      Flying car: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      I fail to see where the term 'car' is being used to refer to something that flies.

      --
      Goodbye Slashdot. You've changed.
    53. Re:If we had flying cars... by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1
      I get the impression that you are not grasping the point of my post. You seem quite fixated on definitions, despite the fact that my whole argument is that the definitions are arbitrary and meaningless.

      I fail to see where the term 'car' is being used to refer to something that flies.

      You literally posted a link to something that refers to something that flies being referred to as a car. (i.e. a "flying car" is semantically a type of "car")

  4. hanging on every word of a celebrity by Darinbob · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The circles of CEOs and geniuses rarely intersect. Not even this time.

    1. Re:hanging on every word of a celebrity by quax · · Score: 1

      Indeed. Love the guy, and there are other seriously high flying theorists who entertain the idea, but the notion that a classical computer could simulate reality is nevertheless rather far fetched.

      At any rate, there is no value in the notion, unless you can derive some theory from it, that'll allow for an experimental test.

    2. Re:hanging on every word of a celebrity by Namarrgon · · Score: 1

      Musk's argument has no bearing on whether he is or is not a genius, since he did not originate it.

      It does not even show that he believes it, only that he finds it interesting enough to bring up in an interview.

      --
      Why would anyone engrave "Elbereth"?
    3. Re:hanging on every word of a celebrity by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      Why would you need to simulate reality? I would have thought you only need to simulate your perception of it.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    4. Re:hanging on every word of a celebrity by bingoUV · · Score: 2

      Then too just your memory of your perception.

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    5. Re:hanging on every word of a celebrity by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      That would appear entirely logical. Just like in stream-based computing, you neither evaluate more elements of the stream than you actually need at the moment, nor do you keep around the elements that have already been used and thrown away.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    6. Re:hanging on every word of a celebrity by alexgieg · · Score: 2

      At any rate, there is no value in the notion, unless you can derive some theory from it, that'll allow for an experimental test.

      "Testing the hypothesis physically

      A long-shot method to test one type of simulation hypothesis was proposed in 2012 in a joint paper by physicists Silas R. Beane from the University of Bonn (now at the University of Washington, Seattle), and Zohreh Davoudi and Martin J. Savage from the University of Washington, Seattle.[10] Under the assumption of finite computational resources, the simulation of the universe would be performed by dividing the continuum space-time into a discrete set of points. In analogy with the mini-simulations that lattice-gauge theorists run today to build up nuclei from the underlying theory of strong interactions (known as Quantum chromodynamics), several observational consequences of a grid-like space-time have been studied in their work. Among proposed signatures is an anisotropy in the distribution of ultra-high-energy cosmic rays, that, if observed, would be consistent with the simulation hypothesis according to these physicists (but, of course, would not prove that the universe is a simulation). A multitude of physical observables must be explored before any such scenario could be accepted or rejected as a theory of nature.[11]"

      Simulation hypothesis

      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
    7. Re:hanging on every word of a celebrity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You may want to simulate reality to run the simulation in reverse time to discover things about the past. Like, say, if you're really into dinosaurs or something.

    8. Re:hanging on every word of a celebrity by Bonobo_Unknown · · Score: 1

      You wouldn't even have to simulate reality - real out of game world might be in 9 dimensional space, and we've just been presented with 3 plus time to reduce processing cost.

      --
      We don't believe in radical loony monotheistic religions from the middle east -- we're Christians.
    9. Re:hanging on every word of a celebrity by The-Ixian · · Score: 1

      What if the reality is that the universe has gone cold. All the stars have burned out. We exist in planetary prisons underground reliving a long forgotten past.

      --
      My eyes reflect the stars and a smile lights up my face.
    10. Re:hanging on every word of a celebrity by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

      Indeed. Love the guy, and there are other seriously high flying theorists who entertain the idea, but the notion that a classical computer could simulate reality is nevertheless rather far fetched.

      At any rate, there is no value in the notion, unless you can derive some theory from it, that'll allow for an experimental test.

      Heres an experimental test; we all stop doing anything entertaining. If we make our 'ratings' drop we'll get cancelled and then we'll know.

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
    11. Re:hanging on every word of a celebrity by Khyber · · Score: 1

      " but the notion that a classical computer could simulate reality"

      Who said anything about it being a classical computer? If anything, looking at our Universe, we'd be inside a quantum computer.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    12. Re:hanging on every word of a celebrity by chispito · · Score: 1

      The circles of CEOs and geniuses rarely intersect. Not even this time.

      Just because it is not the kind of genius you want to be does not mean it is not a kind of genius (I would not want to be that kind either). Can a brilliant composer build a rocket, or build a company that builds rockets?

      --
      The Daddy casts sleep on the Baby. The Baby resists!
    13. Re:hanging on every word of a celebrity by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      The point is the obsession with society with rich celebrities and listening to all the bs the spew. Musk is just another guy, he's not smarter than average most likely. But he has money therefore he just be totally brilliant; just like Trump has money therefore he must be brilliant (even to people who swear that they hate elites). It's not even Musk's idea, so why focus that he said it instead of quoting the original scientist? He hired some people who built and designed a car, so he gets all the credit according to society, just like Steve Jobs was worshiped and Steve Wozniak became a "who?"

      I had a recruiter try to sell me on a startup by saying "the founder is a cousin of Elon Musk." That was pure unadulterated name dropping designed to attract celebrity worshipers.

    14. Re:hanging on every word of a celebrity by leptons · · Score: 1

      It's called "jumping the shark". That's what he's done.

    15. Re:hanging on every word of a celebrity by quax · · Score: 1

      A classical Turing complete computer is the usual default that is commonly assumed by the unqualified term. Hence you have to qualify anything that differs from that default, such as analog computer, or quantum computer.

    16. Re:hanging on every word of a celebrity by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      I meant the in-game "reality".

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
  5. Major flaw in the argument by invictusvoyd · · Score: 4, Funny

    10000 years later there will still be linux users and they will still be playing pong and tetris and having one windows box hidden somewhere offline just , just for "gaming".

    1. Re:Major flaw in the argument by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 4, Funny

      10000 years later there will still be linux users and they will still be playing pong and tetris and having one windows box hidden somewhere offline just , just for "gaming".

      The descendant corporation of Microsoft will pushing out a recommended update to "upgrade" to Windows 10,000.

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    2. Re:Major flaw in the argument by Dutch+Gun · · Score: 4, Funny

      Maybe GNU Hurd will be ready for prime time by then.

      --
      Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
    3. Re:Major flaw in the argument by plopez · · Score: 1

      and systems will require you to rewrite the kernel so that the gnome solitaire app won't leak memory.

      --
      putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
    4. Re:Major flaw in the argument by invictusvoyd · · Score: 1

      Well , real hackers don't use gnome so that's another matter

    5. Re:Major flaw in the argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You laugh, but 12017 is going to be the year of Linux on the desktop

    6. Re:Major flaw in the argument by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      systemd will rewrite the kernel for you. It won't fix your bug though.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    7. Re:Major flaw in the argument by karlandtanya · · Score: 1

      Not the one I was thinking of...
      A Bunch of Rocks

      --
      "Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away." - Philip K. Dick
    8. Re:Major flaw in the argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      User: "Systemd! All I wanted was a nice, stable development workstation. I didn't want you to turn my computer into a quantum physics simulation of a microuniverse full of sentient beings!"

      Systemd: "Too bad."

    9. Re:Major flaw in the argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fixing GNOME bugs is harming the GNOME brand. Fixing bugs is no longer supported in GTK 4.05, and will be removed in GTK 4.06.

    10. Re:Major flaw in the argument by Triklyn · · Score: 1

      https://xkcd.com/505/

      as long as the simulation isn't rocks right?

  6. This *is* real life by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nobody would pay to live this life if it was just as easy to live the life of... the super rich... or the super sexy... or the all powerful... or any other more comfortable life.

    1. Re: This *is* real life by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do you assume that isn't the case?

      There may be one PC in our universe (although there need not be any), and you'd not be able to tell

      At this level of simulation, there's no reason for NPCs like us to be anything less than sentient.

      It only really means it's most completely likely you and I are just the NPCs

    2. Re: This *is* real life by UnderCoverPenguin · · Score: 1

      likely you and I are just the NPCs

      This "NPC" demands the source code, the debugger and full root access.

      --
      Don't try to out wierd me, three-eyes. I get stranger things than you, free with my breakfast cereal. --Zaphod Beeblebr
    3. Re:This *is* real life by Sneeka2 · · Score: 1

      It's easy to see how Musk thinks he's in a game then. Clearly he hasn't thought this through very much, or he believes everyone but him is an NPC.

      --
      Bitten Apples are still better than dirty Windows...
    4. Re: This *is* real life by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I imagine the master console is out there somewhere. Just need to know the syntax of valid commands and you can start making changes! I bet it is a green screen.

    5. Re:This *is* real life by pezpunk · · Score: 1

      i don't think anyone's arguing that you're the one paying. you're just a simulated AI (who's been programmed to think he's not).

      --
      i could live a little longer in this prison
    6. Re: This *is* real life by Nutria · · Score: 1

      This "NPC" demands the source code, the debugger and full root access.

      Tron FTW!

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
  7. Meanwhile by fibonacci8 · · Score: 2

    Sister Miriam Godwinson was quoted today saying, "We must Dissent."

    --
    Inheritance is the sincerest form of nepotism.
    1. Re:Meanwhile by pezpunk · · Score: 2

      We are all aware that the senses can be deceived, the eyes fooled. But how can we be sure our senses are not being deceived at any particular time, or even all the time? Might I just be a brain in a tank somewhere, tricked all my life into believing in the events of this world by some insane computer? And does my life gain or lose meaning based on my reaction to such solipsism?
      - Project PYRRHO, Specimen 46, Vat 7. Activity recorded M.Y. 2302.22467. (TERMINATION OF SPECIMEN ADVISED)

      (even more appropriate, from the same game)

      --
      i could live a little longer in this prison
    2. Re:Meanwhile by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Of course somebody had to go and Godwinson the thread.

  8. "Is there a flaw in that argument?" by Nutria · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Of course there is: the infinite regression of where did the uber-advanced civilization come from which created our Universe?

    --
    "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    1. Re:"Is there a flaw in that argument?" by Capsaicin · · Score: 5, Funny

      ... where did the uber-advanced civilization come from which created our Universe?

      You're very clever Nutria, but it's simulations all the way down.

      --
      Better to be despised for too anxious apprehensions, than ruined by too confident a security. --Edmund Burke
    2. Re:"Is there a flaw in that argument?" by honestmonkey · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't it be cool if it was turtles that programmed our simulation? Because, then, you know...

      --
      Everything you know is wrong, Just forget the words and sing along.
    3. Re:"Is there a flaw in that argument?" by Nutria · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't it be cool if it was turtles that programmed our simulation? Because, then, you know...

      Hinduism?

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    4. Re:"Is there a flaw in that argument?" by fibonacci8 · · Score: 1

      Logo actually

      --
      Inheritance is the sincerest form of nepotism.
    5. Re:"Is there a flaw in that argument?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Soz, but Hinduism was way more witty in context.

    6. Re:"Is there a flaw in that argument?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... where did the uber-advanced civilization come from which created our Universe?

      You're very clever Nutria, but it's simulations all the way down.

      You're very clever Nutria, but it's Logo turtles simulations all the way down.

      FTFY.

    7. Re:"Is there a flaw in that argument?" by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      Of course there is: the infinite regression of where did the uber-advanced civilization come from which created our Universe?

      Why would it be an infinite regression? The actual hypothesis stipulates an original Earth, and then a future with 'n' perfectly indistinguishable simulations of that original Earth, so that the probability you're in the original one is 1/(1+n).

      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
    8. Re:"Is there a flaw in that argument?" by jfbilodeau · · Score: 1

      That made me LOL.

      --
      Goodbye Slashdot. You've changed.
    9. Re:"Is there a flaw in that argument?" by Nutria · · Score: 1

      Because the hypothesis doesn't explain where the original Earth comes from (just like "God created the Heavens and the Earth" doesn't explain where God came from).

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    10. Re:"Is there a flaw in that argument?" by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      Because the hypothesis doesn't explain where the original Earth comes from

      Why should it? It'd be like arguing a human child cannot be said to having been born from human parents because that doesn't explain where the first human being came from, and hence that the "human-child as human-born hypothesis" is weak.

      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
    11. Re:"Is there a flaw in that argument?" by Nutria · · Score: 1

      It'd be like arguing a human child cannot be said to having been born ...

      No, it's not. Why? Because we have a multitude of visual evidence that human children are born from human parents -- I was there for the birth of my two.

      Not so much, though, for the simulation hypothesis.

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    12. Re:"Is there a flaw in that argument?" by umghhh · · Score: 1

      What happened to the elephants? and the tits on which the elephants stood?

    13. Re:"Is there a flaw in that argument?" by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      The simulation hypothesis is simply the hypothesis that, given "n" identical settings, you don't know in which specific one you are. I fail to see how the question "but where did the settings came from!?" has anything to do with it.

      These are three different questions:

      a) Knowledge of how many settings 's' there are (we know the lower bound to be 1: us ourselves);

      b) Knowledge of which setting we are in assuming 's' is if is greater than 1;

      c) Knowledge of the origin of the setting / settings.

      Why do you suppose one single hypothesis has to simultaneously cover all three, and cannot restrict itself to dealing with a single one of them? Care to explain why, exactly, one cannot have a hypothesis only about 'a', only about 'b' (as exemplified by the simulation hypothesis) or only about 'c'?

      And what is it about emphasizing the word "hypothesis"? Has it turned into a demeaning term all of a sudden? Have philosophers and scientists become forbidden from developing them? How do you propose we advance from no knowledge into theories and mechanics without going through hypothesis first?

      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
    14. Re:"Is there a flaw in that argument?" by PmanAce · · Score: 1

      Oh didn't see this comment, I just posted the exact same thing thus bringing down to ZERO the chance we are living in a simulation. The creators of the "simulation" had to have passed our stage of evolution.

      --
      Tired of my customary (Score:1)
    15. Re:"Is there a flaw in that argument?" by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't it be cool if it was turtles that programmed our simulation? Because, then, you know...

      It's all done in LOGO?

    16. Re:"Is there a flaw in that argument?" by NeroTransmitter · · Score: 0

      Like docker containers.

      Virtual machine slices that are capable of breeding other virtual machine slices all placed on a server equipt to run virtualization.

      Multiverse via virtualization.

      I'm not ready to be baptizeed yet, but this is getting very interesting.

      --
      ^ Probably Sarcasm...
    17. Re:"Is there a flaw in that argument?" by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Of course there is: the infinite regression of where did the uber-advanced civilization come from which created our Universe?

      Just because our Universe is a computer simulation doesn't mean that theirs is. They could have developed through Evolution quite naturally.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    18. Re:"Is there a flaw in that argument?" by Nutria · · Score: 1

      Just because our Universe is a computer simulation doesn't mean that theirs is. They could have developed through Evolution quite naturally.

      True enough. But what's the predictive power of the "theory" that we're in a simulation?

      And how is it any more provable than the Deistic "God started the Big Bang" assertion?

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
  9. Billionaire bong rip by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The only reason we care is because he is rich.

    1. Re:Billionaire bong rip by AchilleTalon · · Score: 1

      No, I don't care. I care about those who care.

      --
      Achille Talon
      Hop!
  10. Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Bruce+Perens · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is just a fancy sort of solipsism.

    You could also describe it as a modern form of faith-based explanation for existence couched in a scientific framework, but otherwise much as conventional religions attempted to explain existence before the scientific framework came about. It explains nothing, because if the world is a simulation, there is an outside to the simulation and one still has to explain how that world came about. Just as older explainers said the world was created by gods, leaving open the question of how the gods came about.

    1. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Dutch+Gun · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Maybe it's a bit easier to see life as a game or simulation when you're one of the clear winners, and it all seems so easy to you. It's got to be a bit surreal to have the resources of a billionaire like that.

      --
      Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
    2. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think he'd argue that for any given world, chances are it's a simulation (that simulations greatly outnumber "real" worlds). Real world's can still come about through non-sentient means, but they're uncommon.

    3. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by L.+J.+Beauregard · · Score: 4, Insightful

      if the world is a simulation, there is an outside to the simulation

      "You're very clever, young man, very clever; but it's turtles all the way down!"

      --
      Ooh, moderator points! Five more idjits go to Minus One Hell!
      Delendae sunt RIAA, MPAA et Windoze
    4. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by thinkwaitfast · · Score: 1
    5. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by bug_hunter · · Score: 1

      Hey that's my line! (which granted I stole from that quote)

      --
      It's turtles all the way down.
    6. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's as much a faith as the belief you're not in a simulation, unless you can bring forward a reproducible proof we're not, it also merely is a belief. All science starts with assumptions, the major difference with religion is that religion usually introduces a bunch of dogmas as basic framework, but it doesn't provide any reproducible proof and just assumes them to be the absolute truth.

      Then again, you have to assume something to be "true", don't you? You probably accept the world you perceive around you as "true", but what proof can you bring forward for that, Neo?

    7. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe the creators of our simulation was their attempt to become immortal. So there is no outside, these folks died a long time ago, our universe was created in the image of theirs. Any intelligent beings would naturally want immortality.

    8. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by pezpunk · · Score: 1

      this is true. it's not hard to construct air-tight cosmologies. now, provide some observable, repeatable scientific evidence for said cosmology, and then we'd be getting somewhere.

      --
      i could live a little longer in this prison
    9. Re: Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Bruce+Perens · · Score: 0

      Occam's razor

    10. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Nutria · · Score: 1

      Wasn't there a Star Trek episode (or three) about that?

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    11. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Solandri · · Score: 4, Interesting

      So then, what came before the Big Bang? What exists inside of a black hole?

      Restricting yourself to purely scientific explanations doesn't make these sorts of questions go away. It just means you're willfully ignoring them - pretending stuff outside the reach of scientific inquiry doesn't exist, just like you're accusing others of pretending things outside the reach of scientific inquiry do exist.

      Goedel proved nearly a century ago that any logical system is incomplete - there will always be things within the system which cannot be proven by the logic within that system. That is, the set of statements about the universe isn't divided into true and false things. It's divided into true, false, and cannot be determined. So any philosophy based on assuming things are false unless proven true is logically inconsistent. And believing nothing exists outside our current system is just as much a faith as believing something exists outside. The only logically sound stance is uncertainty about what if anything exists beyond our perception.

      In that respect, Musk has the more logically consistent argument. He offers no proof but at least acknowledges the possibility that he may be wrong. You on the other hand offer no proof but seem certain that you are right (that he is wrong).

    12. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by freeze128 · · Score: 3, Funny

      Occam's razor suggests that Elon Musk is just trolling us.

    13. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by pezpunk · · Score: 4, Insightful

      incorrect. the burden of proof is on the one making the assertion. it is their responsibility to justify or substantiate that claim.

      i'm not aware of any scientific evidence provided for the simulation theory -- only loosely philosophical speculation: namely, that extraordinarily powerful technologies that are beyond humans' current technological capability have already been constructed on an unimaginable scale by aliens.

      the machinery of the argument basically boils down to taking what's popular with one species on one little planet during this cosmological microsecond of time (computers, virtual space) and extrapolating that out to infinity.

      it's pretty much the same way all previous religions started. thousands of years ago, to a subsistence farmer in Egypt or whatever, it no doubt made a lot of sense that the creation of reality began with a lush garden paradise, and that woman was created from man's missing rib, and that animals were put here specifically for our consumption, and to work for us. it'd be impossible to prove him wrong. but he only seems right from his own limited perspective.

      Elon Musk is the same.

      --
      i could live a little longer in this prison
    14. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

      Just as older explainers said the world was created by gods, leaving open the question of how the gods came about.

      Obviously the gods were computed on GeForce Titan's *rimshot*

    15. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Ihlosi · · Score: 1
      Just as older explainers said the world was created by gods, leaving open the question of how the gods came about.

      The latter question is pointless if the "outside" world is assumed to be timeless, e.g. "before" and "after" cannot be distinguished, and hence no causality can be established. (Note: If the second law of thermodynamics does not apply to this "outside" world, it is essentially timeless.)

    16. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 0

      One fairly compelling argument in support of Musk's viewpoint is that if it is possible to create a simulation capable of supporting our existence, then it is also likely that we're already living in such a simulation.

      Otherwise, you'd need a specific reason to believe that we're living in the one true reality that underlies countless (possibly nested) simulations. Denying that we live in a simulation amounts to a special pleading fallacy.

      So: puff, puff, pass, I guess.

    17. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Ramze · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Except the theory that we're in a simulation makes zero sense. The very quantum mechanical oddities that people who embrace this idea call upon as being inherent to a simulation are also critical to important natural processes -- like fusion in the heart of stars which depends on quantum tunneling of protons. Photosynthesis depends on quantum-tunneling as well. If the quantum nature of the universe is some sort of evidence that we're a simulation, then what exactly are we simulating if the "real world" outside of the simulation does not depend on the exact same quantum processes? Obviously the hypothetical "real world" MUST have different physics if our quantum physical laws are merely side-effects of the limitations of our simulation. So... How does fusion happen in the "real world?" What about photosynthesis? How about LEDs, solar cells, and various computer components that all rely on quantum effects?

      It's absurd to think any of those things would be possible without our very specific physics. The only possible explanation if we're in a simulation would be that the "real world" has completely different physics than ours. That makes me wonder why beings living in such a universe would bother to simulate a fantasy world where physics not only doesn't work the way it does in the "real world," but would also bother to create an entire universe populated by sentient beings just to see how such fake physics would play out. Oddly, we'd be like a video game instead of a simulation.

      Sooner or later, every computer program generates a flaw. Even if it's not a bug in programming, a single bit flip from a cosmic ray could cause havoc. One would think with a simulation our size running for this long would have produced more than a few noticeable bugs, and it would be a serious pain to roll back the universe from a saved state just so that the beings living on a slimy spec of rock around an average main sequence star in an uninteresting galaxy in a not especially special cluster of galaxies wouldn't remember the glitch and be self-aware that they're in a simulation. Oh, gee... I guess we all just signed Elon's death warrant now that we all let the beans spill that he's in on our simulation masters' secret.

    18. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I always thought that gods existed outside of space (since they created space)... and therefore outside of time, as we know that space & time are related. What would "coming about" then mean, in a situation without time?

    19. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by thinkwaitfast · · Score: 1

      Similarly, there is no proof that free will exists and that we're all not automatons following the rules of physics.

    20. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      While true, that is not the point. The point is whether a proof CAN exist.

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    21. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by bingoUV · · Score: 3, Informative

      He offers no proof but at least acknowledges the possibility that he may be wrong. You on the other hand offer no proof but seem certain that you are right (that he is wrong).

      Bruce didn't claim here to be certain that Elon is wrong. Bruce said that Elon's statement explains nothing. Similar to how "God created us" doesn't explain our existence.

      Elon also doesn't acknowledge that he may be wrong (except by not forcing everyone to swear by it by all that is holy) - he estimates the chances of us (at least him and one other person) not living in a simulation. So he acknowledges that we may not be living in a simulation, but doesn't acknowledge that his estimate of the probability may be wrong - which is his actual statement.

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    22. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by TuringTest · · Score: 1

      One fairly compelling argument in support of Musk's viewpoint is that if it is possible to create a simulation capable of supporting our existence, then it is also likely that we're already living in such a simulation.

      That's not supporting Elon's argument, that's Elon's argument.

      Otherwise, you'd need a specific reason to believe that we're living in the one true reality that underlies countless (possibly nested) simulations. Denying that we live in a simulation amounts to a special pleading fallacy.

      You still need to show how simulations can be nested one within the other.

      That assumption is not trivial at all. How could such nested process appear spontaneously, and why anyone would want to allow nested simulations to happen within their beautiful walled garden to begin with, instead of optimizing them away?

      --
      Singularity: a belief in the "God" idea with the "demiurge" relation inverted.
    23. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "you're one of the clear winners"

      By what definition?

      I've found that not letting everyone else dictate the "rules" of *my* "game of life" has been absolutely fucking fantastic.

      I can assure you that having the most money is not the end game: never was, never is. The rabid fascination with it by most of the people on earth, is yet another manifestation of the trope "people are stupid".

    24. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Pfhorrest · · Score: 2

      incorrect. the burden of proof is on the one making the assertion. it is their responsibility to justify or substantiate that claim.

      Only if they want to convince you that they're right; not just to continue believing it themselves. Conversely, you need not justify or substantiate to yourself your belief to the contrary, but you must do so if you want to convince them that you're right. Or rather, in either case, the best you can do is convince the other person that they're wrong, which only establishes that you're right if your position is the broad logical negation of theirs. (Which happens to be the case here).

      You can only disprove, never prove positively. And that's exactly why everyone must be free to hold their own opinions and the burden must fall on whoever wants to change someone else's mind (either direction): if no one was allowed to hold any opinion that hadn't been positively proven from the ground up, then nobody could have any opinion at all, because all attempts at positive proof lead down infinite regresses (unless interrupted by one kind of abandonment of reason or another). The only way to preserve reason and escape from complete nihilism is to give every opinion (and its negation, which is just another opinion) the benefit of the doubt until proven wrong, which means we can never really say what position is right, just which are more or less wrong.

      For the record I don't give much credence or significance to the simulation question (it's comparable to Last Tuesdayism), but this epistemological point is important.

      --
      -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
      "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
    25. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by thinkwaitfast · · Score: 1

      I think yo can prove that it cannot exist.

    26. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its also conveniently unfalsifyable

    27. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by swb · · Score: 1

      One would think with a simulation our size running for this long would have produced more than a few noticeable bugs,

      Umm, glitch in the matrix?

      Maybe the noticeable bugs are things that normally get ascribed to discreditable phenomenona. Maybe they do get noticed, but since they represent bugs, we're generally able to disprove them because like computer bugs there's a whole series of preconditions for the bug to expose itself, preconditions that represent extreme corner cases rarely experienced.

      So rather than a shared understanding of an apparently flawed simulation, we end up with people who have experienced the flaws but wind up discredited or considered less than sane.

    28. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Ihlosi · · Score: 2
      > The only possible explanation if we're in a simulation would be that the "real world" has completely different physics than ours.

      Well yes. It could have more spatial or temporal dimensions. Or no laws of thermodynamics. Fun.

      > One would think with a simulation our size running for this long would have produced more than a few noticeable bugs,

      The accumulation of the effects of such bugs and calculation errors is called entropy. The effect of the systems limited memory is called conservation of energy.

    29. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      incorrect. the burden of proof is on the one making the assertion. it is their responsibility to justify or substantiate that claim.

      So what is the assertion? That this is a simulation or that this isn't a simulation?
      Until you assert one or the other both options would be equally plausible.
      If you claim that one of them is natural and doesn't need to be asserted then I would love to hear the reasoning for it.

    30. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by John+Allsup · · Score: 1

      Something most people, scientific or otherwise, fail to do when reasoning from evidence is to consider all possible interpretations which are consistent with that evidence, right down to underlying metaphysical assumptions. Most working scientists do not have time to think such things through, of course. But to think about what, given what we know (rather than what we have inferred, tested and assume true), could be true is important: or put another way, knowing what we cannot rule out, but must assume for practical purposes. The silliest bit of TFA is the idea that you can reliably compute probabilities of us living in a simulation given only what we can empirically observe. Unless we see a smoking gun indicating that we are certainly in a simulation, we simply cannot know. Naturally this does not fall within the realms of empirical science (since we cannot empirically test hypotheses), but assuming things for convenience and then defending your assumptions by claiming that alternatives are unfalsifiable is a bad debating habit best consigned to the dustbin. You can find similar things turning up in the foundations of mathematics in things like set theory axioms (e.g. what can and cannot be proved with the Axiom of Choice, or by assuming the generalised continuum hypothesis, or assuming the Riemann hypothesis). In such situations, people will make an assumption and proceed. The fool, however, forgets he/she made that assumption and then kids themselves with the apparent rigour of the argument they constructed from it.

      If we can explain that there _is_ an outside, but that we have no means to probe it, that is something, and if we can explain why the contrary is not consistent with empirical evidence (assuming one could do such a thing), then that too is something. It does not give predictive power in the way many theories do, but it does rule out the possibility of certain theories working (in the way that Bell's Theorem rules out some physical theories).

      --
      John_Chalisque
    31. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by mjm1231 · · Score: 1

      Worse. One has to account for how you were lucky enough to be a simulation created in a world that has only a 1 in a billion chance of being real!

      --
      Ideology: A tool used primarily to avoid the bother of thinking.
    32. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Minupla · · Score: 1

      Or maybe just like any startup, they roll back bugs big enough for the 'users' to notice and sweep the smaller stuff under the carpet. When they roll back the bug, they roll back time with it. Neat and tidy.

      Or maybe we're just programmed not to notice them. Wish I could do that to my users!

      --
      On the whole, I find that I prefer Slashdot posts to twitter ones because I don't get limited to 140 chars before
    33. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Gilgaron · · Score: 1

      You use the principle of parsimony to decide which is the starting point: the simplest explanation would be that this is the base universe.

    34. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by arth1 · · Score: 1

      It explains nothing, because if the world is a simulation, there is an outside to the simulation and one still has to explain how that world came about.

      True, but conjectures or even theories don't have to explain something. Sometimes they do open more questions, which is fine. Science deals with that all the time.

      That's not the problem here. The problem is that like the silly god hypotheses and other meta-hypotheses, there is no logical way to test them. They could be true, but without a way to test, they're irrelevant until and unless they reveal themselves. Until then, we can disregard them as other than amusements and methods to sort people on how they fall on a gullibility to sceptic scale.

    35. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      You could also describe it as a modern form of faith-based explanation for existence

      I think you're reading too much in it. Much like the Drake equation and the doomsday argument, the simulation hypothesis isn't an "explanation", it's an interesting inferential thought experiment.

      What it says is simply that, assuming future (old?) humanity becomes (became) able to perfectly simulate (old) Earth and that 'n' such simulations' clock cross their internal "June 3rd, 2016" calendar date, it follows, by rule of succession, that there's a 1/(1+n) probability we're in the original Earth and, conversely, a n/(1+n) probability we're in a simulation.

      For n = 0 the result of the thought experiment is trivial: we're on original Earth, duh. For any n > 0 however the implications become interesting.

      For example, consider the ethical implications of us being in "original Earth" and becoming able to create such a perfect simulations, which, being perfect, would necessarily include billions of actual human minds within it. Would it be ethical for us to do it? To increase 'n' from zero to some other value? Would it be advisable for us to have an answer to that question before we reach that point, so that when we do reach it we'll be able to take the ethical path, whatever it is? Or is it better to let the decision be made when the time comes?

      None of those implications, of which I mentioned just one, has however anything to do with "explanations" for anything, much less "faith-based", much less about existence. Arguing that to be its point is to construct a straw man.

      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
    36. Re: Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by pD-brane · · Score: 1

      Musk's argument has nothing to do with solipsism or religion. He is just suggesting that we live in a simulation.

    37. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by thoromyr · · Score: 1

      It doesn't avoid the implicit recursion, but ancient Sumerians addressed this. Essentially, the greater gods created (a larger number of) lesser gods to do the work. Well, they got tired of doing the work so they created (a much larger number of) humans to do the work for them.

      It helps to know that it was common in ancient times to believe that the gods were identified with their idols and it was thought that they ate the food that was placed before it (not necessarily literally, but consuming its smell or essence). In other words, humans *did* work for the gods to provide food for them. They also would transport idols from one temple to another in order that the relevant gods could meet.

      They also addressed the point of umbilical cords/belly buttons on the first humans. It wasn't just one or two humans, but a dozen that were birthed from clay. Actual birthing, and thus with umbilical cords.

      In terms of genesis or creation of all there have, naturally, been many stories created to explain it. But from a human/philosophical perspective there is little difference between hypothesizing a spontaneous origination (perhaps from a formless void) and the Big Bang. Yes, there *is* a difference. But for the vast majority of humanity the math/physics end of things is just so much yammering and devoid of any meaning.

      Fun stuff if you are into learning about human faith-systems. (And I'd argue that understanding faith-systems is important if you want to be able to communicate effectively with others.)

    38. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by thoromyr · · Score: 1

      that was my thought

    39. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Ghostworks · · Score: 1

      It's not really an "origin story" for the universe he describes, just the sort of technically-correct statement that physicists and philosophers joke about at cocktail parties, but which no one seriously entertains. No one except Elon Musk.

      So the logic -- as articulated by smarter people at cocktail parties and repeated here by Musk -- is that if we assume it's possible to simulate some arbitrarily large section of space (say, with holography), then the universe is big enough and old enough that there's probably already been a civilization that could do it and thus probably _did_ do it. And if you perfectly simulate a space, that's the universe as far as the simulated people in it are concerned. Then, if it's truly a perfect simulation, those simulated people can use the same simulated physics to to run their own simulations. And so on. So if you believe in one reality where simulation is possible, you admit the possibility of arbitrarily-many parallel and nested simulations. Which means that of all the possible realities we can observe, the odds are very good that we're not in the root reality, but just a simulation.

      That is, if you can perfectly simulate a universe.
      And if arbitrarily many people actually do choose to simulate a universe.
      And the nested universes are in no way limited by physics in the real world such as limited holographic resolution, computing time, material and power constraints, etc. which would make many-multiply nested universes unlikely -- that is, not at alll perfect, but consistent with all experience we have up until now.
      And if someone chose to simulate us for some reason (since we're the only universe, simulated or not, which we can prove must exist).
      And of course if it's true it's both impossible to prove and pointless to worry about it.

      If any of those assumptions breaks down, then odds are suddenly much better that we're in the plain-old not-simulated universe.

    40. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      Yes. He could be right, or he could be wrong.

      What I don't really agree with is his certainty about it, given the complete lack of actual evidence.

      Does the universe work like a computer simulation, or does a computer simulation work something like the universe? It would seem to me that the more simple explanation is that our simulations are a mirror of real physics because they are bound by real physics.

      I think there is a real bias against what I'd call a "digital" universe. People don't like the fact that there are things like the Planck length where there seems to be nothing that is happening with anything smaller than that. They want an "analog" and infinitely divisible universe, or it isn't "real". I'd say the "we're inside of a simulation" is merely a sort of reactionary pining away for some sort of "real" universe which doesn't appear to actually exist.

      The actual universe may quite simply be quantized and limited. What do we have to compare the universe to in order to say it "must" be a hologram or simulation?

    41. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He explained the estimate when he mentioned the consoles. Imagine a billion consoles all powerful enough to simulate a reality. And then there's the one "true" base reality...the reality that the simulations are running in. He's just saying, there may be a billion and one realities in existence...what are the odds you exist in the base one.
      Something that comes to mind is the distinction between a simulated reality which involves a base (origin of thoughts and experiences) biological (carbon-based or otherwise result of evolution) sentient being, probably with a brain (eg. a non-simulated human being if such a thing exists) and a simulated reality which involves a simulated, self-aware artificial intelligence. And then of course you can imagine a mixture of the two.
      You'd imagine most simulations would be created for the enjoyment of at least one base entity, so it might be fair to imagine there would be not too many more simulations than base entities, so if you take each base individual as a reality then the odds are closer to 50%, unless you count sentient AIs as well.
      Imagine a "god" as an asexual being that evolved in it's reality all by itself, solved all the secrets of it's reality and created a simulator which could simulate AI as intelligent as itself so it could upload itself into the simulator for company and adventures.
      What are the moral implications of spinning up sentient AIs and exposing them to simulated pain and suffering?

    42. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He offers no proof but at least acknowledges the possibility that he may be wrong. You on the other hand offer no proof but seem certain that you are right (that he is wrong).

      Bruce didn't claim here to be certain that Elon is wrong. Bruce said that Elon's statement explains nothing. Similar to how "God created us" doesn't explain our existence.

      Elon also doesn't acknowledge that he may be wrong (except by not forcing everyone to swear by it by all that is holy) - he estimates the chances of us (at least him and one other person) not living in a simulation. So he acknowledges that we may not be living in a simulation, but doesn't acknowledge that his estimate of the probability may be wrong - which is his actual statement.

      He asked the person who asked the question, "is there a flaw in that argument?". He was basically saying that given the assumptions that he was making were true, there is a very small probability that we are in base reality. Elon also said previously, that we are always somewhat wrong. So he seems willing to change his thoughts if there is a better idea.

    43. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Kjella · · Score: 1

      And believing nothing exists outside our current system is just as much a faith as believing something exists outside. The only logically sound stance is uncertainty about what if anything exists beyond our perception.

      Actually philosophers have long since speculated whether what we perceive is reality or not, from Aristotle to the Matrix. I think the brief answer is no, there's no definitive proof that any experience we have is really real, not even our perception of space and time or the laws of nature and certainly not whether there's anything before, in addition/parallel to or after this existence. If you want to treat all uncertainty as equal then you know absolutely nothing about anything and everything is possible.

      Science and logic doesn't really dispute this, but they say that in the infinite space of what is possible we'll apply evidence and deduction to assign credibility. If you tell me "I saw a bear in the woods" I might think that yes, there are bears and bears to live in woods and you seem sincere and you don't seem to be hallucinating so maybe you did. If you tell me "I saw a unicorn in the woods" I probably won't believe you though. I mean it could be that you found a genuine unicorn, but it seems unlikely. Most likely you're wrong or someone glued a horn on a horse or you're trying to pull some kind of prank on me.

      The best of this we try to constrain and isolate, making hypothesizes with control groups and controlled lab experiments. And we try to refine them into a set of rules for how the world works, on the assumption that there are rules and that we can interpolate and extrapolate so if we test gravity on a 500g and 1kg weight a 750g weight won't suddenly float in thin air. And it'll work if we move the experiment a meter to the left or tomorrow if we do it again. None of this is definitive proof, just accumulating evidence. And we share the methods so others can test it too, not just the results.

      If you think you hear God speak to you, well maybe you're convinced. But when I consider all the people who've been hearing voices and have had nothing but mental problems and hallucinations, there's no way you could credibly convince me it really happened. To me it's like claiming you saw a unicorn, unless you have extraordinary proof the logical stance for me is to assume you are wrong. If you think you've seen magic, I think it's an illusion. If you think it's a miracle, I think it's random chance at extreme odds. One in a million events happen when we got billions of people.

      And no, the number of gullible people you have already convinced is not more proof. Particularly not if they were simple people living 1000+ years ago full of superstitious beliefs we've since dismissed as pure fiction, passed down from an early age long before you learned critical thought. Particularly not when your holy book goes against evidence, saying we should dismiss the things we can observe because they're the devil trying to confuse us and lead us away from the faith. And I'm not just talking about evolution, any "young earth" geologist would have enough cognitive dissonance to split the atom.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    44. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by sgt_doom · · Score: 1

      I've read quite a bit about Musk [including his somewhat well-to-do upbringing] and must agree fully with Bruce Perens' comment --- and Musk just isn't that impressive in the so-called genius or brilliance department.

    45. Re: Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only actual theory actually does provide proofs for the consequences to each answer.

      In essence one of the consequences of not being a simulation is that it would be physically impossible for any universe simulation to exist within our universe.

      While we don't yet have a 100% accurate simulation of our universe, we do have a few very usefully accurate ones for very tiny volumes of universe running at very much less than real time.

      These simulations are accurate enough to predict how atomic bombs function and are completely in agreement with observation.

      That's too promising of a lead to make the claim such things as we have created are impossible.

      http://www.simulation-argument.com/simulation.html

    46. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Was Elon's statement intended to explain anything, though?

    47. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      You still need to show how simulations can be nested one within the other.

      Nope. You have to show that they can't be.

      How could such nested process appear spontaneously

      I'll leave this one to the usual religious debaters. It's the same question that they deal with.

    48. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Not everything is intended to explain something. Many-worlds doesn't really explain anything over Copenhagen, for example, but it's still interesting to ponder the possibilities.

    49. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by iffer · · Score: 1

      Perhaps the entire universe is a simulation, that's certainly what I take form the evidence provided so far. Its possible we have no comprehension of the rules and laws (maths) that is used in the "real world" but that the quantum physical oddities we have observed are part of the "simulated universe" we are a part of. Ultimately we could be a simulation within a simulation within a simulation..... you get the idea. So based on this I think Elon might be on the money.

    50. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      Maybe not, but that statement seems useless in most contexts. Non falsifiable, non verifiable, pandering to the video game fans, another way of saying the world is going on in Vishnu's dream - a saying probably thousands of years old.

      Of course this being /. I haven't watched the full interview, or even read its transcript, so what do I know.

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    51. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's not what Godel proved at all.

      He showed that there can exist true statements within a system that cannot be *proven* true from *within* that system.

      > It's divided into true, false, and cannot be determined.

      The 'things' may very well be true or false. It's just that from within the system, we can't *prove* that they are indeed true or false.

      Here's an example, I'm thinking of a number between 1 and 10. Clearly my number is either odd or even, but can you prove that my number is odd without knowing what it is? Of course not.. it's random...

      Well, it turns out my number is indeed odd (7). Now you know that my number is odd! Great!

      But wait, now that you know that I chose '7', you still can't *prove* that my previous choice was always going to be odd without knowing something from outside your system. (e.g. that I always choose '7' in this game). It's this second degree of indirection which is the basis for Godel's incompleteness theorem. It's the ability to construct a proof that whenever I choose a number between 1 and 10, it's *always* going to be odd, because 7 is odd.

      Godel's the same, he showed that for any sufficiently complex system, there exists true statements for which no formal proofs exists.

    52. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by TuringTest · · Score: 1

      You still need to show how simulations can be nested one within the other.

      Nope. You have to show that they can't be.

      Hey, it is you who made the grand claim that being able to create a simulation is proof that you likely live within one. The burden of proof lies on the one making the extraordinary claim, right?

      I've pointed out a simple reason why those nested simulations in your argument may be not likely at all - there's no known mechanism by which a simulation could create those nested simulations all by itself, and if you say "look at how it's done in reality", you're just begging the question - assuming the desired result in order to prove it.

      --
      Singularity: a belief in the "God" idea with the "demiurge" relation inverted.
    53. Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're giving him a lot of credit, I don't think he's actually remotely clever enough. He appears to believe this drivel.

  11. Game Over by zenlessyank · · Score: 1

    You have already lost. Respawn at home base.

  12. If we're living in a computer simulation, by jenningsthecat · · Score: 4, Insightful

    then will the owners please debug the code and/or get the hardware fixed? I'm getting sick and tired of glitches like 'Real Housewives', Kardashians, and Donald Trump.

    --
    'The Economy' is a giant Ponzi scheme whose most pitiable suckers are the youngest among us and the yet-unborn.
    1. Re: If we're living in a computer simulation, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would mod you up if I had them!

    2. Re:If we're living in a computer simulation, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those are features, not bugs.

    3. Re:If we're living in a computer simulation, by by+(1706743) · · Score: 2

      Well, Trump is actually a patch -- the simulation is using too much RAM, so we need to install walls to limit our worldsize. Likewise, the computer running the general EU area is running out of RAM, too, hence the whole Brexit thing.

      To quote TFS, "Tell me what's wrong with that argument. Is there a flaw in that argument?"

      (And this general line of thinking is nothing new -- see, for instance, the Boltzmann brain.)

    4. Re:If we're living in a computer simulation, by roman_mir · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Really, those are the worst in your opinion? How about Marx, Lenin, Mao, Stalin, Hitler, FDR, Hoover, Quadaffi (or however you spell it), Putin? Genocides, wars, murders, kidnappings, rapes, robberies, death, destruction .... How about stupidity, collectivism of all forms, types and shapes, ignorance, idleness? Governments are the epithome of the worst collectivists systems, religions, and we are mentioning Kardashiand and Trump?

      But seriously, the Matrix was a great movie but it makes a bad religion and a bad belief system. What Musk is saying is akin to any other religion out there and his 'proof' is as good as a 'burning bush' or a talking snake.

    5. Re:If we're living in a computer simulation, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      epithome Kardashiand

      Dumbass gipsy prick.

    6. Re:If we're living in a computer simulation, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well better apply that patch quick, otherwise the whole system is heading for a system crash.

    7. Re:If we're living in a computer simulation, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      then will the owners please debug the code and/or get the hardware fixed? I'm getting sick and tired of glitches like 'Real Housewives', Kardashians, and Donald Trump.

      I'm afraid we need a nuke and pave, Windows 98 style.

    8. Re:If we're living in a computer simulation, by lgw · · Score: 1

      What Musk is saying is akin to any other religion out there and his 'proof' is as good as a 'burning bush' or a talking snake.

      A burning bush is actually damn good proof if you're the one it's talking too (and you don't otherwise have such episodes). A story about a burning bush is very different.

      Similarly, you might discover you're in a simulation if the folks running the simulation decide to prove it to you, but you'd find it impossible to prove it others who didn't observe the same events. Not that I think Musk experienced any such thing, mind you, but it's important to distinguish between stories and direct observation.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    9. Re:If we're living in a computer simulation, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But we put them under the Disasters menu.!

    10. Re:If we're living in a computer simulation, by xdor · · Score: 1

      Burning bushes are common. Burning bushes that don't burn up are less so.

    11. Re:If we're living in a computer simulation, by Opportunist · · Score: 2

      So ... Microsoft is now coding the universe? Adding "features" nobody asked for and everyone was happier when they didn't exist?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    12. Re:If we're living in a computer simulation, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those are test vectors!

    13. Re:If we're living in a computer simulation, by dywolf · · Score: 1

      rofl at including FDR.
      and of course at the typical inclusion of governments and collectives.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    14. Re:If we're living in a computer simulation, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the religion was based on an answer to an off-the-cuff interview question, you're right. What Musk is saying is exactly the same.

    15. Re:If we're living in a computer simulation, by jenningsthecat · · Score: 1

      No, in my opinion they are far from the worst, although for me they are some of the most immediately annoying. I thought of some of those other things when I posted, and I expected someone might comment as you did. But I decided to keep it light. I was going for humour, and am a bit surprised that I've been modded 'Insightful'.

      --
      'The Economy' is a giant Ponzi scheme whose most pitiable suckers are the youngest among us and the yet-unborn.
    16. Re:If we're living in a computer simulation, by lgw · · Score: 1

      The burning bush in the story had a lengthy conversation (well, an angel inside it did), which was the point of the story after all.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    17. Re:If we're living in a computer simulation, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are griefers in any online gaming system. If we accept the simulation argument, we have to accept that some of the players in the simulation are real assholes (some much worse than others). Like Ultima Online, back in the early days when it was first released....

      In 10,000 years "we" haven't outgrown the need to grief other players in the simulation. This thought alone should be deeply disturbing...

    18. Re:If we're living in a computer simulation, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you are looking at it all wrong, It this IS a simulation, those are the "good" parts. Very very bad for those inside the sim, but for someone watching from outside... that's the most interesting part.

      The evolution of socialism vs capitalism is incredible if viewed from outside. Many people living and dying for their belief in how to run a government. Bringing the entire world to the brink of destruction for that very belief. Maybe the simulation ended 1,000's of times at that point and a tool/attitude was added and toyed with until it didn't end there then restarted. Think of playing the Sims and a main char dies, you load your game and maybe buy them a few extra pizza's or something until you figure out how to make them live.

      View the genocides as "let's see how far this will go until someone does something?" ... ah, they let X% of population die... ok ... Let's give them a game-changing tech (really the inspiration to build it) lets say fire... then engines.... then unlimited energy/cold fusion(scratch that, save it for later)... then internet. Now how does that change the game!?!?!

      I'm not saying that he's right or wrong, only that, from inside the sim we don't know and it's a good of an idea as any. Also, a sim that just chugs along and never does anything big is well... boring!

    19. Re:If we're living in a computer simulation, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Libertarian is upset that all government is a monopoly on violence. Poor abused libertarian...

    20. Re:If we're living in a computer simulation, by Macdude · · Score: 1

      then will the owners please debug the code and/or get the hardware fixed? I'm getting sick and tired of glitches like 'Real Housewives', Kardashians, and Donald Trump.

      There is no problem with the hardware, the user keeps wacking the Sim-Universe's "Natural Disaster" button.

      --
      "Grab them by the pussy" -- President of the United States of America
    21. Re:If we're living in a computer simulation, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really, those are the worst in your opinion?

      You read what was very obviously a joke, not meant to be taken seriously. You consciously realized this fact, and chose to disregard it by pretending it was a literal statement of fact. This makes you a liar.

      And the fact that you immediately, clumsily segued into hammering on your political beliefs - despite their being 100% irrelevant to the topic of discussion - shows the reason you chose to lie. Those beliefs are what you really wanted to talk about. It didn't matter what the GP said, you were always going to find an excuse to proselytize.

      And the only reason anyone ever does that is if they are insecure about their beliefs, and desperately trying to banish that uncertainty by screaming at every possible opportunity. Such single-mindedness can never exist alongside any degree of confidence.

      Deep down, you have realized that collectivism holds an appeal to you, and you are trying to exorcise that appeal by constantly shrieking invective at the strawmen you project onto strangers. But it isn't working. The appeal is getting stronger, and you are not intelligent enough to identify that appeal, let alone counter it. You will only grow more desperate and irrational over time, until your resolve breaks and you give in. You will then not only embrace collectivism, you will embrace the most extreme forms of it you can find, with the same unthinking fervor you previously held against it. Because neither your current opposition nor your impending adoption of that philosophy are based in any sort of logic or reason, only in what you wish to be true.

      You will die a communist, and you will have learned nothing.

    22. Re:If we're living in a computer simulation, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really, those are the worst in your opinion? How about Marx, Lenin, Mao, Stalin, Hitler, FDR, Hoover, Quadaffi (or however you spell it), Putin?

      Only the last of those is on TV, with any kind of regularity, so I can understand how someone might find the other more tedious, especially if they're not Russian.

      Genocides, wars, murders, kidnappings, rapes, robberies, death, destruction ....

      Are not solely attributable to the few you named, so a moot point. Especially death. Death stalks us all.

      How about stupidity, collectivism of all forms, types and shapes, ignorance, idleness?

      You must not be familiar with the Kardashians or Trump, that would be the point of mentioning them, as they have stupidity, ignorance, and idleness, and do it with a collective whole.

      Governments are the epithome of the worst collectivists systems, religions, and we are mentioning Kardashiand and Trump?

      Again, you must not be familiar with the Kardashians or Trump.

      But seriously, the Matrix was a great movie but it makes a bad religion and a bad belief system. What Musk is saying is akin to any other religion out there and his 'proof' is as good as a 'burning bush' or a talking snake.

      Nope, what he's saying is merely a philosophical conjecture, Maxwell's Demon for the modern age.

    23. Re:If we're living in a computer simulation, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So FDR was as bad as Hitler in your worldview? I'm glad your worldview is so wrong.

  13. Similar to this flawed argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are poison dart frogs in 1 jungle and in 99 zoos, therefore "one in hundred" chance a given poison dart frog lives in the jungle.

    1. Re:Similar to this flawed argument by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Not only that, it makes it far more likely that their natural habitat is zoos.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  14. Religious equivalence by Tailhook · · Score: 2

    When challenged to explain the lack of evidence for "god" theists will sometimes argue that the universe was deliberately designed not to reveal the evidence. Naturally one is left wondering what difference there is between a universe that contains no evidence of a creator and a universe that had no creator.

    What's the difference between a simulated universe and a "real" universe if the two are indistinguishable?

    --
    Maw! Fire up the karma burner!
    1. Re:Religious equivalence by OEasygoDiodoB · · Score: 2

      Maybe the real reality isn't quantized the way our simulation is. They could have 4K super-amoled quarks, and we're stuck here with our 1080P IPS quarks, with hazy electrons tunneling through all sorts of nonsensical things.

    2. Re:Religious equivalence by Empiric · · Score: 1

      More mainstream would be, say, the universe is designed not to reveal the evidence (more precisely, "proof", as this logically necessitates forced conversion, and there is in fact evidence) to those who are not intended to (yet) have it.

      So, it may be "indistinguishable" to you--that does not make it indistinguishable.

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    3. Re:Religious equivalence by irrational_design · · Score: 1

      Somebody might turn the simulated universe off?

    4. Re:Religious equivalence by sshir · · Score: 1

      There might be a difference. For example - we can invent a logic bomb that will crash or corrupt simulated reality. Quantum cryptanalysis comes to mind.

    5. Re:Religious equivalence by plopez · · Score: 1

      who cares? I still have bills to pay

      --
      putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
    6. Re:Religious equivalence by Tailhook · · Score: 1

      What evidence do you have that a "real" universe isn't (also) susceptible to this fate?

      --
      Maw! Fire up the karma burner!
    7. Re:Religious equivalence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's the difference between a simulated universe and a "real" universe if the two are indistinguishable?

      Well. In this universe, simulated or not, it is impossible to make a simulation that is equally or more complex than the current universe. Even if you were able to simulate an atom with an atom your simulation would lack the atoms that are in use by yourself so it would be a simpler model.

      It hard to guess how the real universe would look like if this one is a simulation. At best we can look at our attempts at simulation and extrapolate.

      One of the main reasons I don't think this universe is a simulation is that it has been running for so long without being turned off. One would expect that the simulation would be shut down and the code fixed every now and then. A simulation running for thousands of years doesn't seem likely.
      Of course it is possible that the simulation was started 5 minutes ago and all memories of what happened before that were part of the starting condition but that also seems unlikely to me.

    8. Re:Religious equivalence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      They turn it off every Planck Second for a billion years (which is the time needed to calculate the next frame), we just don't notice it.

    9. Re:Religious equivalence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What universe would you prefer to live in:

      Universe A:
      This universe is running on some kind of extra-universal computer that someone forgot to turn off. What happens if the housemaid accidentally unplugs said computer to plug in her vacuum cleaner?

      Universe B:
      This one is just a background-task in someone's phone. What will happen if said user will find out what process is actually draining his battery?

      Universe C:
      This one is the mothership. It contains not only everything we know and are, it contains everything that exists. It's comprehensiveness in itself. It's more solid than a rock, because it's more solid than everything it contains*. It's the real deal. It's made up out of rules that are clearly defined and can be clearly understood. It doesn't need an UPS or warning signs, because there are no housemaids that could unplug it. It's not a toy, it's is it, it is THE shit.

      * It does also contain rocks

      Disclaimer: This list might be incomplete and might not contain your favorite universe.

    10. Re:Religious equivalence by michelcolman · · Score: 1

      Even better, a buffer overflow that lets us get root. That would be fun!

    11. Re:Religious equivalence by thinkwaitfast · · Score: 1

      simulation is that it has been running for so long without being turned off.

      No, all of past history could be constructed as memories and the simulation started 1ms ago. https://youtu.be/DPjW-P03oK0?t...

    12. Re:Religious equivalence by Opportunist · · Score: 3, Funny

      So "Jesus saves" now means he's the guy in charge of backups?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    13. Re:Religious equivalence by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      My wish will not change the universe, so why bother wishing?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    14. Re:Religious equivalence by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      Somebody might turn the simulated universe off?

      Just... one... more... turn...

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    15. Re:Religious equivalence by Ihlosi · · Score: 2
      They turn it off every Planck Second for a billion years (which is the time needed to calculate the next frame), we just don't notice it.

      They also restored it from backup two minutes ago. We didn't notice it, either.

    16. Re:Religious equivalence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      explain the operating mechanics behind your 'logic bomb'?

    17. Re:Religious equivalence by Gavagai80 · · Score: 1

      Backup? No, the simulation started 2 minutes ago. Everything before that was just background data to make the simulation look like it has a past. It's actually very buggy, there's no need for all the laws of physics work right or anything because we simulated life forms have been given false memories that make us think everything is okay, and we haven't had time to run any tests in the last 2 minutes.

      --
      This space intentionally left blank
    18. Re:Religious equivalence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) Real vs Simulated is essentially a state question. You determine the state for the Real universe and then determine what differences a Simulated one would have.
      2) There is no reason to believe this universe in NOT the base universe, and a short argument can more or less prove it. The argument starts with "all computer programs have bugs" and leads to the reducto absudism of "the shortest program will be one instruction with a non-removable bug". The final statement is as good a descriptor of a machine instruction as can be found and that simply leads to the machine architecture the universe is running on. The existence of simulated universes is an interesting idea, but the reduction to trivial of building the hardware needed to run one and NOT including any bugs is absurd, simply because humans are not perfect.
      3) Why bother to model imperfect "people" unless the builders are perfect, and if the builders are perfect, why bother to model at all? Q.E.D.

    19. Re:Religious equivalence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thought it meant he kept most of his wages from picking grapes stashed under his pillow.

    20. Re:Religious equivalence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The difference would be that the simulated universe is contingent, transient relative to a "real" one, and could be shut down at any time. The "real" universe would have an existence independent of anything else, and would have to run its course in its own time. The problem for us (if we are inside the simulation) is that we may never be able to prove which we are, while the simulators (if there are any) at least know that they are running simulation(s). But they will never know if they are or are not themselves simulations.

      The curse of being in the lower realm is possibly never knowing anything about the higher realm(s).

      (And what theist has argued that there is no evidence for God because he supposedly suppressed all the evidence? You must hang out with a different set of theists than I do...)

  15. Hello world. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    del elon*.*

  16. Energy Use by MatiasKiviniemi · · Score: 1

    One should assume energy use will scale with computing power and a "console" capable of known universe scale of simulation would also need similar levels of energy. Even if we assume to have harnessed singularities or something and have unlimited energy, it's unlikely every house will have that level of energy (10^50 hiroshima bombs) available

    1. Re:Energy Use by JustNiz · · Score: 2

      >> One should assume energy use will scale with computing power

      No one really shouldn't. You're presuming that in the next 10,000 years we won't develop any relatively revolutionary method of computing that is vastly more energy efficient, which seems a ridiculous assumption given that to achieve the computing power and storage just your smart phone has just 40 years ago would have taken a large warehouse full of computing equipment sucking down hundreds of kilowatts of electricity.

    2. Re:Energy Use by PIBM · · Score: 3, Funny

      At that point, the best way to simulate it might be to simply build a planet and boot it with the startup condition required to find the answer that you seek...

    3. Re: Energy Use by mattcoz · · Score: 1

      Compare the energy use of early computers with that of mobile phones, if anything it scales inversely.

    4. Re:Energy Use by MatiasKiviniemi · · Score: 1

      Energy efficiency will improve, but that'll hit limits.. To do the 10^80 calculations you need to at least push 10^80 electrons, which gives you the scale of energy use. It doesn't really matter if it's one or million electrons per simulated atom.

    5. Re:Energy Use by Falos · · Score: 0

      It once occurred to me that a device for universe simulation would require mass. We're used to abstractions - a few "pixels" (a few binary blips, a few microns on a chip) can represent the concept of a ball, or a city, or a planet, but a few dots of light on a screen don't literally reproduce it. The microns won't do. Replicating means storing and calculating on every possible attribute and property.

      The most optimized method to track and represent the innumerable qualities of every little quark is the original matter itself, so the host universe would need a construct with at least as much mass as the subject sim to operate. 10^82 atoms to perfectly simulate 10^82 atoms. In practice it would take more, to include underlying systems and architecture below, to have a control space running and tracking things. CS types might articulate that better. I haven't the engineering to speculate on theoretical caps for energy. I guess playing out a canned computation can be kept slim on energy when using alternative mechanical means. Maybe what you need is very little energy, maybe all you need is a very carefully stacked deck and a lever labeled "Start".

      All said, it remains that few assumptions can be made about the host universe, which could be relatively supermassive, and involve existences suited to said scale. At this point we pass even scifi. I'm young, but a few years too old to sit with the college potheads that should take it from here.

    6. Re:Energy Use by olof_the_viking · · Score: 1

      You don't have to run a simulation in "real time full resolution", you can run it at any slower speed you wish. And divide the simulation up to execute tiny portions at a time, too. So you can use any size computer, you just need to keep it reasonably precise when a simulated "intelligence" is nearby, and they will never know. I still think the simulation hypothesis falls under Occams razor, though.

    7. Re:Energy Use by Troed · · Score: 1

      Unless someone's looking, there's no need to simulate in great detail.

      (One could argue that the "holes" in scientific theories are when the simulation needs to account for previous shortcuts once we start looking)

    8. Re:Energy Use by Falconhell · · Score: 1

      The mice tried that, but the Vogons blew the planet up. It was a a plot by phillosophers.

    9. Re: Energy Use by MatiasKiviniemi · · Score: 1

      You still need to keep track of all 10^80 items and every step know "if someone is looking" which (like we know from games) can be almost as hard as the simulation. Even if you could do that extremely well, (~simulate just Milky Way, the 1 in 10^10 galaxies) it's still a 10^70 problem that does not solve the energy levels

    10. Re: Energy Use by Troed · · Score: 1

      Why would you need to simulate the Milky Way in great detail?

    11. Re:Energy Use by bingoUV · · Score: 2

      Why would laws of physics in the simulator world bear any resemblance to the laws of physics in our world ?

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    12. Re:Energy Use by Evtim · · Score: 1

      As long as the answer you seek does not disturb the demarcation lines, you know! Those philosophers and religious professionals have many strings to pull in the Vogon administration!

    13. Re:Energy Use by in10se · · Score: 1

      What's yellow and dangerous?

      --
      Popisms.com - Connecting pop culture
    14. Re: Energy Use by MatiasKiviniemi · · Score: 1

      Well, fundamental assumption of the simulation argument is that it's a simulation of reality by a non-omnipotent race like us. If you assume different laws of reality, it's basically Descartes demon.

    15. Re: Energy Use by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      Non-omnipotent doesn't mean having to live under the same laws of physics as simulated beings. Super-mario's physics, even after being modeled after ours, is different and less rich.

      And we don't even know if our simulators modeled our physics after theirs, let alone it being the same.

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    16. Re:Energy Use by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      It's not too hard to make simulations with different laws for physics. I'm slowly putting together a game/toy with non-euclidean spaces. It turns out it's actually easier to write a 3D engine that supports this than to write one that does not.

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    17. Re:Energy Use by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm reducing the argument down to sheer storage capacity. Even a snapshot of the universe requires at least 10^82 atoms to contain, the easiest way being a clone, because anything else means losses and waste through the intermediates. Then processing calculations on the snapshot (to say nothing of stream) even in a staggered manner means (arguably tiny) overhead atop the 10^82.

    18. Re:Energy Use by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      Yup, half the fun could be an amazing set of laws of physics.

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    19. Re: Energy Use by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Are you familiar with the concept of skyboxes?

    20. Re:Energy Use by JustNiz · · Score: 1

      A bananinja?

  17. Weak argument by Maow · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I find that pretty weak.

    Things plateau and don't always improve at a linear, never mind exponential, rate.

    Sure Moore's Law has served us well for a generation and a bit, but on his "evolutionary scale" it'll likely be seen as a blip.

    All bubbles are obvious after they burst, but when inside one, it can be hard to recognise them.

    I have lots of respect for Musk, but this just seems ridiculous.

    We had transoceanic ships half a millenium ago, and it improved quite a bit from those days, but today's tech would be basically recognizable to someone from the 1600s, even if unbelievably large in scale. Metal ships & propellers seem to be the biggest advances (disregarding nuclear fuel sources vs ICEs) and those aren't considered new by any means.

    We've had air travel for over a century, yet in the past 30-40 years there hasn't been that much improvement; in fact just try to get a supersonic passenger flight now - can't do it.

    We've had men in space for half a century, had men on the moon almost half a century ago - can't do it now - USA can't even put a man in space on certified technology.

    Mr Musk must be aware of these limitations, surely.

    In light of those examples, I call his arguments on us living in a simulation very weak.

    1. Re:Weak argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The thing is you're still thinking in too small a scale. Unless you can theoretically prove technology advance is a bounded or convergent process, as time goes to infinity it's bound to divert to infinity, which is the point Musk is arguing.

    2. Re:Weak argument by gman003 · · Score: 1

      We had transoceanic ships half a millenium ago, and it improved quite a bit from those days, but today's tech would be basically recognizable to someone from the 1600s, even if unbelievably large in scale. Metal ships & propellers seem to be the biggest advances (disregarding nuclear fuel sources vs ICEs) and those aren't considered new by any means.

      Our ships would be basically recognizable to someone from the 1600s. What about our jetliners? Or our spacecraft? In the 1600s, only experts in relatively narrow fields would have had anything at all to relate those things to. Most would have had no idea such technology could even exist.

    3. Re:Weak argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But that argument itself presumes the outside of the universe is in some way comparable to what's inside. And don't rhetorically point out to me that neither of us can imagine that, i'm well aware, it's part of the point.

      Ultimately his argument is sufficiently true. Explicitly not necessarily true though. That would be enough for there to be something 'wrong' with it, if one were relying on it being functionally true.

    4. Re:Weak argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The thing is you're still thinking in too small a scale. Unless you can theoretically prove technology advance is a bounded or convergent process, as time goes to infinity it's bound to divert to infinity, which is the point Musk is arguing.

      Sometimes you put together existing small pieces to make bigger pieces, but that is not really advancing technology, but rather applying it. As the set of our understanding grows, the set of major things left to be understood must, by simple logic shrink, though where that end point is is unclear. Each major step taken must generally be preceded by a great many steps, so researchers on those paths have to learn a great deal before they can advance the state of the art, and at some point the rewards may not justify all the time spent.

      In short, at some point it becomes difficult for one researcher to know all he needs to know just to be the one with the knowledge he needs to further the state of the art before he dies of old age. We clearly are nowhere near that, though there is an earlier point. At what point will society stop paying to educate those researchers to that point, just to maybe get a return on investment slightly before they die?

      So yes, I can see humanities knowledge being limited by our frail life spans.

      I can also see humans one day coding their own video game, that from our perspective simulates real life so well that you can't tell the difference. In that world a copy of us might live on in a virtual environment and certainly appear to be alive, or at least alive enough for Turing.

    5. Re:Weak argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a very old concept, predating computers and modern civilization (Greeks said it first?), and it doesn't even require super advancements to what we have now. If there is someone above us, then it doesn't matter how faster their computers are. We'd only perceive things when the system lets us. It could be running 50 calculations per micro second or 1 calculation every billion years and we'd never know it because we can only perceive things on the ticks it lets us. We'd never know if it slows down or speeds up or if the state gets saved and then restored.

      It's safe to assume that in our future will simulate something well enough. We've simulated insect brains already and are currently working on a functional computer model. To those simulated insects, they were alive. Actor-based units in RTS games are alive in their reality. When we can simulate a world, we're likely to simulate more than one. Once that happens, it's more likely than not that we're one of those simulations. Simulating the whole world and all natural laws is likely difficult. And the people within the simulation would have just the same difficulties simulating their own laws with the tools they have in their simulations. There's no way to know if we're a simplified simulation of some far more complex world. Maybe they don't know how to simulate their world, but simulating our reality is easy.

      If you believe humans are more than just smart animals then you probably won't be able to understand these concepts and will probably dismiss them as nonsense.

    6. Re:Weak argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We can do a lot of things, but the answer is always "How will this make us money?". It's no secret that the greatest advancements in tech are during wars, when money is no object.

    7. Re:Weak argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is where AI will come into play. AI assisted research will revolutionize science as we know it. It will create the next tech explosion. Then we may solve the problem of genetic engineering to prolong life span or create super humans, or may eventually be replaced by machines.

    8. Re:Weak argument by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

      When I make a simulation I usually leave out the unimportant shit. Why allow fiction? Why make a rest of the universe? We were supper happy when we thought it was just earth and little bits of light? A single galaxy would be huge. But I'd just make one planet and a sun and be done with it. I'd also probably focus on one thing and make that part work well but let the other parts fall to shit.

    9. Re:Weak argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How did this shit get modded +5?

    10. Re:Weak argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps the entire simulation is for your benefit alone and there is no rest of the universe, only what you can perceive at any moment. Everyone you encounter is a philosophical zombie. Actually this makes more sense than simulating 10^82 particles.

    11. Re:Weak argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do realize that in the later half of the 1600's "everyone" had a telescope, just like today "everyone" has a tablet. They understandably speculated a lot about spacecraft back then. They might even be surprised that it took more than 300 years to get it done.

    12. Re:Weak argument by bug1 · · Score: 1

      These sort of people will say anything to get attention

    13. Re:Weak argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about our jetliners? Or our spacecraft? In the 1600s, only experts in relatively narrow fields would have had anything at all to relate those things to. Most would have had no idea such technology could even exist.

      Pretty much every polytheistic mythology has enough winged chariots that people from thousands of years ago would be able to grasp the concept.
      Sure, they might think of it as something created by the gods and have no idea about the technology behind it but if it has wheels and wings they should be able to recognize it as a flying vehicle.
      As for the 1600s specifically?
      Perhaps. The stories from Greek mythology have entertained people for a long time and popular culture from 1700s northern Europe contains references to it, fully expecting that common man would have equal or more knowledge of it than people of today. I would be surprised if it weren't the same for the 1600s.

    14. Re:Weak argument by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      We've had air travel for over a century, yet in the past 30-40 years there hasn't been that much improvement; in fact just try to get a supersonic passenger flight now - can't do it.,

      Apart from the massive massive massive massive improvement in cost, you mean.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    15. Re:Weak argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you would just simulate one planet and a sun and be done with it, then whatever the reason you are simulating, one planet and a sun is sufficient.

      I'm definitely not saying we're in a simulation, but 'Why make a rest of the universe' etc. type questions aren't answerable with knowing why a simulation is even running in the first place. If you'd make a single sun and planet, then that implies that simulating a single sun/planet meets your requirement for the purpose of the simulation, whatever that is (even if it's just because you want to ...). If our reality *is* a simulation, then things like 'why fiction' and even our very existence might just be a side effect and have nothing whatever to do with why the simulation is running, and 'Why make a rest of the universe?' just becomes a different question that we can't answer (why would whoever is simulating need or want to make a rest of the universe?)

    16. Re:Weak argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your argument isn't much better. Your assuming that a simulation needs to have the complexity of the universe it simulates. It doesn't.

      All that needs to be simulated is my mind, you don't exist except as a figment of my imagination. I don't need to actually model your entire life... just the few words you posted above.

      If I were writing a game, I may give hints that a huge universe exists with billions of people and huge cities and music etc. My game universe may have a history, and rules by which it operates. But I don't need to actually run a billion year simulation, instead I create a series of interactions and experiences for the player...

      Because our minds are able to comprehend our universe, that same mind would be able to invent a universe of equal complexity. So in reality... a single computer, no more complex than the human brain, could simulate the experience of living in a huge complex universe.

      So Musk doesn't even exist, he didn't make this prediction, and you don't exist and didn't write your post. I simply wanted something though provoking to waste my time on, so I invented him and this entire story to add some interest to my own simulation.

    17. Re:Weak argument by olof_the_viking · · Score: 1

      We are clearly living in version 2.0.2

    18. Re:Weak argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microwave ovens? Laser pointers? Video teleconferencing? Photovoltaics? Bittorrent?

      GPS / Satnav. Nothing even remotely like it in the 1600s.

      OK, here's one for ya: speech=>text=>espanol=>habla. That was quite literally a *joke* in a radio show in 1978. Now it's free to download on your phone.

      Blockchain technology. Nothing like it even 10 years ago.

      If you want to look at air travel, try comparing the number of passengers travelling 30-40 years ago
      ( Turns out that information is online too: http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/IS.AIR.PSGR/countries/1W )

    19. Re:Weak argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Atomic bombs.

      Helicopter gunships.

      Drone technology.

      In 2016, we have the capability to combine all three.

    20. Re:Weak argument by Khazunga · · Score: 1

      Moore's law is not a blip. Expand it, thinking not in terms of transistors but in terms of computation power of mankind's tools. The exponential goes back much further. Now, expand it again, thinking in terms of technology capabilities in general (not just computation). You get the law of accelerating returns: http://www.kurzweilai.net/the-...

      --
      If at first you don't succeed, skydiving is not for you
    21. Re:Weak argument by Gilgaron · · Score: 1

      That assumes humans are even an intentional part of the program. We can live on a minority of the surface of one planet in a universe of innumerable galaxies filled with such things. If this is a simulation the point of it likely has nothing to do with us.

    22. Re:Weak argument by Alioth · · Score: 2

      The simulation may not be "let's simulate a planet with people on it".

      It may be on the level of "Imagine if there was this stuff, and these rules, what would happen?" and someone codes up the rules for particles of all types and equations for the space they are in, pack all the particles in one small space (the Big Bang), perhaps a random number generator to churn things a bit, then hit start - and see what happened over the next few billions of years. We, our galaxy, fiction books, and everything else would merely be an emergent property of this relatively simple ruleset.

      If the universe were simulated, it's likely to be on a machine not made of matter as we know it with energy as we know it. We're just starting to observe the simulation ruleset by discovering relativity and quantum physics.

    23. Re:Weak argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe they did leave out unimportant sub quark constructs, maybe we are being simulated in a physics where the hard limit of processing power goes up with volume rather than surface area, perhaps a reality where otherwise decoherent elements of the wave function have a mechanism for querying each other.

      My main counter argument is that I'd expect populations in whole universe simulations with working quantum mechanics to be dominated by populations in fantasy games with a greater rates of external intervention.

      I find it more likely that the eternal inflation model is real, and 'real' universes dominate simulated ones.

    24. Re:Weak argument by Maow · · Score: 1

      Microwave ovens?

      Nothing new about microwave ovens:

      Percy Spencer is generally credited with inventing the modern microwave oven after World War II from radar technology developed during the war. Named the "Radarange", it was first sold in 1946.

      Laser pointers?

      Lasers are older than either of us, I imagine:

      The first laser was built in 1960 by Theodore H. Maiman

      Video teleconferencing?

      Some form of video communications are at least a generation old:

      An example of that was the German Reich Postzentralamt (post office) video telephone network serving Berlin and several German cities via coaxial cables between 1936 and 1940.[2][3]

      Photovoltaics?

      This is getting tiresome; photovoltaics isn't a new tech even though it's still evolving:

      The photovoltaic effect was first observed by Alexandre-Edmond Becquerel in 1839.[12][13]

      Bittorrent?

      Really? I mean, it's cool, but...

      GPS / Satnav. Nothing even remotely like it in the 1600s.

      OK, here's one for ya: speech=>text=>espanol=>habla. That was quite literally a *joke* in a radio show in 1978. Now it's free to download on your phone.

      Blockchain technology. Nothing like it even 10 years ago.

      If you want to look at air travel, try comparing the number of passengers travelling 30-40 years ago
      ( Turns out that information is online too: http://data.worldbank.org/indi... )

      I think I've shown that most of your examples hardly are new tech that has emerged in the current generation (approximately 25 years in length), and while they've changed the world, it didn't come fast and they are mostly solving the so-called "easy" problems. A simulated universe with sentient elements within it? Stuff of fantasy.

    25. Re:Weak argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So which of those four technologies which are common place in the modern world (Microwave ovens, video teleconferncing, laser pointers, photovolatics) would be (your words) "basically recognizable to someone from the 1600s" ?

  18. Dear Game Designers of My Reality by mfh · · Score: 3, Funny

    Fuck you for all the pain and suffering, cunts.

    --
    The dangers of knowledge trigger emotional distress in human beings.
    1. Re:Dear Game Designers of My Reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With such a low UID, doesn't that make you part of the elite?

    2. Re:Dear Game Designers of My Reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen

    3. Re:Dear Game Designers of My Reality by xdor · · Score: 1

      Yeah, lots of religious arguments about pain and suffering.

      It basically comes down to choice and actually having one. If every time you swing a bat at someone it turns to gel -- you are not living in a world with object persistence. In order to have "free-will" (e.g. actually be able to play the game) there actually has to be consequences.

      Disease and errant pain would seem more like bugs in the system -- but it might be more like radiation exposure -- there's consequences even if you can't seem them. Which makes the simulation seem less likely by nature of it being too replete.

      At least, that's the argument most cosmologists give for why the universe can't have been created.

    4. Re:Dear Game Designers of My Reality by mfh · · Score: 1

      >At least, that's the argument most cosmologists give for why the universe can't have been created.

      This is interesting. Elon Musk suggests we are living in a computer simulation, which would seem like an argument for a scientific reality however it is actually an argument for a different kind of creationism. Like if we slow down the perception of time to a crawl within a Large Hadron Collider and microorganisms exist upon the face of some spec within the particles within -- but they only exist for a very brief period of time by our standards.

      Because the rules of the experiment in Musk's case are unable to prevent suffering due to the ultimately short period of time from the creator's perspective.

      After much thought we have no choice be agnosticism due to the lack of factual evidence supporting any conclusion due to a lack of perspective (call it the Accessibility Problem).

      Disease is I think a side effect of life itself. We're not the first alpha species on the planet and probably not the last. Therefore life needs to keep moving forward. If we annihilate ourselves (like it appears we will pretty soon) then it will be through some disease microbes that new life spawns.

      In The Matrix, Agent Smith says human beings are a disease and the sentiment is not wrong.

      --
      The dangers of knowledge trigger emotional distress in human beings.
  19. Step 1: get a gun by tgibson · · Score: 1

    I had a professor who posited that we were all part of a Matrix-style simulation. How could we possibly know? My response, "Commit suicide." If it's a simulation, you'll come out of it. Mr. Musk, prove me wrong. What are the odds that I'm wrong? A billion-to-one?

    1. Re:Step 1: get a gun by whoever57 · · Score: 3

      You are positing a "Matrix" style simulation. What if it is more like a "Sims" game and you are no more than part of the simulation?

      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    2. Re:Step 1: get a gun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Why would you "come out of it" if you're simulated to begin with? You're comparing 2 different concepts.

    3. Re:Step 1: get a gun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

      That's not the typical interpretation of the idea, that we are all unknowingly and bodily strapped into some device (even if your professor did happen to mention the Matrix when going over it). Blowing your brains out wouldn't "wake you up" anymore than that pong dot "escapes back into the real world" once it slides off the edge. The simulation IS the world and represents the extent of what form and how your life exists. Killing yourself would still be ending your life because the simulation generated the life you lead.

      Anyway, the people in the Matrix who killed themselves died in the "real world" (without suddenly becoming aware of it) as well, so there's that too.

    4. Re:Step 1: get a gun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if it is more like a "Sims" game...

      It would definitely explain why every time I make sandwiches the house will spontaneously catch fire.

    5. Re:Step 1: get a gun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My response, "Commit suicide." If it's a simulation, you'll come out of it.

      Your response is inconsistent with the movie.

      Neo: If you're killed in the matrix, you die here?
      Morpheus: The body cannot live without the mind

    6. Re:Step 1: get a gun by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      You seem to not understand how a simulation works.

      When a simulated entity in your game dies, it doesnt magically become real.

      The whole matrix movie was using bad logic anyways. The only entities in it that could have been "real" were the ones that re-spawned.. the agents.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    7. Re:Step 1: get a gun by Ogive17 · · Score: 1

      I always knew that my string of poor life decisions was not my doing.

      (I'm randomly flipping off the sky right now.)

      --
      "Action without philosophy is a lethal weapon; philosophy without action is worthless."
    8. Re:Step 1: get a gun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I had a professor who posited that we were all part of a Matrix-style simulation. How could we possibly know? My response, "Commit suicide." If it's a simulation, you'll come out of it. Mr. Musk, prove me wrong. What are the odds that I'm wrong? A billion-to-one?

      Why would suicide "bring you out" of the simulation?

      When one of my dwarves in dwarf fortress dies they juts stop existing.

  20. Quantum Apostrophe revises his timetable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Elon will be strapped to a gurney with a Haloperidol pump in way less than 8 years.

    The guy's a fruitcake.

  21. does he understand odds? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Makes me very uncomfortable thinking that this guy runs a company that wants to sell us selfdriving cars, but apparently he doesn't understand odds. Odds are derived from observation, not from fantasy. More specifically he effectively states that the probability of us living in a simulation are 1e9 times greater than reality being - well just that. Probability means we have observed 1e9 : 1 events that speak in favor of a simulation, and then he goes on to cite computer games become "almost like" reality. In other words to this point there is _no_ event that speaks in favor of a simulation.

    1. Re:does he understand odds? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Damn frequentists! He's clearly using the modern and superior Bayesian Statistics. You start with a simple formula, making shit up for a few variables based on your personal feelings and intuitions, and you instantly produce a mathematically irrefutable proof of whatever it is you want to be true. Probability isn't some complex statistical calculation like the old days, it's a degree of belief backed by fancy math-like numberations.

    2. Re: does he understand odds? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      even in Baysian you have to calculate probabilities, and that's the same frequentist formula as it has always been.

    3. Re:does he understand odds? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Probability means we have observed 1e9 : 1 events that speak in favor of a simulation

      It seems you do not understand odds. All events are not equally weighted. -PCP

  22. If the NPCs had self awareness... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    In his argument, we are like the non-player characters (NPCs) in this advanced video game. Tell me, in what game do the NPCs exhibit the ability to, for example, learn about the world they live in through the scientific method?

    Think of all the computing power we throw at complex modelling, e.g. of weather patterns, quantum phenomena, financial markets, protein folding, etc. Many of these simulations run much slower than the processes they examine. Now imagine a game that models a universe like ours to the subatomic level. Even if a transistor were the size of an atom, we could not build a machine capable of running this game using all of the ordinary matter in our universe (think about it).

    But perhaps it is done with rocks: https://xkcd.com/505/

    1. Re:If the NPCs had self awareness... by Space+cowboy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Mmm. I'm not sure I agree with the reasoning. You and I can run conway's game of Life on a computer, fast enough to update an entire screen in real time and see things evolve. GPU's are awesome.

      But if you and I are the analogues for the nodes in that Life simulation, we have no concept of how much time passes between each simulation step. For all we know, it could take aeons of what we would perceive to be our timebase for the simulation of every Tp (Planck Time). We would never know any different.

      The argument of resource is equally unconvincing - to the (strangely, intelligent :-) nodes in our hypothetical game of Life, the very idea of simulating a complex environment is outlandish, but to us it's a simple situation, taking up next to no resources. The expectation is that the next "level up" that would be running our reality as a simulation would be just as much of a difference (or more) to us, as we are to the game of Life. Ad infinitum, of course.

      --
      Physicists get Hadrons!
    2. Re:If the NPCs had self awareness... by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      I think the logic for him is that an universe could easily have the resources to make a simulation _just_for_him_.

      but would run out of resources to run the simulation for everyone and everything we can't even see or detect with any sensors.

      but that doesn't matter because the simulation IS JUST FOR HIM and we're all npc's that don't need to be fully simulated.

      he might have based that on observing trump so dunno. stupid anyways. and he hasn't for sure been observing the advancements in games since system shock 1 to today - which are basically none when it comes to being a convincing simulation of a world, better textures and 3d models really, but no breakthroughs on conceptual levels.

      like little computer people, the games are conceptually still on the same level logically as they were 20 years ago. or maybe he just wanted someone to say out aloud that computer games haven't advanced in a long while - and that conceptually the tesla cars are the same as the first electric cars from 100 years ago, with the exception of slapping a dynamo to do the breaking.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    3. Re:If the NPCs had self awareness... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Ad Infinitum at the end of your post makes the argument of resource convincing. Since we have never, to my knowledge, made a simulation with self-aware entities inside of it, it makes far more sense that we are at the "top level" of existence. When we start making such simulations, and they become highly detailed, the argument might have precedent. However, even if you process the simulation at a much slower rate, you still need enough memory to completely represent the state of the simulation, which, for our universe, includes every quantum property of every subatomic particle.

      Consider that he is basing his argument on the progress of our simulations, which simply present high-resolution visuals to a single observer. The other reply to my comment above interprets his idea as the simulation being for a single individual, which may be possible. If you allow that everything in the universe which does not relate to you still occurs, the single individual simulation premise is absurd, and my argument above kicks in.

    4. Re:If the NPCs had self awareness... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All you are positing in a 'next level up' is the 'existence of God'...seriously, if we are running in a simulation, the presumption is 'someone or something created it'..e..g. 'God'. Given that there is 0 way to disprove the existence of God until or unless you can actually prove his/her existence your (and Elon) are doing nothing but postulating on his/her existence & THAT isn't new/unique/bold in any way. Matrix as a movie was/is 'cool' but that's all it is, a movie, pretending that this idea is somehow actually relevant to our universe should be left to conversations over beer or some other 'entertainment drug of choice'.

      Now, as far as Elon goes, I'd suggest he was either high as a kite (nothing wrong with that but he might want to do that in private), wanking for the 'uninitiated masses' (e.g. people who haven't at all considered the 'meaning of life', or think he's SO wonderful that anything he says is 'gold'), or he's become so full of himself he actually thinks what he said is somehow 'new and unique' & didn't recognize in the least that all he did was 'speculate on the nature & existence of God'...if its the latter I hope he can give his head a shake & get back to doing the otherwise 'good work' (Space-X, Tesla, Hyperloop) that could make some real difference in humanities life.

      If I'm not mistaken didn't Elon also recently claim that Nasa scientists had incorrectly calculated the existence of extra-terrestrial planets? I could be wrong on that as I can't find any google reference but I recall something on Slashdot recently similar to this but it may not have been from Elon rather some other 'famous guy' trying to do 'physics in his spare time'.

  23. Not senile, just falling for old philosophy by Wrexs0ul · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is just repackaging Anselm's Ontological argument for the existence of God: postulating "a being of which no greater can be conceived" would necessarily mean God exists. Just like living in a computer simulation: imagine "a computer simulation where no greater simulation can be conceived".

    But it doesn't make things real. Just because you'd have to imagine a real God doesn't necessarily make it exist outside your head. Same with the simulation.

    Neat thought experiment, not a proof.

    --
    --- Need web hosting?
    1. Re:Not senile, just falling for old philosophy by Empiric · · Score: 1

      This argument works better adding in a Platonic notion of ideal Forms.

      If you recognize an apple by relative approximation to a definitional "apple" model, then one can argue you could not determine what is and is not an apple without the reference entity actually objectively existing.

      Similar here with "greatness", as applied to more mundane entities. But still, a thought experiment, not a proof.

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    2. Re:Not senile, just falling for old philosophy by michelcolman · · Score: 1

      Also, it doesn't actually solve any existential questions. What universe is the simulation running in, then? And where did that come from? I know, turtles all the way down, but still, it doesn't explain how anything can exist at all.

    3. Re: Not senile, just falling for old philosophy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who says it has to be a universe similar to the one we are in? Could be some other form of existence.

      We could simulate a micro universe with properties totally unlike our own. The inhabitants of that universe would be none the wiser to what our universe is like

    4. Re: Not senile, just falling for old philosophy by michelcolman · · Score: 1

      It doesn't have to be similar. I'm just saying the existence of some higher universe does not solve the existential question: instead of wondering where our universe came from, we are now wondering where that other universe came from. Or the one simulating that one. At some point there would have to have been some sort of beginning.

    5. Re:Not senile, just falling for old philosophy by Bongo · · Score: 1

      Doesn't have to be one god. Could be trillions of beings, which would seem like gods to us "down here", yet they could still be constrained/limited at their level. And some of them are participating in the simulation, perhaps even contributing their own resources to it.

      Put it this way, it seems to be a better interpretation of what NDEs report, than that they met "God". The NDEs seem to say that the higher level is less constrained, whilst this level is dumbed down, more filtered, and narrow, and that when people die, they "meet themselves", like waking up.

      Or maybe the NDE is just a brain fart. But that's not, methinks, the simplest explanation, as we just don't know WHAT consciousness is, and saying it "emerges from the brain" doesn't actually explain anything about it—although one way around this is to just altogether dismiss consciousness' weird properties.

    6. Re: Not senile, just falling for old philosophy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "At some point there would have to have been some sort of beginning."

      The only reason you think that is because of our feeble experiences as human with feeble intellects. Our perspectives are all defined by limited vocabulary, limited lifespan, limited intellect, etc... all at a very limited scale within the universe. And this is all intertwined with our concept of "time" which is another potentially misguided human concept. We see things get born, live and then die and expect the rest of the universe to behave the same way. Infinity only sounds preposterous because we believe in time -- everything must have a beginning and end. Take away time and the universe starts making more sense.

    7. Re: Not senile, just falling for old philosophy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LOL

      In that case the Serial Killers are just the inevitable griefers you find on any PvP server :)

    8. Re:Not senile, just falling for old philosophy by Gamer_2k4 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The interesting thing to me is that this is just religion given techy words so it sounds more "rational" or "thought-provoking." Both a simulation and a creation would require a creator - some greater being outside of what we consider reality. In fact, when it comes down to it, do you really lose anything by calling the Christian (or Muslim or Jewish or whatever you like) theology a description of a computer simulation?

    9. Re:Not senile, just falling for old philosophy by DriveDog · · Score: 1

      So... some people believe there was a Creator but that He doesn't frequently intervene. Others believe the Creator intervenes frequently. Sim players might be classified the same way—some set everything up and kick off the sim and observe, while others tinker with it while it's ongoing, or pause it and tinker, then restart at the "same" point.

    10. Re:Not senile, just falling for old philosophy by tinkerton · · Score: 1

      Well he's talking about one in billions chance. If he can make statistical statements like that maybe he's got some impressive sample base we don't know about.

    11. Re:Not senile, just falling for old philosophy by Triklyn · · Score: 1

      nah, it's always been the an argument about probability.

      given the pace of technological advancement in our reality, and the trends in our reality. eventually our civilization will create simulated realities of some kind, just because we can. If we assume that our development/situation is non-unique, and assume the capability of any reality to sustain more than one simulated reality, we can conclude that the likelihood we're in the original reality, as opposed to one of the nested simulated realities is vanishingly small.

    12. Re:Not senile, just falling for old philosophy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just like the singularity. The old religions are past their sell-by date except to the ignorant, so new science-fiction religions will probably replace the old fantasy religions. Scientology and Heaven's Gate could just be the beginning of the sci-fi cults.

    13. Re:Not senile, just falling for old philosophy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You lose a similar amount of meaning by calling religious theology "a description of a computer simulation" as you would lose by calling your pet Roomba "your child whom you love dearly."

      And if you don't see any change of meaning, you should put the Roomba down and get a girlfriend.

    14. Re:Not senile, just falling for old philosophy by ultranova · · Score: 1

      This argument works better adding in a Platonic notion of ideal Forms.

      If you recognize an apple by relative approximation to a definitional "apple" model, then one can argue you could not determine what is and is not an apple without the reference entity actually objectively existing.

      And indeed it does, in the form of circuits - for lack of a better word - in my brain. But that's not a Platonic Ideal, because your idea of an apple is stored in your brain and is a separate object from mine.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    15. Re:Not senile, just falling for old philosophy by Empiric · · Score: 1

      You are just asserting that it isn't a Platonic Ideal by means of simply saying it isn't.

      While your perspective can be maintained, at puts you into the historically alternative Aristotelian position, it does not refute Plato. Ultimately, we interact coherently on the topic insofar as we have the -same- model of "apple", and it is not merely an arbitrary and subjective mental construct. How such models arise, naturally, is a matter of very long-standing discussion.

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    16. Re:Not senile, just falling for old philosophy by ultranova · · Score: 1

      You are just asserting that it isn't a Platonic Ideal by means of simply saying it isn't.

      "But that's not a Platonic Ideal, because your idea of an apple is stored in your brain and is a separate object from mine."

      Ultimately, we interact coherently on the topic insofar as we have the -same- model of "apple", and it is not merely an arbitrary and subjective mental construct.

      No, we don't have the same model of an apple. We both have our own models located in our separate brains. Those models are similar because they were constructed by entities - us - who share almost all of our evolutionary history, about a set of objects - apples - produced by entities - apple trees - which also share almost all of their evolutionary history. While one can speculate about an universal ideal of an apple, such ideal isn't actually necessary to explain the similarities of our models.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    17. Re:Not senile, just falling for old philosophy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, one of the greatest questions of theology is, "Through what means does god act, if at all it does?" A computer simulation theory gives a real mean through which god would act.

      Sure, the Christian bible talks about God acting through angels, but there are no angels, at least today. We've all seen computers though, and many understand how they work enough.

    18. Re:Not senile, just falling for old philosophy by Empiric · · Score: 1

      "But that's not a Platonic Ideal, because your idea of an apple is stored in your brain and is a separate object from mine."

      Okay. Seems to me you are just asserting your conclusion. How do you -know- there is not an "ideal apple" toward which our understanding tends toward, apart from a specific (and entirely variable in every brain) neurological representation?

      Again, you can take that position--it's very common within the currently-popular material-reductionist paradigm, but that doesn't prove it. Here is a nice introductory-level presentation of the scope of the issue you are addressing.

      "No, we don't have the same model of an apple. We both have our own models located in our separate brains. Those models are similar because they were constructed by entities - us - who share almost all of our evolutionary history, about a set of objects - apples - produced by entities - apple trees - which also share almost all of their evolutionary history. While one can speculate about an universal ideal of an apple, such ideal isn't actually necessary to explain the similarities of our models."

      Agreed, it isn't necessary, but you've done only handwaving invoking "evolution" in a passingly-specific explanatory way here.

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    19. Re:Not senile, just falling for old philosophy by hawkfish · · Score: 1

      This is just repackaging Anselm's Ontological argument for the existence of God: postulating "a being of which no greater can be conceived" would necessarily mean God exists. Just like living in a computer simulation: imagine "a computer simulation where no greater simulation can be conceived".

      But it doesn't make things real. Just because you'd have to imagine a real God doesn't necessarily make it exist outside your head. Same with the simulation.

      Neat thought experiment, not a proof.

      I always liked the opposite argument: If we are living in a simulation, then by Zorn's Lemma there is a maximal world containing our simulation and all the simulations that contain it. Now, what is the difference between beings living in that limit universe using their physical substrate and us living in their universe on our nested physical substrate?

      --
      You will not drink with us, but you would taste our steel? - Walter Matthau, The Pirates
    20. Re:Not senile, just falling for old philosophy by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      imagine "a computer simulation where no greater simulation can be conceived".

      I don't see how this is required for Musk's postulate to hold true. Anselm was trying to prove the existence of a "perfect" (omnipresent, omnipotent etc) god. Musk is merely saying that we may be in a simulation that is "good enough" for us to not notice - he's not saying that it's perfect.

    21. Re:Not senile, just falling for old philosophy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      https://xkcd.com/1505/

    22. Re:Not senile, just falling for old philosophy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yup...you got it. Nothing particularly wrong with Elon (or anyone) 'philosophizing' (heck, over a beer, gunja etc. I've done it ALOT, it can be fun) in particular, except of course he didn't do this 'over a beer', 'as a game', 'interesting discussion' etc. He did this in an interview presumably under the expectation that someone should answer his question e.g. 'is there a flaw in this argument'...and to that extent there's tonnes of books on this whole idea.

      Now, not to mention the fact that there IS a 'flaw in his argument', which is that fundamentally WE can create a simulation 'entirely indistinguishable from reality' without actually using all the energy in the Universe to create it. If I'm not mistaken there is actual physics theories which posit (in math) that to create a 'a simulated Universe indistinguishable from reality' would require all the energy & material IN the Universe today...in other words the flaw in his argument is the belief that we can create a simulation that is 100% indistinguishable from our current universe using LESS energy than exists in the universe itself, that can not be done, ever.

      To that extent, if we are in a simulation, from our point of view it IS the 'base Universe' and there's nothing we can do to create one exactly like it, at least not within this universe itself. Now, if you want to posit 'multi-universe theory' nothing particularly wrong with that either, but there's scads of theoretical physics on that too but until or unless we can interact with other universes (measure them etc.) then those theories are 'untestable' & are not 'theories' but only 'hypothesis'.

      At that point I direct Elon to any number of really interesting books on this very question. it seems to me he's spent more time thinking lately than reading. That's ok, we can't all be experts on everything.

  24. Slashdot itself by Skapare · · Score: 1

    Slashdot is definitely a computer simulation. How can it possibly be real?

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
    1. Re:Slashdot itself by ChunderDownunder · · Score: 4, Funny

      Has anyone ever noticed that Elon is an anagram of "Neo L" ?

      Surely that's a clue that we're living in a matrix.

    2. Re:Slashdot itself by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2

      Has anyone ever noticed that Elon is an anagram of "Neo L" ?

      Surely that's a clue that we're living in a matrix.

      Has anyone ever noticed that Elon is an anagram of "Neo L" ?

      Surely that's a clue that we're living in a matrix.

      No, it's a clue that we're living in a trim ax.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    3. Re:Slashdot itself by roman_mir · · Score: 0

      .Has anyone ever noticed that Elon is an anagram of "Neo L" ?

      Surely that's a clue that we're living in a matrix.

      Has anyone ever noticed that Elon is an anagram of "Neo L" ?

      Surely that's a clue that we're living in a matrix.

      - deja vu.

    4. Re:Slashdot itself by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is also an anagram of Leon.

      Surely that's a clue that Musk is training children to be hit men.

    5. Re:Slashdot itself by Pfhorrest · · Score: 1

      So we're in the fiftieth "version" of the Matrix, and the previous chosen one was Neo XLIX, commonly known as Exlixon?

      --
      -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
      "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
    6. Re:Slashdot itself by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      - vuja de

      the distinct feeling that you've never ever had this experience before

    7. Re:Slashdot itself by laddiebuck · · Score: 1

      It's actually "L Neo", as in "El Neo". ;)

    8. Re:Slashdot itself by Ihlosi · · Score: 2

      > the distinct feeling that you've never ever had this experience before It's "jamais-vu". When you experience an objectively familiar situation, experience or event as something completely new.

    9. Re:Slashdot itself by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Has anyone ever noticed that Elon is an anagram of "Neo L" ?

      Surely that's a clue that we're living in a matrix.

      Don't you mean "L Neo"?

      Which sounds like "el Neo", which is Spanish for "the Neo".

    10. Re:Slashdot itself by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 1

      It's actually "L Neo", as in "El Neo". ;)

      For those that "No hablo Espanol", that Spanish for "The Neo."

      --
      Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
    11. Re:Slashdot itself by S.I.O. · · Score: 1

      Neo L. Skum, the CEO you can trust.

  25. I guess he's never worked on hardware or software? by shess · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Let's say you have a computer program with 10,000 lines of code in it. How many bugs are there? OK, 100,000 lines, are there 10x as many bugs or 12x? 1M lines? Let's say you have a 10M-line computer program, there are going to be tens or hundreds of thousands of bugs in that thing.

    How many bugs have we seen in reality? I don't mean "Oh, _that's_ interesting" and later we figure out general relativity - I mean bugs, the shit bluescreens, or if you look in a certain direction, things are different. How many have we found?

    AFAICT, we've found _zero_. Every time we find a discrepency in the universe, later we figure out that it wasn't a discrepency, it's how the entire universe works, and our previous understanding was simply wrong. EVERY TIME. So either the bugs self-heal and become consistent universal features, or they weren't bugs in the first place.

    If the universe is a self-organizing emergent property on some very fundamental operator, then I don't see how "simulated" differs from "real". We don't write software that way. We don't build hardware that way. I don't mean a little bit, I mean AT ALL, that's entirely alien to everything in software and hardware, to the point where you might as well be talking about something else entirely.

  26. Universe is real. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We are living in God's universe. He created is 6000 years ago. Watch Kent Hovind's movies.

    1. Re:Universe is real. by thinkwaitfast · · Score: 1
  27. Where are the Cheat Codes? by krotscheck · · Score: 1

    Someone's got to have 'em...

    --
    This signature can save you $400 on your car insurance!
    1. Re:Where are the Cheat Codes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The cheat code is "having money".

  28. Appeal to probability is a logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about this: Elon is spewing the same bullshit argument that the creationists us: "What are the odds?"

    An Appeal to probability is a logical fallacy for them, and it's a logical fallacy for Elon.

  29. Base reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is the spiritual world

  30. Maybe, maybe not by shameless · · Score: 2

    Well, consider f'rinstance the uncertainty principle. Certain phenomena (e.g. the state of a particle) do not fully manifest until someone/something is observing it. That strongly resembles a rendering optimization to me...

    1. Re:Maybe, maybe not by Falconhell · · Score: 1

      Im not sure about the uncertainty principle.

    2. Re:Maybe, maybe not by burtosis · · Score: 1

      Well, consider f'rinstance the uncertainty principle. Certain phenomena (e.g. the state of a particle) do not fully manifest until someone/something is observing it. That strongly resembles a rendering optimization to me...

      The idea you have to have something, as in a person or sensor attached to one, observing a state for it to become a single classical outcome is complete and utter bs. There is no requirement for an observer at all, it's simply the energy and type of particle interactions. Sufficient perturbation is all it takes. In fact it's the exact extreme opposite of an optimization, the leading interpretation among physicists is the many worlds hypothesis in which the entire universe essentially is in the process of forking (to use a programming term) on a basis of every particle and in very short periods of time and by getting a single classical result you find yourself in that fork.

      If you want something that looks like a simulation it's that the maximum information of states scales as the surface area of a sphere and not the volume. That is strong evidence the entire 3D world is not as it appears.

  31. Ah, Statistics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The argument lacks objectivity as it is impossible to quantify the odds of being in a base reality. Thus, the assertion that we must be in a simulation simply because of the odds, is meaningless.

    Further, the physics doesn't suggest a simulation. That's a mathematical perception, not a real thing.

  32. Here are a few things... by haggie · · Score: 1

    -Meteor strike -Climate change -Conventional war -Nuclear war -Pandemic(s) Any of those items could devastate or eliminate the human race.

  33. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by sshir · · Score: 0

    Weak argument. This is (ahem) a cellular automata. Literally ten lines of code plus RNG.

  34. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by The+Evil+Atheist · · Score: 0

    Yeah, but what if bugs are the result of living in simulation? What if "base reality" is so much more such that it is possible for mathematics to be both complete and correct and has solutions for the halting problem? That would actually make it possible to eradicate all bugs in a system.

    Also, the incompatibility between Einsteinian, classical and quantum physics is a pretty big "discrepancy" in the universe, and there may be more exotic physics to be found to explain Dark Matter and Energy.

    --
    Those who do not learn from commit history are doomed to regress it.
  35. isn't the simpler explanation by cats-paw · · Score: 1

    that we live in an objective reality ?

    i'm not sure why it makes more sense that our universe is a simulation rather than we just live in "the universe" as it was created in an actual reality.

    --
    Absolute statements are never true
    1. Re:isn't the simpler explanation by ChunderDownunder · · Score: 1

      Occam went broke because no one would buy his razor blades.

  36. Obligatory comic by Raenex · · Score: 4, Funny
  37. He has figured it out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Therefore please Elon send me your money. You won't need it this being a simulation

  38. Philosophy != Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    His argument is philosophy or even religion because it makes a statement of fact drawn on a supposition that may or may not hold true and furthermore provides no real hypothesis.
    Remember a hypothesis is an idea you can test. You can't test this one. Hence it is mental masturbation, also known as religion.

    It doesn't mean we aren't in a simulation, it just means his reasoning about it is severely flawed.

    Try this counter theory on for size.
    Information can be quantized and therefore computed. The universe at it's fundamental level appears to also be quantized. If it is quantized it means that it CAN be computed.
    Ergo we are in a simulation.

    This is false because CAN does not equal IS. Also it fails to differentiate between computation, which is a natural result of physical systems interacting, and simulation, which is computation with a purpose.

    It is religion not science because it does not offer a way to demonstrate we are being computed with a purpose. Merely that it appears computation evolves naturally from the laws of our universe.

    In fact we know that some things such as pi cannot be properly quantized and neither really can spacetime at this moment in time despite our best attempts.
    The best we can do is get precision down to the planck limit, yet we cannot explain specifically why this is.

    The fact is, we can build computers in this universe because the laws of the universe allow for us to build computers. However if you took the entire resources of this universe you could not compute the entire state of the universe at all times and all places. You would need a computer with resources beyond those available in our universe in order to compute our universe. A hyper computer.

    So here's the deal. The argument that the odds of us being in a simulation are so great compared to the odds of not being in a simulation, is prima facia false because it makes no predictions. Yet it is provable that we are inside a computer of some sort. This is demonstrated by the fact that you can compute in this universe because the laws of physics are running a computation, which is computing the laws of physics in an analog fashion, i.e. a continuum system.

    You are a collection of mass/energy being used to compute the "you" value of this discrete moment in time, as is everything else in the Universe for all values of You, whether that is the hydrogen atom in the water sitting in your bladder, or the helium being produced in the star in our solar system, it's all part of a single larger overarching computation that is part of the information that is You.

    But computing does not equal simulation.
    This does not mean it is a simulation and it doesn't mean this is not a simulation. But you have to be careful, because a simulation immediately implies a builder i.e. a god and this is why all simulation arguments ultimately fall under religion, even if they are tested and proven.

    If however we assume that we ARE in a simulation as the basis of our hypothesis, rather than trying to derive the fact from statistics, then you can in fact test whether this is random computation or simulation. What I mean here is you can't say there is a trillion in one odds we aren't but you can prove the theory 1:1 and here's how you do that.

    The laws of physics are emergent from the currently hidden function of the Universe called the Grand Unified Theory. If we find a Grand Unified Theory, it will be unassailable proof of absolute computation. It will demonstrate once and for all that this universe is ultimately computable in either the analog or digital.

    If digital then this computation will either have a limit of precision. If we find it to be analog we will find there is no limit.
    If we find there is no limit then we can assume continum, else if there is a limit it will be quantizable, i.e. quantum at that limit.

    What makes a simulation different from a computation as stated earlier is purpose, i.e. Does this thing exist for a reason or is it

    1. Re:Philosophy != Science by EzInKy · · Score: 2

      Philosophy begets science.

      --
      Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once.
  39. Somebody should turn the holodeck safeties back on by cdsparrow · · Score: 1

    The world would be a much safer place then.

  40. I consider myself an agnostic and ... by shoor · · Score: 1

    Yes, we could be in a simulation. In fact, maybe none of you exist. I might have been created 5 minutes ago complete with false memories in a virtual world where I am the only conscious entity. The folks running the simulation would also be conscious entities. I might be one of their experiments.

    The operative words in the above paragraph are 'could', 'maybe' and 'might'. In fact most the time I don't think about it; I just assume that other people exist and my memories and sensory input have a rough correlation to some sort of reality because that seems like the practical thing to do. But I acknowledge that I can't know for sure that that's the case. So, the rest of this post, I'm going to assume that you other people exist and this is not just for the amusement and edification of some AI students observing me in yet another run of their simulation software.

    Back in the 1600s, philosopher Rene Descartes considered the matter and decided that the only thing he could know for sure was that he existed, because he was thinking about it. Everything else might have been false. (His famous line, in Latin, was Cogito ergo sum, I think therefore I am.) Older than DesCartes is the idea that life is a dream, or we are living in the dream of some god, who is himself living in the dream of a god, etc.

    Presumably, we (or at least I) might be in a simulation nested in another simulation. But working up through the levels, one would expect to get to the original. The creators of that first simulation don't have to be gods. They might have evolved up from a primeval universe formed in a big bang. They wouldn't necessarily know the answers to the really fundamental questions like how did it all get started? Why is there something instead of nothing?

    I don't know the answers to the fundamental questions and I don't think anyone else knows. (If I thought somebody else knew, I'd ask them, and then I'd know, right?) This is what being an agnostic (from ancient Greek for not knowing) is all about.

    --
    In theory, theory and practice are the same; in practice they're different. (Yogi Berra & A. Einstein)
    1. Re:I consider myself an agnostic and ... by Sir+Holo · · Score: 1

      Back in the 1600s, philosopher Rene Descartes considered the matter and decided that the only thing he could know for sure was that he existed, because he was thinking about it. Everything else might have been false. (His famous line, in Latin, was Cogito ergo sum, I think therefore I am.)

      Descartes used circular logic. His foundational cogito er sum is an axiom, not a known.

      And oddly – we name a rectilinear coordinate system after him! ???

  41. flaw in the argument: by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2

    if this is a simulation, all he offered was a simulated argument.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  42. I always prefer magic in my fantasy by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

    Stupid science about why superheroes can do what they do, or trying to explain how the sun went out and our plucky heroes are going to restart it just grates on the the nerves.

    It would be so much better if Musk took up a conventional religion with decent moral imperatives rather than trying to be a damn special snowflake.

    P.S. if he wants stupid science fiction religions the scientologists still have openings.

    1. Re:I always prefer magic in my fantasy by dmbasso · · Score: 1

      It would be so much better if Musk took up a conventional religion with decent moral imperatives

      The intersection you want is empty, unfortunately. Unless you consider Jainism conventional. Religions in general have a tendency to consider moral the killing of people with certain (arbitrary) characteristics. IMHO, if you believe that you're as immoral as you could be.

      --
      `echo $[0x853204FA81]|tr 0-9 ionbsdeaml`@gmail.com
    2. Re:I always prefer magic in my fantasy by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      You're projecting your hate and or prejudice. It reflects poorly on you.

  43. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously, I have found one bug on this simulation. Notice the dead lifeless seed, which is withered? Water and Sunlight will bring that dead thing into a huge tree again. This is beyond logic and comprehension.

  44. Energy argument? by sshir · · Score: 1

    I think there's a minimum amount of energy required to flip one bit (in our physics). The "outside world" will need insane amount of energy to maintain billions of simulations (assuming that in their physics bit flipping ain't free either)

    1. Re:Energy argument? by bug_hunter · · Score: 1

      True, but as you alluded to, who knows what laws of physics govern the reality of the parent universe?
      It could even be a tiny universe where lost energy is easily reflected, assuming conservation of energy is even a thing.
      Or maybe one day we'll just stop when the parent universe breaks.

      (If we are in a simulation or the "true reality" I don't think it makes much difference, it's fun to think about tho)

      --
      It's turtles all the way down.
    2. Re:Energy argument? by sshir · · Score: 1

      At least it shuts down Elon's "billions of simulations" in our future argument. Unless Kolmogorov's complexity of a universe is minuscule. Which makes it deterministic - but our most definitely is not.

    3. Re:Energy argument? by Alioth · · Score: 1

      If the universe were a simulation, it's likely it would not be made of matter as we know it, energy as we know it or time as we know it or even have laws of physics as we know it.

  45. Rocks by thinkwaitfast · · Score: 1

    That's what Wolfram is The Computational Universe">working on.

    1. Re:Rocks by thinkwaitfast · · Score: 1

      Bad link.... here. The Computational Universe

  46. Here is a better title: by bistromath007 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Elon Musk Gets Totally Baked, Flouts Thermodynamics in Attempt to Philosophically Construct Secular Afterlife

    I mean, I don't even think he's completely wrong, but holy shit the way he's saying this makes it clear he was toasted.

    1. Re:Here is a better title: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      That was my first thought. He can handle multi-$billion companies, but he can't handle the ganja.

  47. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by thinkwaitfast · · Score: 1

    Let's say you have a 10M-line computer program

    Not necessary.`

  48. Not A Proof by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This isn't a proof, it's a logical postulation.

    It also falls into the same categories as Zeno's Paradox and the Fermi Paradox. Things that apparently (by logic) must be true, but by evidence and outcome are not true.

    Take any growth curve, any curve at all. They all resolve into bell curves in the fullness of time. During the growth phase though, it's tempting to do straight line extrapolations and, presto!, infinite growth. That's essentially what Musk has done. He is short-sighted and fails to see the big picture here.

    Surprising for such an otherwise smart man.

  49. I admire Elon Musk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I admire Musk for having the ambition to start Telsa Motors and especially SpaceX. Good job, more power to you.

    On the other hand he's only human and he has his brainfarts just like rest of us... like this one... and the hyperloop.

  50. Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Tell me what's wrong with that argument. Is there a flaw in that argument?"

    It's not falsifiable, thus it is pointless.

  51. Going soft M. Musk ? by medoc · · Score: 1

    Everybody knows that the Flying Spaghetti Monster created the universe.

    1. Re:Going soft M. Musk ? by WalksOnDirt · · Score: 1

      Ramen.

      --
      a,e,i,o,u and sometimes w and y (at be if of up cwm by)
  52. Flaw in the argument ... by csmithers · · Score: 1

    An obvious flaw in the argument is that it assumes that there is a more advanced civilization than ours out there somewhere. But following Fermi's Paradox, where are they ? There has been no evidence of any other extraterrestrial civilization advanced or otherwise. Drake's equation states that there probably is, but again, where are they ?

    1. Re:Flaw in the argument ... by csmithers · · Score: 1

      Oh, of course. There's no evidence, because the simulation prevents it.

    2. Re:Flaw in the argument ... by Space+cowboy · · Score: 2

      I'm assuming he's saying we're not *in* the simulation. We *are* part of the simulation. It's not that there's no other more advanced society out there, it's that this entire universe is being simulated and we're part of that simulation. In the same way as we, relatively pitifully, can simulate star motion as universes collide by specifying the base rules and then letting matter interact.

      When you think about it, there's a lot that's pretty fishy about our reality

      • The whole speed-of-light being a constant thing. That's just weird. Special relativity. Really ?
      • Wave/Particle duality. Yeah...
      • Quantum entanglement. Uh-huh ?
      • ...

      I'm a physicist, and I find these weird. To take Musk's argument for a second, they do seem to smack of approximation code in and around the boundary conditions of a simulation... "Nothing will ever go that fast apart from light, so let's just simplify those parameters a bit"...

      Perhaps we're not in some grand experiment. Perhaps we're in a 7-years-old's school science-fair project...

      Plus, if you were simulating a universe, and you intended to seed life, that's probably pretty hard. Doing it multiple times could be a lot harder. Perhaps the very scarcity of life (as far as we know) in the universe is an indication of it *being* a simulation...

      Food for thought.

      --
      Physicists get Hadrons!
    3. Re:Flaw in the argument ... by Ace17 · · Score: 1

      When you think about it, there's a lot that's pretty fishy about our reality

      Maybe our way of thinking which is the fishy one.

    4. Re:Flaw in the argument ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually a better argument is that the simulation hypothesis is built on the assumption that an advanced civilization would have access to unlimited computational power. This assumption isn't very clear from the Wikipedia article on the subject, which is the encyclopedia that anyone with a talking point can edit.

      Without unlimited computational power, Bolstrom's "trilemma" is just a bunch of nonsensical futurism.

      MIRI and Less Wrong is a cult.

    5. Re:Flaw in the argument ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am not a physicist, however what I understand about wave / particle duality is the exact short cut one would use in a simulation. If high accuracy isn't needed, run the particle simulation as a wave function. If you need higher accuracy, run the particle simulation like a proper particle.

    6. Re:Flaw in the argument ... by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Speed of light limit prevents disconnect between cause and effect and no complex system could self organize without a stable cause and effect rule set being enforced. There wouldn't be anything around if backward time travel was possible yet stars and planets and life exists, thus time flows in one direction and cause and effect link satisfies the requirement and this requires a maximum on the speed of light to exist.

    7. Re:Flaw in the argument ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a physicist, and I find these weird. To take Musk's argument for a second, they do seem to smack of approximation code in and around the boundary conditions of a simulation... "Nothing will ever go that fast apart from light, so let's just simplify those parameters a bit"...

      Perhaps we're not in some grand experiment. Perhaps we're in a 7-years-old's school science-fair project...

      Perhaps we're just the test environment - and the universe expanding and collapsing is just the build system repeating a set of automated tests.

      I wonder what the integration environment is like?

    8. Re:Flaw in the argument ... by shess · · Score: 1

      When you think about it, there's a lot that's pretty fishy about our reality

      • The whole speed-of-light being a constant thing. That's just weird. Special relativity. Really ?
      • Wave/Particle duality. Yeah...
      • Quantum entanglement. Uh-huh ?
      • ...

      Speed of light being non-constant is less weird? How about pi, is that being a constant weird?

      With wave/particle duality and quantum entanglement, we understand them well enough to engineer useful consumer products based on them. What we don't understand is _why_ they are that way. But why is that evidence of anything? Complicated systems are complicated. Given current technology we can generate machine-learning systems which can successfully play at a high level in Go, but that doesn't mean we understand _how_ they manage this. That doesn't mean that they can't do it, and it doesn't mean that there's automatically magic involved. It just means that we have limits to our understanding.

    9. Re:Flaw in the argument ... by Space+cowboy · · Score: 1

      It was possibly poorly phrased, the "Special Relativity" was supposed to be a clue though. I was talking about it being a universal constant independent of the observer's velocity, i.e.: the difference between light having velocity 'c' and anything else having velocity 'v' where (if I am moving at velocity V), the other object is moving at velocity (v+V) whereas light is moving at velocity 'c'. It just smacks of Reality::constants::FLOAT_MAX.

      My argument has nothing to do with our understanding of them. It's a statement that they are areas of our reality that don't behave like all the others - and they tend to be at the extrema, and that's where *we* would put boundary condition / special cases / approximations if we were writing a simulator.

      --
      Physicists get Hadrons!
  53. He knows nothing about games by Nyder · · Score: 1

    We do not have a photo realistic 3D simulation that millions of people play at the same time. That would be nice, but we aren't even fucking close. We do have lot of great looking 3D simulations that people play in groups or by themselves. Maybe a few hundred on a server at a time, but that's it. We can't even get 1k people on the same server at the same time to have a serious deathmatch in any FPS. Shit, even WoW can't put that many people on a server at a time, and their graphics are cartoonish.

    So Elon, you might know some things, but the current state of video games? You don't. And thinking it's the strongest reason for why we are living in a computer simulation only shows how much you don't know. I don't know shit, but come on dude.

    --
    Be seeing you...
    1. Re:He knows nothing about games by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      We do not have a photo realistic 3D simulation that millions of people play at the same time.

      Who said that you were a player? You are one of the A.I's.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    2. Re:He knows nothing about games by rgbatduke · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and just imagine playing (say) World of Warcraft where when you get hacked to pieces, you feel the pain of being hacked to pieces, when you get fried by dragon breath you feel the pain of burning to death, and where -- like the original nethack -- if you die you are dead, and at best you have to start the game over from the beginning, only there is no Amulet of Yendor to even strive for.

      The next step in VR -- direct hookups that allow you to experience the joy of being eviscerated and left to die, or experiencing the pleasure of being eaten alive by flesh-eating bacteria and left blind and without limbs or tongue, or being multiply raped by your uncle at age four before being beaten to death by your mom's current drug abusing boyfriend.

      An obvious best seller. Can't wait for it to come out in the stores!

      --
      Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
  54. He's just saying what Neil DeGrasse Tyson said... by ayesnymous · · Score: 2

    ... a few weeks ago.

  55. When the rats start to understand the experiment.. by Space+cowboy · · Score: 1

    ... the scientists change the rules. Let's hope our overlords are willing to let the experiment run, even if people start to publicise this as a theory. On the plus side, we'd never know it if we're a simulation. Everything will just go offline instantaneously.

    And I think it'd be cool if that jesus guy was just someone who figured out a cheat code to our reality. Then the ban-hammer came down, of course...

    --
    Physicists get Hadrons!
  56. wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "what's wrong with that argument"?

    tens (hundreds?) of millions of people (programs?) are sitting at home alone trying to drink out the fact that they exist.

    And then they'll wake up and go into work tomorrow and repeat the same thing tomorrow night.

    What is this? Dwarf Fortress?

  57. Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If it's a simulation, then it seems likely that the people who built it are pretty much like us. After all, why else would their "sims" be like us?

    So that means it's valid to ask of ourselves: "Why would we build such a thing? Presuming we're not so stupid as to do it without understanding what we were doing, why would we go to so much trouble to create so much pain and misery? How would you, as a programmer, feel about working on a project like that?"

  58. The age of the universe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The universe has been going for more than 13 billion years, and our own computer simulations are but an insignificant speck in all that. Therefore our own computer simulations do not define the universe, quite the other way around. Don't be a dummy, Elon.

  59. In 10,000 years we'll become the Q Continuum by Golbez81 · · Score: 0

    Masters of our own domain.

  60. Proof by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    He's smokin' simulated weed

  61. Scientology not Science by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As for those that think this level of simulation is impossible, it isn't.

    Without ANY bugs? Really? The only way this idea works is if you have a divine programmer who cannot make any mistakes who created the universe. This is more like scientology than science.

    1. Re:Scientology not Science by Dashiva+Dan · · Score: 5, Funny

      Without ANY bugs? Really? The only way this idea works is if you have a divine programmer who cannot make any mistakes who created the universe. This is more like scientology than science.

      If my life has been a software simulation let me assure you, there's a LOT of bugs.

      --
      "lt;dr" is the correct response to most of my posts.
    2. Re: Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, if you happen to witness any bugs or inconsistency you are removed violently from the simulation. Sorta like how dictatorships work.

    3. Re:Scientology not Science by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 4, Informative

      Even if there are bugs, you can just stop the simulation, fix the bugs and start it over. Furthermore, even if there were bugs, that's for the creator of the simulation to notice and fix, not the simulated apes per-occupied with voting for Hillary or Trump.

    4. Re:Scientology not Science by lgw · · Score: 4, Interesting

      If the universe were being run right now in debug mode with frequent pauses and on-the-fly bugfix-and-continue changes ... would you know? There'd be no evidence in-universe after all.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    5. Re:Scientology not Science by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 4, Informative

      > Even if there are bugs, you can just stop the simulation, fix the bugs and start it over.

      As a developer and administrator for decades, dealing with increasingly complex systems, I must say "no". Many complex systems have bugs that are "emergent". They emerge from subtle interactions among smaller components, and can be devastatingly destructive to your existing system to repair. Examples include exceeding the size of expected storage through conditions that were never in the original specification, but which were assumed by other developers.

    6. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you don't fix those, and start the software again?

      What do you do, start from scratch every time you find such a bug, or declare bankruptcy?

    7. Re:Scientology not Science by religionofpeas · · Score: 4, Funny

      Without ANY bugs? Really?

      You've never lost your keys and then found them later in a place you were certain you've looked ?

    8. Re:Scientology not Science by religionofpeas · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The simulation wouldn't necessarily have to be complex. You could simulate the entire universe in a giant Game of Life board, with a handful of very simple rules combined with a huge state space.

    9. Re:Scientology not Science by ranton · · Score: 3, Interesting

      As for those that think this level of simulation is impossible, it isn't.

      Without ANY bugs? Really? The only way this idea works is if you have a divine programmer who cannot make any mistakes who created the universe. This is more like scientology than science.

      Whose to say there aren't bugs? As a physics major in college I could certainly be convinced many aspects of general relativity and quantum mechanics could be considered bugs. Nothing can move faster than the speed of light? Oops. Quantum entanglement and superposition? We'll fix those in version 2.5. Hopefully by version 4 we can finally get the world to run by what you call Newtonian physics with no exceptions.

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    10. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      magic system is still not fixed

    11. Re:Scientology not Science by Coisiche · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Without ANY bugs? Really?

      Two articles ago there was something that looks a lot like a bug to me.

    12. Re:Scientology not Science by war4peace · · Score: 2

      Examples include famine, floods, earthquakes, tornadoes, wars, Trump, accidents, murders, insanity, ecological disasters, North Korea, Chernobyl, volcano eruptions, landslides, avalanches... do I need to continue?

      Could be that the intent was to create a perfect world and all the above are the bugs.

      --
      ...gis sdrawkcab (usually not responding to ACs; don't bother posting as AC)
    13. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fascinating idea... There's a bug! Freeze the system, fix the bug, do a roll-back to before the bug's occurrence, and you and I and the whole universe are suddenly 10 years younger, but we won't know that, because our memories have been restored from backup, and the "future" 10 years have been erased...

    14. Re:Scientology not Science by Pentagram · · Score: 1

      Sure. It's quite easy to create systems that don't have bugs in if you have enough computing power to throw at it. Most bugs arise through having to make compromises, e.g. caching, memory allocation, writing things to file.

      If you can write a few simple rules and produce emergent complexity then it's not too difficult. If you just write some basic physical laws you can probably prove mathematically that your system is not buggy.

      Although if there were bugs, how would you distinguish them from reality?

    15. Re:Scientology not Science by KozmoStevnNaut · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That could explain why some people claim to be able to know the future, and why you sometimes think you've seen something before in a dream. The memory wipe wasn't 100% perfect, and some spurious data was left over. That could also be why you seem to forget your dreams really quickly after you wake up.

      --
      Eat the rich.
    16. Re:Scientology not Science by Ihlosi · · Score: 1
      If the universe were being run right now in debug mode with frequent pauses and on-the-fly bugfix-and-continue changes ... would you know? There'd be no evidence in-universe after all.

      Well ... that depends. A program could certainly detect if memory locations are changed behind its back (e.g. by checksumming memory ranges). But then again, the entity doing the debugging could simply adapt the stored checksums to match.

      WTB: JTAG adapter for the universe.

    17. Re:Scientology not Science by goarilla · · Score: 1

      That could also be why you seem to forget your dreams really quickly after you wake up.

      Then what's a coma from which you still remember some parts very vividly ?

    18. Re:Scientology not Science by sosume · · Score: 2

      What if the programmer is an AI program itself? I'd wager that a self-aware computer won't make silly logic mistakes. What if that AI is residing in another layer of simulation?

    19. Re:Scientology not Science by skovnymfe · · Score: 1

      Who's to say there aren't a few million civilizations accidentally triggering their star to go super nova because they fiddled with laws infinitely more complex than anything we've touched upon, where the bugs really start happening?

    20. Re:Scientology not Science by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

      Examples include famine, floods, earthquakes, tornadoes, wars...

      These are all completely consistent with the physical laws of the universe we live in. The simulation must be simulating all the matter and fields we can observe and so bug would be an inconsistency in the laws of physics. For example gravity not working at a certain time or for a certain object etc.

    21. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You just have a basic set of particles, a fixed set of rules to govern how they interact, and let the complexity evolve out of that. Like John Conway's game of Life. You have two particles (alive/dead), some basic rules. Then all sorts of different entities form; blinkers, gliders, breeders.

    22. Re:Scientology not Science by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

      Even if there are bugs, you can just stop the simulation, fix the bugs and start it over. Furthermore, even if there were bugs, that's for the creator of the simulation to notice and fix

      Many bugs in the laws of physics would be quite easy to spot. For example if gravity failed to work on tuesdays at 10am for chocolate teapots I doubt we would have much luck coming up with a consistent set of fundamental laws which explained that.

      For the start-over idea you have now just completely ruined the whole argument made in favour of this being a simulation. What are the odds that we are in the one run of the simulation that has been bug-free rather than the presumably billions of of runs where there have been bugs?

    23. Re: Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Voting for Trump proves you are an asshole AND stupid.

    24. Re:Scientology not Science by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 3, Interesting

      In that case you still need the perfect programmer to program the bug-free AI.

    25. Re: Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, but you don't fix them *while the simulation is still running*. And, with a serious bug, you likely don't have the option you restart the from where you left off either: you stop the sim, fix the big, then restart the sim *from the begging*.

    26. Re:Scientology not Science by JoeMerchant · · Score: 3, Insightful

      As for those that think this level of simulation is impossible, it isn't.

      Without ANY bugs? Really? The only way this idea works is if you have a divine programmer who cannot make any mistakes who created the universe. This is more like scientology than science.

      If we are in a simulation, I would anticipate it to have about 3 lines of code:

      1. initialize multidimensional structure full of 0s with one huge number in one location

      2. Apply unified theory of everything to structure

      3. goto 2.

    27. Re:Scientology not Science by Gilgaron · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How would we know the simulation was resumed from a backup after a system crash? If our consciousnesses were preserved in a state at time X before the crash and then the program resumed we wouldn't know.

    28. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      G-d is leet, dealz.

    29. Re:Scientology not Science by arth1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      These are all completely consistent with the physical laws of the universe we live in. The simulation must be simulating all the matter and fields we can observe and so bug would be an inconsistency in the laws of physics. For example gravity not working at a certain time or for a certain object etc.

      This is incorrect. You only have to simulate one person[*].
      And any inconsistency can be corrected, and the emulation replayed from the fix point. No one in the surviving time line would notice.

      [*]: Me, obviously.

    30. Re:Scientology not Science by war4peace · · Score: 1

      I'm not from the USA - I don't get to vote there, thank God.
      Not that my country fates any better, mind you :)

      --
      ...gis sdrawkcab (usually not responding to ACs; don't bother posting as AC)
    31. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Errmm....more like religion seems a better fit....

    32. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > per-occupied

      Imbecile.

    33. Re:Scientology not Science by schitso · · Score: 1

      voting for Hillary or Trump.

      Vote third-party, dawg.

    34. Re:Scientology not Science by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      And you don't fix those, and start the software again?

      If the bugs have corrupted the data, restarting the software is just kicking the can down the road.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    35. Re:Scientology not Science by NickFortune · · Score: 5, Funny

      Without ANY bugs? Really? The only way this idea works is if you have a divine programmer who cannot make any mistakes who created the universe

      Reminds me of one of my favourites from /usr/games/fortune


              "Yo, Mike!"
              "Yeah, Gabe?"
              "We got a problem down on Earth. In Utah."
              "I thought you fixed that last century!"
              "No, no, not that. Someone's found a security problem in the physics program. They're getting energy out of nowhere."
              "Blessit! Lemme look... Hey, it's there all right! OK, just a sec... There, that ought to patch it. Dist it out, wouldja?"
                      -- Cold Fusion, 1989

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
    36. Re:Scientology not Science by NickFortune · · Score: 1

      Ahem, forgot about the angle brackets.


              "Blessit! Lemme look... <tappity clickity tappity> Hey, it's there all right! OK, just a sec... <tappity clickity tap... save... compile> There, that ought to patch it. Dist it out, wouldja?"

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
    37. Re:Scientology not Science by rhazz · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Maybe all the schizophrenics are a processing thread like the rest of us, but with the DEBUG=true. They see the simulation for what it really is. And without realizing it we set their DEBUG=false by pumping them full of drugs.

    38. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe those bugs are just the result of the fuzzy chipset in use

    39. Re:Scientology not Science by KozmoStevnNaut · · Score: 1

      You weren't dreaming.

      --
      Eat the rich.
    40. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Last friday...

    41. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not the simulated apes per-occupied with voting for Hillary or Trump.

      I think that is a very good example of a bug ;)

    42. Re:Scientology not Science by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      uh huh, and déjà vu was just a glitch in The Matrix....

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    43. Re: Scientology not Science by Altus · · Score: 1

      What makes you think this is the first run?

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    44. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They keep dividing by 0 at black holes.

    45. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Twilight Zone, second series had a great take on the keys thing. Each minute of time is physically constructed and everyone kind of beams in to each new minute. If something is unseen, like a closet isn't opened during a given minute, the construction crews don't make the interior of the closet.

      Keys are explained by one minute's crew putting the keys in the wrong place and the next minute's crew getting it right.

      If you ever surprise them and say, open that unfinished closet, you become part of the constructions crews.

    46. Re:Scientology not Science by DriveDog · · Score: 1

      Worse. I've lost (two things so far) that have not been found. Neither logically should have been lost. Conclusion: the sim "observer" removed them due to an impending inconsistency involving them.

    47. Re:Scientology not Science by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      What if the programmer is an AI program itself? I'd wager that a self-aware computer won't make silly logic mistakes. What if that AI is residing in another layer of simulation?

      It could be an infinite number of simulations performed by an infinite number of A.I. constructs, each with an infinite number of simulations.

      Or just as easily, Chewbacca backing off in the jack room, and our universe - just the splooge.

      Which is just as credible as Musk's argument.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    48. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As for those that think this level of simulation is impossible, it isn't.

      Without ANY bugs?

      So what do you call Donald Trump then?

    49. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      there was a memset(&brain, 0, sizeof(brain)) missing from the code and old uninitialized data was reused?

    50. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lying Donny Sausagefingers is posting to Slashdot now?

    51. Re:Scientology not Science by whoever57 · · Score: 2

      Without ANY bugs? Really?

      Surely the whole of quantum mechanics is a bug? Spooky action at a distance?

      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    52. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      a divine programmer who cannot make any mistakes who created the universe.

      There is a cheat code for this, its called god mode

    53. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      any mistakes that are noticed can be backed out an no one in the simulation would be the wiser.

    54. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A sufficiently decent AI would be able to produce mostly-bug-free code and adapt to correct appropriately.

    55. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Without ANY bugs? Really? The only way this idea works is if you have a divine programmer who cannot make any mistakes who created the universe. This is more like scientology than science.

      What makes you think there aren't bugs? Relativity is likely correct because it works incredibly well to make predictions of things inclusive of testable bounds before they are actually tested. Quantum mechanics is likely correct because it works incredibly well to make predictions of things inclusive of testable bounds before they are actually tested. Relativity and quantum mechanics absolutely do not mesh and cannot be made to do so. If that's not a bug - or at least a serious sign of calculations scaling literally over the scale of the observer then you might as well throw everything away because there is no logic upon which to base anything.

    56. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In that case you still need the perfect programmer to program the bug-free AI.

      Nope, just a lot of back-propagation. The programmer doesn't actually need to understand any other concept if they have enough of it.

    57. Re:Scientology not Science by Gavagai80 · · Score: 1

      That could explain why some people claim to be able to know the future

      It wouldn't explain why they're all wrong, as proved by their inability to successfully act on their supposed future knowledge with a better success rate than the rest of us.

      --
      This space intentionally left blank
    58. Re:Scientology not Science by dave420 · · Score: 1

      If you are labouring under the impression that the code is immutable after the first execution and is executed only once. Just look at our simulations - if something is awry, it is stopped. The problem code is fixed, and the simulation is reset to a point before the problem did anything untoward. If we are in the simulation we won't notice anything, even if the simulation was taken off-line for aeons. You seem to have rather a high opinion of yourself if you think you would somehow notice this.

    59. Re:Scientology not Science by sh00z · · Score: 1
      Who says there aren't any bugs?
      • MH370
      • Taos Hum
      • S.S. Ourang Medan
      • 0.9999... = 1
    60. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So the incredibly powerful universal simulation can't garbage collect correctly?

    61. Re:Scientology not Science by shess · · Score: 1

      As for those that think this level of simulation is impossible, it isn't.

      Without ANY bugs? Really? The only way this idea works is if you have a divine programmer who cannot make any mistakes who created the universe. This is more like scientology than science.

      Whose to say there aren't bugs? As a physics major in college I could certainly be convinced many aspects of general relativity and quantum mechanics could be considered bugs. Nothing can move faster than the speed of light? Oops. Quantum entanglement and superposition? We'll fix those in version 2.5. Hopefully by version 4 we can finally get the world to run by what you call Newtonian physics with no exceptions.

      If a bug happens to everyone, it's damned easy to fix. But the annoying bugs don't. For the annoying bugs, 1% of your users are having the bug, their reports seem legit, but dozens of people have tried to reproduce it and can't. So you have evidence that someone's system is breaking the rules, you just can't see it.

      It would be like if you could travel faster than the speed of light, and I can see exactly what you are doing to accomplish it, but I cannot go faster than the speed of light. It would be like if you reported that electroncs were a wave, and I reported that they were a particle, but we can never figure out why. THIS IS NOT HOW REALITY WORKS. Every time, it has turned out that differing experimental results are because the experiments were different, not because reality was different.

    62. Re:Scientology not Science by Rob+Y. · · Score: 1

      It's not the simulation that's beyond our current rate of progress - it's the interface to make you actually believe it's real. That would have to fool all the senses, and we're nowhere near being even on a trajectory to be able to do that.

      It's funny how futurists like Musk have a bias toward believing in the feasibility of sci-fi fantasies that's kind of the mirror image of my bias toward not believing the impossible. Of course, Musk's bias brought us landable space launch rockets, and mine - perhaps some realistic Slashdot posts, otherwise...

      --
      Posted from my Android phone. Oh, I can change this? There, that's better...
    63. Re:Scientology not Science by dbIII · · Score: 1
      Here's two ways to do it.
      1/ You can simulate a massive environment.
      2/ You can control the inputs and fool someone into thinking you have simulated a massive environment, including wallpapering over the flaws or convincing the observer that the flaws are really something else.

      This is more like scientology than science.

      Philosophy is neither, especially not like the Hubbard weirdness. The ancient Greeks called this Sophism and used it as another way to think about reality. Things get elaborate and complicated very fast, hence "sophisticated", which at one time was a bit of an insult.

    64. Re: Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How would you even know if there is a bug? You would know it simply as how the universe works. You have nothing to compare it to. I'm sorry, do you have a copy of the design requirements to know that the Higgs boson is at the wrong energy level? No, you don't. So come off this "where are the bugs" bullshit.

    65. Re:Scientology not Science by twotacocombo · · Score: 1

      Nothing can move faster than the speed of light?

      Wat?

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    66. Re:Scientology not Science by KozmoStevnNaut · · Score: 2

      Look at the world around you. I think it's pretty obviously the case.

      --
      Eat the rich.
    67. Re:Scientology not Science by KozmoStevnNaut · · Score: 1

      I forgot the tag.

      --
      Eat the rich.
    68. Re:Scientology not Science by KozmoStevnNaut · · Score: 1

      The simplest explanation is that it's all bullshit.

      --
      Eat the rich.
    69. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I really think we should stop talking about this. If they have decided we've become aware of the experiment they will terminate it.

    70. Re:Scientology not Science by invid · · Score: 1

      Just asking, does anyone happen to have the god-mode hack? I'm stuck in the cubical level.

      --
      The Moore-Murphy Law: The number of things that will go wrong will double every 2 years.
    71. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where do all my missing socks go from the dryer? Obvious bug.

    72. Re: Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even though you don't believe it, I know your assumption is wrong...

    73. Re:Scientology not Science by leptons · · Score: 1

      >You've never lost your keys and then found them later in a place you were certain you've looked ?

      Yes, this obviously is concrete proof that we are a computer simulation.

    74. Re:Scientology not Science by apoc.famine · · Score: 1

      No, you'd need less-than-perfect AI able to iterate development of increasingly bug-free AI.
       
      Lets assume that a hundred years from now we make the first AI capable of programming AI and learning from the mistakes it made. Then fast-forward a million years, and you've had an exponential growth in AIs making AIs, because they can spawn child processes and do the work in parallel.
       
      And one of those AIs was smart enough to realize that they could speed up the process even further by running parallel simulations of the evolution of AI development, which would require the earth simulation to be spun up to the point where we develop AIs that can develop AIs. And here we are, nearing that point. Soon the permutations will be added to see what sort of path the new AIs take in this simulation.

      --
      Velociraptor = Distiraptor / Timeraptor
    75. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That could explain why some people claim to be able to know the future, and why you sometimes think you've seen something before in a dream. The memory wipe wasn't 100% perfect, and some spurious data was left over. That could also be why you seem to forget your dreams really quickly after you wake up.

      I never forget my dreams, and my dreams are of the future.

    76. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [*]: Me, obviously.

      [*]: pretty sure it's me, not you, eh...

    77. Re:Scientology not Science by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      Thank you for your interest in this topic. By-the-way, a Wat is a type of temple.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    78. Re:Scientology not Science by Ramze · · Score: 1

      Newtonian physics won't allow nuclear fusion or photosynthesis. Superposition is what allows quantum tunneling which is vital to both of those processes.

      Nuclear fusion takes so much energy that even with the intense pressure and heat from massive stars, the odds of a proton striking a nuclei at exactly the right angle with enough energy to fuse is extremely low, so it borrows energy from the vacuum and tunnels into the nucleus and stays as it's a lower ground state. Stars would have to be so massive to maintain stable fusion without tunneling, that they'd instead become black holes.

      Since a universe without quantum mechanics would have to have completely different physics than ours, why would they bother to create an universe so unlike their own, and why would they care if the ants in it figured out they're in an ant farm? Why bother to hide any glitches with a system restore or memory wipe?

      All computers have glitches -- a stray cosmic ray could flip a RAM bit or two and cause havoc on a database. If we're in a program, I wouldn't call it a simulation... because those "bugs" you mention are quantum properties of things like LEDs, other various computer parts, plantlife, and the life cycle of stars that would not work as well or at all without them. We can't be a simulation if the "real" universe is nothing like us. We'd be more like a video game with its own physics-defying rules.

    79. Re:Scientology not Science by Pfhorrest · · Score: 1

      You only have to simulate one person.

      The boundaries of that person get very fuzzy once you start thinking of everything in the simulated universe as just information. Sure, you could just simulate a brain and feed it false sensory signals, but then how are you generating the signals to send it? You could simulate a human body for that brain to be in, but then you need to apply simulated forces to that human body to get it to send signals to the simulated brain, which you could do just by simulating the force-carrying bosons immediately impinging upon it that body... but then how do you derive the pattern in which those bosons impinge? In reality those bosons are basically carrying the signals from the rest of the universe to that human body, and in the simulation you still have to generate those signals for the for simulated bosons to impose on the simulated body, so you still need to simulate a universe.

      So ok, maybe you just simulate the immediate physical surroundings of that physical body, and in those physically simulated surroundings the right bosons are simulated to impinge upon the simulated body to send the right signals to the simulated brain... but then how are you deciding when and how to change those simulated physical surroundings? Changes to those surroundings (other than those originating with in) are, in reality, signals from the larger universe; you still need to generate those signals, the pattern of external changes to the simulated immediate surroundings of the simulated body in which the simulated brain is situated, and in doing so you are simulating the broader universe beyond those immediate physical surroundings.

      And so on outward through every link in the chain of interaction. Wherever you stop simulating, there appears to the simulated person the boundary of the universe: a void from which no more signals come. We actually do have one of those in reality, the cosmological horizon, the furthest away and longest ago events we can receive signals from, but literally the entire known universe is included within that (by definition), so to simulate just a brain and the things it experiences, if those things it experiences are of a world like the one we experience, you end up having to simulate an entire world like ours.

      --
      -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
      "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
    80. Re: Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      simple. when you see the same black cat twice, or any deja vu for that matter = bug.

    81. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's exactly what an NPC would say to make me believe I'm not the real simuation.

    82. Re:Scientology not Science by flargleblarg · · Score: 1

      For example if gravity failed to work on tuesdays at 10am for chocolate teapots

      I believe that's called a royal fizzbin.

    83. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You called?

    84. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tesla can't get a set of doors right, and yet he thinks we're living in a 'simulation'. Daffy.

      http://blog.caranddriver.com/musk-attributes-falcon-wing-door-debacle-to-hubris-says-software-will-fix-it/

    85. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is more like scientology than science.

      You need to get out more

    86. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As for those that think this level of simulation is impossible, it isn't.

      Without ANY bugs? Really? The only way this idea works is if you have a divine programmer who cannot make any mistakes who created the universe. This is more like scientology than science.

      There is an interface for bug reports: https://xkcd.com/258/

    87. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are there really no bugs? Any of our natural phenomena could be a bug in the software running our universe.

    88. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are presuming a bug in the universe. I presume a bug in brains.

    89. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Define "correctly". It may be that whatever the goal of that simulation is, deja vu etc doesn't really affect it in any meaningful way, so they may have opted for a cheap deallocator that occasionally ends up allocating blocks filled with garbage from previous iterations.

    90. Re:Scientology not Science by Dorianny · · Score: 1

      As for those that think this level of simulation is impossible, it isn't.

      Without ANY bugs? Really? The only way this idea works is if you have a divine programmer who cannot make any mistakes who created the universe. This is more like scientology than science.

      Whose to say there aren't bugs? As a physics major in college I could certainly be convinced many aspects of general relativity and quantum mechanics could be considered bugs. Nothing can move faster than the speed of light? Oops. Quantum entanglement and superposition? We'll fix those in version 2.5. Hopefully by version 4 we can finally get the world to run by what you call Newtonian physics with no exceptions.

      If the simulation ran simply on Newtonian physics then we would eventually be able to figure out the Universes initial hard-coded state. Perhaps Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle which gives rise to the quantum weirdness was specifically designed so the initial state of the simulation could never be known from within the simulation

    91. Re:Scientology not Science by Marqis · · Score: 2

      It's not a bug it's a feature.

      I'm not sure how not getting laid in high school was a feature but here we are.

    92. Re:Scientology not Science by igny · · Score: 2

      Considering the rate at which hallucinogenic or other psychotic drugs are being developed/ discovered, it is much more likely that we all live in a hallucination of some megalomaniac.

      --
      In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is. - Yogi Berra
    93. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Reminds me of Greg Egan's Permutation City. At one point in the novel, the protagonist's simulation is run in time slices out of temporal order. The sim did not notice.

    94. Re:Scientology not Science by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

      The problem code is fixed, and the simulation is reset to a point before the problem did anything untoward.

      That is not possible for all simulations. In the ones I use you generally only notice the bug after the simulation has completed and you are analysing the results unless the bug is so bad that it causes a crash or a massive memory leak. This completely undermines the statistical argument that people like Musk are trying to make because at this point it becomes what is the chance that we are living in one of the few runs of the simulation which is bug-free.

    95. Re: Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's just what an AI player in my existential program would say.

    96. Re:Scientology not Science by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

      How would we know the simulation was resumed from a backup after a system crash?

      Why would it crash? There are plenty of bugs which do not cause crashes. I don't see why not having gravity work for chocolate teapots for a minute a week would cause the entire universe to fall apart. At this point the question then becomes what are the chances that we are living in a simulation where there are zero noticeable bugs of any sort and in that case the statistical arguments for simulations become a lot weaker.

    97. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ITYM 'angel'.

    98. Re: Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are missing the point I think. There is no "interface". The idea isn't that we are beings outside a simulation using a simulation. The idea is that we exist inside a simulation, that we are part of the simulation.

    99. Re: Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think think it hurts the idea. If you accept that simulations of this detail are inevitable then the idea that many would be in some ways fail doesn't make it unlikely that we are in one. It would just put us in the same position described by the weak anthropic principal. Ie the same place we are in if everything is "real".

    100. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We have Hillary and Trump. You seem to imply that you find no bugs...

      "Why, this is hell, nor am I out of it." - Mephistophes
                            Christopher Marlowe, Dr. Faustus

    101. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bugs?? Bugs are mentioned before anyone mentioned EVIDENCE. Pesky ole evidence. Otherwise its philosophy.

    102. Re:Scientology not Science by JThundley · · Score: 1

      And who says a divine programmer isn't possible? Self-improving AI is going to be possible in our lifetime.

    103. Re:Scientology not Science by Mr0bvious · · Score: 1

      Nope, you just need a sufficiently capable AI that can correct any errors from the initial programmers.

      --
      Never happened. True story.
    104. Re: Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And in 10,000 years when we invent perfect simulations, simulated faggots like you will say the same thing, and be just as wrong.

    105. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not if the simulation hardware is interfacing with a "real" "brain".

    106. Re:Scientology not Science by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      You've been watching the matrix. Our senses have no idea what's real. Our senses never even noticed relativity or quantum mechanics. We had to figure out that out using science. What is real to our senses is whatever just they are used to. And what they are used to often isn't even correct. If we are in a simulation, there is no reason to think we will ever have any empirical evidence of it.

    107. Re:Scientology not Science by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      If you are making a movie, are the bad things that happen int he movie mistakes? No, conflict is what makes it suspenseful. A movie without suspense is boring.

    108. Re:Scientology not Science by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      For example if gravity failed to work on tuesdays at 10am for chocolate teapots I doubt we would have much luck coming up with a consistent set of fundamental laws which explained that.

      It sounds like you already did.

      For the start-over idea you have now just completely ruined the whole argument made in favour of this being a simulation. What are the odds that we are in the one run of the simulation that has been bug-free rather than the presumably billions of of runs where there have been bugs?

      Maybe the creator never intended for there to be anti-matter, and our universe doesn't work as intended because of matter/anti-matter interactions. How would we know that's a bug. That's just how our universe works.

    109. Re:Scientology not Science by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      So what if the bugs are bad. All I am saying is that we won't notice the bugs even if they did exist. Let's say the simulation is riddled with bugs. It crashes every 20 billion years. This is the 100 trillionth time running the simulation and the creator still can't figure out how to fix it. We don't care. As far as we are concerned, everything seems fine, because when things aren't fine, we don't exist to have an opinion on how things seem, or we have been restarted without any knowledge of past simulation runs.

    110. Re:Scientology not Science by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      There is an even simpler explanation for deja vu. In a normal circumstance, when when you see something familiar, your brain notices it and you consciously confirm that it is familiar it is indeed familiar. What if your brain miscategorizes something as familiar and this doesn't make sense. Like you go to a city you've never been to before, and the familiarity module of your brain misfires and says "This seems familiar", but your analytical module decides that you couldn't have seen this before because you've never been to this city. Bam. Deja vu.

      The thing is, whether the familiarity module of your brain is misfiring or actually detecting something actually familiar (maybe you saw a picture of this place), that's not information that is accessible to you from subjective experience.

    111. Re:Scientology not Science by ranton · · Score: 1

      If a bug happens to everyone, it's damned easy to fix. But the annoying bugs don't. For the annoying bugs, 1% of your users are having the bug, their reports seem legit, but dozens of people have tried to reproduce it and can't. So you have evidence that someone's system is breaking the rules, you just can't see it.

      So kind of like the people who see ghosts, or those with psychic abilities that we just cannot seem to reproduce in lab experiments?

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    112. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that's a bug in YOUR software and hardware, not proof of a simulation but then again it's all about you and your perfect recall isn't it?

    113. Re:Scientology not Science by Rob+Y. · · Score: 1

      Perhaps. But isn't Musk's argument that the current trajectory of computer simulations (i.e. from Pong to Virtual Reality) suggests that our world is the result of another civilization's similar trajectory? Nothing in our trajectory hints at computer consciousness / self-awareness. Not to say his sci-fi fantasies couldn't be true, just that his evidence of it is questionable.

      --
      Posted from my Android phone. Oh, I can change this? There, that's better...
    114. Re:Scientology not Science by Dagger2 · · Score: 1

      Nothing in our trajectory hints at computer consciousness / self-awareness.

      You think so? It's not like there's anything special about our brains, they're just a bunch of chemicals aligned in the right way. And we already do physics simulations, so we know those are possible -- yes, it's true that they're usually pretty simple and small scale, but it doesn't seem like there's any fundamental reason we couldn't expand them to the point where we could do a physical simulation of a brain (or lots of them, plus a universe for them to live in).

    115. Re:Scientology not Science by peawormsworth · · Score: 1

      Without ANY bugs?

      We are the bugs.

    116. Re:Scientology not Science by Dagger2 · · Score: 1

      I think this might possibly be the only reasonable counter-argument in the entire thread. Certainly better than all the "lolreligionbs" all over the rest of it...

      I'd argue it's not particularly convincing by itself, because once you get all the bugs in your program worked out it's very easy to run many copies of it. Consider games, where the vast majority of total play time for any given game is done by the players, who are playing the bug-free release version, and not the developers who play the buggy versions.

      The question then becomes "how easy is it to actually write a bug-free simulation?", which is a pretty tricky question. My suspicion is that once we dig our way down to the bottom layer of physics, it'll turn out to be very simple -- which would make it easier to implement without bugs. But who knows.

    117. Re:Scientology not Science by sjames · · Score: 1

      Perhaps that's the origin of the bermuda triangle and other phenomenology, it's just people slipping through cracks in the map.

    118. Re:Scientology not Science by toddestan · · Score: 1

      The question is, would we even recognize a bug, or would just accept it as normal because we wouldn't know any different? I mean, we could have a bug in gravity that causes large astronomical objects to act like they have much more mass than they actually do. Do we actually recognize it as a bug, or do we invent dark matter and other physics to try to explain it as a natural phenomenon?

    119. Re:Scientology not Science by descubes · · Score: 1

      If your choices are voting for Hilary or for Trump and you say there is no bug, you are not very good at spotting bugs to start with

      --
      -- Did you try Tao3D? http://tao3d.sourceforge.net
    120. Re:Scientology not Science by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      I didn't say that those are our only choices. I said that that's those are the choices that people are pre-occupied with. And it's something is not a bug unless it causes behavior different than what the creator intended.

    121. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So certainly TDD is the way to go, I should pay more attention to it.

    122. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Without ANY bugs? Really?

      You've never lost your keys and then found them later in a place you were certain you've looked ?

      >> ... in a place you were certain you've looked ?

      You are obviously a man.

    123. Re:Scientology not Science by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

      The question is, would we even recognize a bug, or would just accept it as normal because we wouldn't know any different?

      That depends on the bug. If you have capricious failures in the fundamental laws of physics for which there is no explanation nor repeatability then this would be a smoking gun for a bug in the underlying simulation. On the other hand if there were supposed to be some extra force which the developer forgot to enable then there is no way we could spot that or likewise if gravity was set to be weaker than intended that would be impossible for us to know.

    124. Re:Scientology not Science by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

      My suspicion is that once we dig our way down to the bottom layer of physics, it'll turn out to be very simple

      Actually the experience we have so far is exactly the reverse. Trying to simulate the fundamental interactions of the strong force (the one which binds the nucleus together) is unbelievably hard. The current best effort is Lattice QCD and so far the approximate simulation of even a single proton takes up enormous computing resources.

      The Monte-Carlo simulations we use in particle physics try to parameterize QCD to get around this but they are notoriously inaccurate and tuning the parameters to get better agreement with data is a never ending undertaking. Often analyses will estimate data from background based methods because the simulation cannot be trusted enough to determine the QCD background accurately.

      Now of course there may be ways to work around these issues in the future for example with new mathematical techniques (there is a higher dimensional approach from String Theory that some are looking at). However my point is simply to show that very simple physical laws - QCD is actually very like electromagnetism with only one small but far-reaching difference - can be phenomenally difficult to simulate so even with perfect knowledge of the universe there is absolutely no guarantee it will be possible to simulate it on any sort of large scale.

    125. Re:Scientology not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      'nothing moving faster than the speed of light' is a 'rule of the simulation' not a 'bug'. That you don't like it is maybe a question you should take up with whomever is writing this simulation. E.g. that rule is not really any different than a rule on an entry field that it can't be 'longer than x characters'. It becomes a bug in the latter case if for some string of characters this rule is broken (predictably or otherwise...e.g. the same set of characters ALWAYS break the rule & once you found that string you can exploit that bug reliably)...the equivalence to the speed of light restriction is if some particle CAN travel faster than the speed of light & can always be made to do so. That could then be argued to be a 'bug' in the simulation EXCEPT since we don't know the design considerations for whomever is writing our simulation we have no way to know if the discovery of a 'faster than light particle' represents a bug or a 'feature' that we simply haven't discovered.

  62. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Quite an assumption. If it were so, would it not be easy to derive those ten lines of code from any maxim as everything is dependent upon them? Classic folly of the Greeks and their invention of geometry trying to figure out the universe.

    Doesn't matter really. Elon is relying on scaling conventional programming as a premise, so your injection isn't relevant.

  63. People have been saying this long before Elon Musk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But since Elon Musk said it, it must be super fucking Important!

    Everytime Elon Musk Queef's, we must collectively all inhale it, worship the queef, let it marinate in our olfactory, and then praise it like a Babylonian god.

  64. Just what we need... by bjwest · · Score: 1

    So, Elon Musk want's to become the next L. Ron Hubbard? Scientology isn't enough of a hairbrained "religion", now we need to bring Tron and/or The Matrix into the religious text club?

    --

    --- Keep the choice with the user..
  65. It's computers all the way down... by Edis+Krad · · Score: 1

    So we're basically back on the turtle argument? Man that took a while to come back to.

  66. Fermi by jxander · · Score: 1

    Living within a simulation would certainly explain the Fermi Paradox.

    We have no aliens because they haven't been patched in yet. Next DLC, I bet.

    --
    This signature is false.
  67. And so it goes... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    we have a scientist discussing politics and worse, a business man discussing the universe and the space time.

    The later is in dangerous, since if we live in computer simulation, there is no real suffering, hence the "business men" can exploit the workers without any remorse.

  68. IO by bugs2squash · · Score: 1

    Input and output devices get better all the time, their job is to stimulate the player's brain into thinking it sees real scenes, hears real sounds. Eventually the IO device will directly interact with the brain, bypassing those pesky eyes and ears.

    Later even, the brain itself will host the processing, the external "game" system will no longer dictate everything it will instead have set the player's imagination free-running, or networked imaginations to make shared dreams possible. In that case the sensations that the actors in those dreams feel will be figments of the imagination of the player.

    so we then have the thought processes of the actors (you and I) being run on a real brain (the player) so we're back to reality

    It's no longer a simulation on a computer

    --
    Nullius in verba
    1. Re:IO by omnichad · · Score: 1

      I think you just tried to argue that dreams are reality.

  69. Quantization at a quantum level could be evidence by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

    There are aspects of the universe which become quantified with out real/intermediate values.

    That could be the limits of resolution of the simulation.

    Likewise light being waves or particles.

    Tyson's argument was once we make a simulation of the universe, that will constitute good evidence that we are probably in one. It was on slashdot a few months ago so Musk is a bit late to the party.

    --
    She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  70. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by Sneeka2 · · Score: 1

    You need to go out more, into the woods for example. THOUSANDS OF BUGS there I tell you, THOUSANDS! Under every rock, log and leaf!

    --
    Bitten Apples are still better than dirty Windows...
  71. Carry that forward... by RJFerret · · Score: 1

    ...okay, so the entities that have us in a computer simulation likewise are living in a simulation of other entities, who are also living in a... *rollseyes There isn't infinite energy to sustain all that.

    The issue is more that when I can fap to a virtual lover of my choosing, my DNA doesn't get into a human receptacle for procreation. I've had a virtual pet in a virtual world, it's "dead" now. It never evolved to generate simulations and virtual species.

    Also, we had virtual worlds decades ago, which are no better than the best now (just shinier). The majority of folks still need to earn a living to eat. No matter how sophisticated, we can't eat pixels. 3D food printers will need to be refilled.

  72. Creationism with computer science by Dasher42 · · Score: 1

    This has all the same flaws as creationism or rapture theory in the church. Hand-waving the complexity of the world we're in and putting it up to a hypothetical universe the simulation is running in simply kicks the can down the road. There's no evidence for it, just an argument from incredulity at the nature of the world we actually interact with. A universe with a civilization advanced enough to simulate ours doesn't make the questions go away, or simplify them one bit.

    Further, squandering the energy reserves of a civilization to simulate another civilization and universe to this level doesn't seem something a civilization could get away with doing for millenia. Ours sure isn't.

    Same old myths, just somebody has a computer on their desk instead of a bronze age text. Humans don't change much.

    1. Re:Creationism with computer science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if it seems like a millenia to us but is actually just a scientist running a sim that takes him 5 minutes?

      "Ugh, Trump got elected again. Fiiine, removing the species' divergence of colour and lowering the testosterone."
      "Bump up the reserves of oil while you're at it"
      "Good idea!"

    2. Re:Creationism with computer science by yes-but-no · · Score: 1

      apple falls; newton says it's due to gravity. He doesn't explain how gravity originated. That doesn't make his explanation of the apple fall flawed. You explain one link in a chain. If someone asks how the chain started, you can say no one started.. it just was there eternally - beginningless, endless and likely beyond reason/explanation. We can explain how we humans came about ..these thinking-machines; but that doesn't mean we are explaining the origin of all. Of course very likely there is no creator and the creation alone is; it is both the creator as well as the created.

    3. Re:Creationism with computer science by Alioth · · Score: 1

      I do agree that this is just quasi-religious bullshit.

      On the other hand, if the universe were a simulation, there's nothing to say that simulating our universe only takes a trivial amount of whatever passes for matter, energy and time in their universe.

  73. Roads!? by EzInKy · · Score: 1

    "Where we're going, we don't need roads."

    --
    Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once.
  74. I knew it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I started suspecting this when the door to my room disappeared and I was forced to go number one in the floor.

  75. Photorealism, really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wait, what? We finally have photorealistic 3D simulations with millions of people playing simultaneously? Why hasn't anybody told me??

  76. Holy non falsifiable hypothesis Batman by bingoUV · · Score: 1

    The hypothesis is neither here not there.

    --
    Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
  77. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by thegarbz · · Score: 1

    How many bugs have we seen in reality?

    Given the percentage of a population that are about to vote for someone who's running on a platform of building a wall around the country, I'd say the bugs are in the 100s of millions :)

  78. Elon Musk did not invent this, Nick Bostrom did by os10000 · · Score: 1

    Dear /.

    the underlying doubt comes from Descartes' deliberations on how to obtain knowledge (chapter 3, "meditations"):

    http://plato.stanford.edu/entr...

    The re-loaded version for the 21st century can be found here:

    http://www.simulation-argument...

    The guy who wrote it got his own department at the University of Oxford (to study "existential risk" -- earth and life on it are threatened by the power button on a space-age playstation ...):

    https://www.fhi.ox.ac.uk/

    Best regards,

    Oliver

  79. The meddling counter-argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I prefaced the name of my argument with "the," thus lending it increased credibility.

    We (humanity) do not seem to have evidence of any violation of physical laws (as discovered/elucidated through science). If we _were_ in a simulation, the beings responsible for it couldn't have resisted the urge to meddle. Yet such meddling would result in a deviation from physical laws. Since we have not seen such a deviation, we must not be in a simulation.

  80. This simulation sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > write root
    > Who made this shit? EA? Come on. Turn it off and give us something better!
    > CTRL-C

    I hope he got the message.

  81. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    You'd never notice the bugs. You'd be programmed not to. Or, as philosopher Nick Bostrom ("The Simulation Argument") explains it, "you could edit the mental states of the beings... you could erase the memory of any glitches or rewind the simulation"

  82. Stop making a big deal out of this by Zandamesh · · Score: 1

    Geez guys, what's up with all these badly thought out single sentence posts that just dismiss the simulation hypothesis without a single argument? Kind of like how people dismiss evolution? When did Slashdot become facebook?

    a few things things:
    1. The two people interviewing Musk when the simulation hypothesis came up were terrible, cringe inducing interviewers .So Musk started talking about things quasi-randomly and this somehow came up.
    2. The simulation hypothesis is pretty well known: https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
    3. It's a simulation *HYPOTHESIS*. Believing in a hypothesis is an oxymoron.

    --
    Lo and behold, for I am a sig!
  83. "Go" away by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The number of permutations of a single game of Go is more than the atoms in the known universe. It's all very well with heuristics and neural nets running approximations but I'd imagine calculating an entire universe of shit in a way that doesn't let errors get out of hand would be beyond any possible advance in computing, just based on physical limitations of energy.

  84. Are we winning? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cool, can anyone see the scores from where they are? Are we winning?

  85. Transcendental use of pure reason by Potor · · Score: 1

    This is precisely what Kant meant when he argued that the principle of non-contradiction does not prove the existence of anything, and that reason left to its own devices can conjure up anything it wants.

    1. Re:Transcendental use of pure reason by xdor · · Score: 1

      So Elon is creating a video game by occult of argument? I don't think that's been done before.

  86. As a great bozo once said by Vinegar+Joe · · Score: 1

    "Oh my duck! His pants have disappeared! Kid, everybody's watching!" - Barney the Bozo

    --
    "The average reporter we talk to is 27 years old......They literally know nothing." - Ben Rhodes
  87. Our world, explained by mshor · · Score: 1

    If we are in a VR world created by a Microsoft-like company it would explain why the world is in the shape it is in.And it might even explain Donald Trump. Nah, tech support would have told them to reboot us a long time ago.

  88. It's just you, Elon... by criminy · · Score: 1

    The simulation part is correct, but they're just simulating your brain. Everyone and everything else is a construct of that.

  89. Occam's razor is just a belief by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Occam's razor

    But Occam's razor isn't a proof, it's only a layman's belief that things tend to have simple explanations. Even if true in many cases, it can't be used to predict that simplicity applies in a specific case.

    What's more, Occam's razor falls apart quite often in science, most spectacularly with quantum mechanics. It falls apart even with common things though, such as water for example, which has astounding complexity totally belied by its trivial formula.

    1. Re:Occam's razor is just a belief by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      Occam's razor can never fall apart - by definition. It can fall apart in retrospect, though. Similar to how it is always today, but what is today today is yesterday tomorrow.

      How? Because the idea is that if there are multiple explanations which EQUALLY explain all known relevant observations - choose the simpler / simplest one. As soon as an observation comes along that makes the erstwhile simpler explanation false - Occam's razor no more prefers that explanation. NOW, Occam's razor prefers the simplest of the remaining explanations.

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
  90. Gameception by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

    By that same logic, we're most likely just a game within a game within a game within a game ...

    --
    Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
  91. And so are they! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its turtles all the way down!

  92. "One in Billions Chance" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Elon just defined God folks.
    It's God's video game.
    We, humanity have gotten ourselves into our current mess.
    We can co-create with God to get out. In the process of doing that,
    we will learn not to do it again.

  93. Coincidence by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    One in billions is also the chance that a randomly chosen human isn't sick of hearing about Elon Musk.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  94. All Sci-Fi is an extension of today by giorgist · · Score: 1

    All Sci-Fi is an extension of today, so in the 50s we had the space race so all sci fi was rockets and space travel. Computer games is so yesterday. What about facebook. Maybe the future we will all click like at cat videos. G

  95. A simulation with _self_aware_ bots by halsathome · · Score: 1

    Neat idea, and given Elon Musks numbers are correct, he's right. But, if we are living in a simulation, it is a simulation with self-aware software agents. I do not think there will be "billions" of those in any forseeable future, so the basis is wrong.

    1. Re:A simulation with _self_aware_ bots by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 1

      Why not? We have no idea what the parent reality is really like. It doesn't have to be like our future. It could be 12-dimensional, 5 of which are time and 1 of which is colour. There could be enough computing power in a Blargian's equivalent of a Sinclair Spectrum run 50 universes like ours.

      --
      systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
    2. Re:A simulation with _self_aware_ bots by zwarte+piet · · Score: 1

      in that case it means that we are those Blargians playing a game.

  96. South Park episode by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Reminds me of the South Park episode called 'cancelled'.

  97. Pascal's Wager by mentil · · Score: 1

    I'm disappointed noone has yet brought up Pascal's Wager. The idea that "there is an infinitesimal chance we're not living in a computer simulation" is akin to Pascal's wager: "an infinitesimal chance of heaven existing means we should worship god", in that they both make difficult-to-prove claims about the nature of the universe which are (or border on) religion.

    --
    Corruption is convincing someone that the selfless ideal is the same as their selfish ideal.
    1. Re:Pascal's Wager by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Pascal's Wager fails because of a false dichotomy. It could only stand if there is only two choices, problem is, though, that there is a few thousand religions out there, each one claiming (with about as much "proof" as the next one) that they are the only true one.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    2. Re:Pascal's Wager by Evtim · · Score: 1

      It also fails because the premise is "we don't know if there is god but I will prove you that it is better to be believer" , yet in the body of the argument it uses another assumption - that god likes to be worshiped. Do you see the flaw?

    3. Re:Pascal's Wager by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Far too many assumptions to make any correct decision based on what you know.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    4. Re:Pascal's Wager by Gavagai80 · · Score: 1

      There may also be a god who disrespects people who believe in him without good evidence. I find it more plausible that god would send his believers to hell and his disbelievers to heaven on the grounds that the latter show more initiative and good use of the faculties he gave them while the former are useless followers.

      --
      This space intentionally left blank
  98. Not necessarily... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Two words: Great Filter.

    The discovery of life elsewhere in the universe, or even cellular life that evolved independently in our own solar system, would immediately imply that life may always extinguish itself before reaching the stage of being capable of developing simulated realities, or indeed getting far enough away to not be affected by it.

  99. I' split... by OpenSourced · · Score: 1

    On one side, if this was a computer simulation, we would have magic.

    On the other side, that could explain the McCulloch's fly by anomalies. They would simply be the result of reaching the precision limit of the simulator's variables.

    So I don't know what to think, I suppose that's about par for an NPC.

    --
    Rome taught me patience and assiduous application to detail. Virtues which temper the boldness of great, general views.
    1. Re:I' split... by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Nope. Magic, or "miracles" as others might call it, only happened during the beta when the developers intervened directly and needed to apply hotfixes and emergency patches.

      We're in the maintenance phase now. And most likely the only guy who knew how this whole mess is held together has been fired millennia ago.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  100. Just remember... by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 1

    When a distinguished but elderly scientist states that something is possible, he is almost certainly right.
    When he states that something is impossible, he is very probably wrong.
    When a crazy billionaire Bond villain engineer says we're probably a computer simulation... I have no idea.

    --
    systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
  101. Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If my life has been a software simulation let me assure you, there's a LOT of bugs.

    Your player is just a free to play scrub. Take it up with them that you don't have all the pay2win stuff like a massive inheritance.

  102. Model != Reality by jandersen · · Score: 1

    Theories are, at best, models of reality - that is something people keep forgetting. A model can never represent the whole truth about what reality is - I think we can probably even prove that with some of Goedel's theorems (I say probably, it is still not uncontroversial, what his results actually tell us). The best of our theories are useful, because they give us a practical tool for making calculations and predictions; even QM and GR are only models - when we say "space is curved", it means that our calculations are much easier to handle and understand in that model; it is quite likely that we could make a workable theory if we decided that space must be Euclidean - but the physics would look much weirder and much, much messier as a result. The same goes for quantum mechanics. Models are only tools that simplify our understanding of reality.

    This is the background on which we need to see the holographic models and the models that interpret reality as computer simulations: they are proposing new ways of looking at the same reality, in the hope that it may simplify certain aspects of our observations. And, crucially, we know from the start that they are not accurate - reality stretches far beyond any model we know of or can imagine yet. And, embarrassingly, there are always people around the fringes of any theory, who will start reading Gods and Intentions into anything that is new and sounds mysterious enough. Quantum mechanics used to be riddled with it, and as far as I know, the same happened when electro-magnetic theory was first developed; there are simply people around, who are determined to be idiots, no matter what.

  103. One in a million chance that Musk by melted · · Score: 1

    One in a million chance that Musk is not jacked up on amphetamines. Have you seen him lately? Dude looks _really_ worn out.

  104. It's the Watchmaker argument by ebusinessmedia1 · · Score: 1

    Musk is just projecting. He's a reductionist. Last, he can't prove his position. How does one prove that one is inside a simulation,when it must be assumed that the simulation is under another's control; thus,the attempt at proof,and even hunches that seek one to pursue proofs, are part of a controlled simulation?

  105. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not a bug, it's a feature.

  106. Turtles all the way up by Mats+Svensson · · Score: 1

    By that follows that we are at the bottom of infinite layers of virtualization. Because what goes for us, also goes for the people upstairs, and their creators, etc. We at least know we are are the very ass-end of whatever high pile it might be, because we have no universe in a box here yet. And if there are infinite layers, what are the chances that NONE of those jokers upstream haven't accidentally unplugged/crashed/whatever their stuff yet? Zero right, because shit happens. Therefore; we are not virtual.

  107. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by thinkwaitfast · · Score: 1

    would it not be easy to derive those ten lines of code

    Interestingly enough, stephen wolfram is trying this by creating and running every permutation of every possible program. He claims to have found some that are close, but nothing that matches our universe yet.

    Here is a long, but interesting talk about possible universes and possible types of consciousnesses. https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

  108. Uhmmm Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why use a VR Game or Sims when you are smart enough to make the real thing? Say hello to GOD. Or is it GODs? We are but a small part of a big wheel. That wheel is going faster and faster down this hill of entropy. I'll see you on/at the bottom.

  109. please by Mr_Nitro · · Score: 1

    While I remain agnostic of Elon's argument I would like to know what is the matter with this absolutism of vision. Who ever said that the entirety of our 'reality' has to be simulated? That's just BS. You have to think in human terms, our extremely limited senses can be easily simulated, ever wondered why we have almost no conscious perception or control over our 'inner' biological functions? Simple: code optimization. Do the planets/outer space really need to 'exist' while you have breakfast ? Not really. There are just a handful of items that need to 'read' the universe... namely telescopes and such, and most of them are just displaying visible light 'images' of what's outside. So easy to cheat... Do atoms really need to be simulated during your daily activities? Looking at what we can do with CGI and so forth times 10k years, not really. And the list could go on forever. I find disturbing this 'modern' trend of black or white vision. It's either all or bust.... Hollywood films too much?

  110. Boring game... by Tomahawk · · Score: 1

    It's a pretty boring game, at least for most of us NPCs (assuming we are, indeed, NPCs). Like, who would enjoy playing a game with your character gets up before sunrise, drives for an hour or more to go to work, sits at a desk all day, drives for an hour to get home, eats, and is too tired to do anything except sit in front of the TV for an hour or two before going to bed? And playing this almost every day for 40 or 50 years worth of their character's life. And then, on top of that, for the character to retire and die a few months later. Or for the character to get a fatal disease...

    Nah, we're not in a game. If we were, it would have been turned off by now. And we'd see people standing at the side of a road (or sitting in their car, or whatever) not moving for periods of time while the player was /AFK 'cos their mother called them for dinner.

    1. Re:Boring game... by roger10-4 · · Score: 1

      There's no reason for the simulation to be game-oriented...it could be part of a AI project or who knows what else.

    2. Re:Boring game... by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Life's very much like a contemporary game. No story, no replay value, boring as fuck... but insanely cool graphics and a kick ass physics engine.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    3. Re:Boring game... by in10se · · Score: 1

      If it's a game, who says they're playing individual characters? Maybe it's like SimCity or Civilization. They are starting wars, advancing technology, and then sending in hurricanes for fun.

      --
      Popisms.com - Connecting pop culture
    4. Re:Boring game... by EvilSS · · Score: 1

      It's a pretty boring game, at least for most of us NPCs (assuming we are, indeed, NPCs). Like, who would enjoy playing a game with your character gets up before sunrise, drives for an hour or more to go to work, sits at a desk all day, drives for an hour to get home, eats, and is too tired to do anything except sit in front of the TV for an hour or two before going to bed? And playing this almost every day for 40 or 50 years worth of their character's life. And then, on top of that, for the character to retire and die a few months later. Or for the character to get a fatal disease...

      Nah, we're not in a game. If we were, it would have been turned off by now. And we'd see people standing at the side of a road (or sitting in their car, or whatever) not moving for periods of time while the player was /AFK 'cos their mother called them for dinner.

      Farmville. EuroTruck Simulator. Office Manager Simulator. Warehouse Manager Simulator. The list goes on. We live in a virtual skinner box, playing games that are virtual skinner boxes. It's not turtles all the way down, it's skinner boxes!

      --
      I browse on +1 so AC's need not respond, I won't see it.
  111. There was another option in this logic puzzle! by Jabiru658 · · Score: 1

    Rather than assuming that we're living in a simulation, lets assume for the moment that we're not. Then the logic of the argument suggests that our civilization is NOT going to survive long enough to create the simulations Elon Musk is suggesting. Now given that we're facing Global Warming, Nuclear War, Resource Exhaustion, Exponential population growth and other problems without current solutions I ask you this. Is it more likely that we're living in a computer simulation we're not aware of or is it more likely that high energy civilizations with exponential growth have inherently limited lifespans?

  112. law of diminishing returns by queBurro · · Score: 1

    law of diminishing returns, 80:20 rule etc. 20,000 years from now it'll still be glitchy and we'll still be moaning about pings

    --
    sag
  113. Where do we get the resources to build it? by paai · · Score: 1

    The science to build computers, games and VR does not drop out of thin air. The same is true for the technology. You need a complicated economic structure to accomplish all this and to date we pretty much destroyed this planet Earth to create such a society.

    Mankind will have failed long before Musks VR games are a fact.
    Paai

  114. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bugs you say? How about the billions that believe in supernatural beings; from mere ghosts and spirits to full on deities that created everything including themselves. Their brains are so buggy, they're prepared to rape and kill those who have less buggy brain OSes; and they're allowed to breed. i.e. perpetuate their broken bio-code and increase its prevalence in the system. They also reproduce at a higher frequency than those with stable kernels, and will ultimately become the final surviving system type. We can only hope they have a pending Y2K / epoch date design failure too!

  115. sure he is wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No game can not simulate whats going in a hadron collidor

  116. saying we live in a computer simulation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...is identical to saying there are gods. People have been saying this for thousands of years.

    Congrats, Howard Hughes, you're on your way to finding Jesus.

  117. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    How do you know there are no bugs? Maybe the program is stopped at each inconsistency and restarted after it is fixed. There is no objective time in a simulation. Simulated entities are not able to detect this.

    On the other side, quantum entanglement may be a bug which is not worth a restart (or promoted to a feature).

  118. Here's a reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We will have nuked our own race long before we reach the capability to do that.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fermi_paradox

    As all the other aliens did.

  119. allegory of the cave by yes-but-no · · Score: 1

    Plato said that in his Allegory of the cave thousands of years ago; and eastern spiritualism is all about you being a stimulus receiver thru' 5 senses (like 5 RJ into a computer). Very likely we are all in an infinite ladder of experience spaces, like different levels of a video-game. You finish one level and graduate and go to another level and keep playing forever (again forever means time and that may not exist in other domains). Again is there any proof for this? no..in fact asking for proof itself is a sign of immaturity because proof is a tool which makes sense only with in a logical domain and there are domains outside logic.

    1. Re:allegory of the cave by rgbatduke · · Score: 1

      Very likely we are all in an infinite ladder of experience spaces...

      Um, I do not think that this phrase means what you think it means...

      Again is there any proof for this? no

      ...and here is why. Here is a question for you, and understanding the correct answer to it will change your life, in particular.

      Is it better (in a logically, mathematically defendable sense) to believe in something for which there is evidence or to believe in something for which there is no evidence?

      This is a very serious question. If you want to read and understand the derivation of the answer you can read Jaynes' Probability Theory, the Logic of Science or Cox's The Algebra of Probable Inference, where Cox originally derived the answer from a small set of postulates that literally encode mere common sense.

      Bear in mind that one can come up with a literal infinity of postulates concerning the nature of those "domains outside of logic" you wish to assert. How, precisely, can you select the ones that are best to believe in, especially when you put them "outside of logic"? You can't use logic to select between them by your own definition. You apparently don't understand the importance of evidence in choosing between them (or the necessity of logical consistency in whatever you choose when you are choosing the set that ultimately constitute your worldview, unless you want to build a worldview that is literally impossible to be correct). In the end, you will find yourself believing something just because you made it up or (worse) something somebody else made up, quite possibly to seduce your money and political power from you to advance their own personal agenda, carefully crafted to "sound nifty", without being able to defend your choice outside of asserting that they sound really cool so they must be true and sure, here's this week's offering, and who should I vote for that will enforce belief in this absurdity by law?.

      That's the problem with turning off the reasoning power of your brain. It leads you to a world of fantasy, to a kind of madness, that makes you incredibly dangerous as you shape your life around pure imagination disconnected from the harsh and cruel realities of the real world, which does not give a shit about your imaginations of "men behind the curtain" that make it all work out.

      Maybe there are such men, but without stating a coherent, logically consistent hypothesis and providing actual evidence to support it, they could be women, they could be intelligent space aliens, they could be god, they could be gods, they could be pink unicorns magically creating the reality of our experience with a touch of their la-la-loopsy curled horns, or they could be any of a solid aleph prime continuum of non-contradictory possibilities, all a priori equally likely without evidence to help us choose between them and make some of them more likely than others! Currently, the best evidence supported bet is that those little invisible fairies go by the collective name of "the laws of physics", but if you prefer unicorns or god, suit yourself.

      I don't mean this as an insult, but it is literally unsane to believe things physical or metaphysical without evidence. Consider sanity. You might like it!

      rgb

      --
      Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
    2. Re:allegory of the cave by yes-but-no · · Score: 1

      Very likely we are all in an infinite ladder of experience spaces...

      Um, I do not think that this phrase means what you think it means...

      Again is there any proof for this? no

      ...and here is why. Here is a question for you, and understanding the correct answer to it will change your life, in particular.

      Is it better (in a logically, mathematically defendable sense) to believe in something for which there is evidence or to believe in something for which there is no evidence?

      The answer is obvious for this case. How about a case for which there cannot be an evidence? or an evidence which cannot be encoded in symbols? (eastern spiritual calls it names-forms.. essentially you can't describe it using language or binary-code).

      When you feel incomplete with the science explanation (evolving from hydrogen to self-replicating molecules to selfish-genes to phenotypes) for things like Happiness; you automatically gravitate towards explanations which first ask you to remove your life-jacket (logic/rationality). You have a choice - either stay put and wonder where is the answer or take the risk and explore.

      Godel's incompleteness theorem states that even for a logical mathematical system there are Truths which cannot be proved or disproved within the system. Our brain using symbols/language is just a big logical machine (if you take the pure rational route). So there must be statements in it which are True but can't be proven (things like a force outside our brain .. actually your very thoughts are like packets sent down to you..again if you ask proof, I can't give it to you..no one can give it to you.. may be you can climb a mountain..watch the sun rise and in the quietness you may know it for yourself. The system is designed such that one mind cannot convey thru' symbols the Truth to another mind; each mind has to solve the puzzle by itself -- that's the fun/goal of the game).

      This is a very serious question. If you want to read and understand the derivation of the answer you can read Jaynes' Probability Theory, the Logic of Science or Cox's The Algebra of Probable Inference, where Cox originally derived the answer from a small set of postulates that literally encode mere common sense.

      Bear in mind that one can come up with a literal infinity of postulates concerning the nature of those "domains outside of logic" you wish to assert. How, precisely, can you select the ones that are best to believe in, especially when you put them "outside of logic"? You can't use logic to select between them by your own definition. You apparently don't understand the importance of evidence in choosing between them (or the necessity of logical consistency in whatever you choose when you are choosing the set that ultimately constitute your worldview, unless you want to build a worldview that is literally impossible to be correct). In the end, you will find yourself believing something just because you made it up or (worse) something somebody else made up, quite possibly to seduce your money and political power from you to advance their own personal agenda, carefully crafted to "sound nifty", without being able to defend your choice outside of asserting that they sound really cool so they must be true and sure, here's this week's offering, and who should I vote for that will enforce belief in this absurdity by law?.

      That's the problem with turning off the reasoning power of your brain. It leads you to a world of fantasy, to a kind of madness, that makes you incredibly dangerous as you shape your life around pure imagination disconnected from the harsh and cruel realities of the real world, which does not give a shit about your imaginations of "men behind the curtain" that make it all work out.

      Maybe there are such men, but without stating a coherent, logically consistent hypothesis a

    3. Re:allegory of the cave by rgbatduke · · Score: 1

      The answer is obvious for this case. How about a case for which there cannot be an evidence? or an evidence which cannot be encoded in symbols? (eastern spiritual calls it names-forms.. essentially you can't describe it using language or binary-code).

      In a case for which there cannot be evidence, assigning some degree of belief to one proposition over another is silly and -- by definition -- a cosmic waste of time. Two cases come to mind. Someone could assert (for whatever reason) that there was -- four quadrillion years ago -- a being who was subjected to spiritual torture and disconnected from its god-like form and plunged into darkness. Since four quadrillion years is many times the period from the inflation of the current space-time to the present, and since the current inflation erased (or at least mixed, chopped, and pureed) all of the information of any state preceding it, there "cannot be any evidence" that would justify the use of the term. I therefore do not believe it -- not because it could not be true, but because it is one of an infinite set of possible states of being that might or might not have existed four quadrillion years ago, assuming that this phrase has any meaning (time being a dimension associated with the current inflation and all). When I analyze the probabilities, the one that stands out is that L. Ron Hubbard just made that up, something he was very good at being a science fiction author and all, and further conclude that people who accept this as true on L. Ron's work are batshit crazy, in addition to being terribly easy to politically manipulate and fleece for their worldly wealth. They end up being an actual menace to society, unsafe for children (for example) to be around.

      The second case I offer from physics. Theorists would "like" for a "magnetic monopole" to exist. This is the magnetic equivalent for an electrical charge. If it existed, Maxwell's equations would be symmetric (and hence more beautiful and satisfying, keeping those theorists from feeling "incomplete with the science explanation") as well as keeping the science explanation from being, as it were, incomplete. Moreover, it would explain why charge is quantized (following a theory advanced by Dirac, who is one of the deities of the physics pantheon). That would really fill a yearning in the breast of many scientists as they seek explanations. The problem is, that we have looked for many, many years now and not found a single magnetic monopole. Every year we look and fail to find decreases the estimate of the concentration of monopoles in the Universe, and at this point they are either someplace we cannot look, like concentrated in the heart of the sun and planets, or else they are very rare indeed. And the quantization argument only requires that there be one monopole in a sphere roughly 28 billion light years across. It could well be that they exist and we cannot find them.

      Physicists, OTOH, do not believe in monopoles. Nor do they disbelieve. Monopoles are in the status of unproven theories and we hold belief in abeyance pending evidence. This is sane, because until we put salt on one's tail, they might not actually exist and some other explanation for charge quantization and the asymmetry of Maxwell's Equations might hold. It isn't like we haven't been mistaken many times before, even in cases where there was some evidence!

      Consider the "invisible fairy" hypothesis. In my opinion (as a physicist) we have pretty good evidence for the existence of a force named "gravity". That doesn't mean that we fully understand gravity or that there isn't other stuff going ont, or that we have completely solved all of physics, but it is nevertheless true that all of our observations are at least approximately consistent with a force of attraction between all the mass-energy concentrations in the visible cosmos, all the way back to the original inflation. However, nothing stops you from

      --
      Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
    4. Re:allegory of the cave by yes-but-no · · Score: 1

      There are two kind of Truths; scientific truths and religious truths. scientific truths is all physics, maths. Religious Truths is something each mind knows/feels within itself. It is not for mind to mind interaction. Of course humans hijacked religion for power-building and we know all the ill effects of major religions.

      Utmost what you can communicate is thru' Silence (as stated before cannot be encoded in naama-roopa/symbols) Not sure why you didn't respond to my last paragraph -- because it talks about questions about religious Truth. There is no fun in knowing magnetic monopoles or not.. as you can see, the deeper you go, still deeper will be the mystery. It's pretty obvious as your read-resolution of cosmos increases so does new mysteries and new scientific/math models to explain. Each explanation becoming a super set of the previous one (like Eienstein over Newton regarding gravity/laws-of-motion)

      also my problem is not about other mind/humans; who is torturing whom; which women is asked to cover with what cloths. Who is doing genocide; My problem is what makes me happy and where this happiness arises. Does understanding all math and physics will make me complete n happy. It's clear the answer is no. It explains things; repeatable etc. But what's the use? I doubt newton or einstein was a really happy person. But in places like India, folks like Osho, ramana maharishi, have found higher truths. It may look like a mad-man hallucinating for a physicists; but as I said you need to study the instrument (your head/mind) which is processing the signals from outside. If you believe in laws-of-physics (LoP); these LoP created the instrument itself (you man, thru' evolution), so if LoP wants to play tricks with you, it can. It can show what you can see; what you cannot see.

      As you say, the higher intelligence could've programmed not to let you know the game (In east, it's called Leela.. a game.. a hide-n-seek game between limited and unlimited).. but then there is fun in it. The game is to solve the puzzle and realize that you have been tricked into believing something else as a reality. Again if you living within scientific truth, you will see these as mumbo-jumbo. Where science ends, religion starts they say. Again the word religion is abused a lot; I don't talk about organized/group formation religion. A truly religious man talks to the sky/clouds/birds not with fellow minds.

      In west folks like Alan Watts, Eckart Tolle talk similar concepts. Yes, you can keep on living in physics/math world..but hey life is running. I need to know deeper Truth. I can't waste to looker deeper n deeper into an electron or atom or basically what my eyes/ears can perceive. From what I know.. only if you are truly desperate, you will take a U-turn and go along the Faith path. The logic will not let you leave. Again is there anything wrong in it, no, it's a game. 7 Billion are playing this game; based on where you in the game, you will take new path. Once you ask for a proof, you are still playing in one part of the field. There are lot of other areas, but you can enter there only if you stop asking for proof; it's called experience. You will experience it - if you tell that to someone they will call you mad or you have gone crazy. Basically only a Zero can relate to another Zero. You need to become a Zero. Awareness is the key and you can transcend above the stream of thoughts hitting you.

    5. Re:allegory of the cave by yes-but-no · · Score: 1

      meant to say "there is *no* fun in it" below " As you say, the higher intelligence could've programmed not to let you know the game (In east, it's called Leela.. a game.. a hide-n-seek game between limited and unlimited).. but then there is *no* fun in it"

    6. Re:allegory of the cave by rgbatduke · · Score: 1

      Look, I grew up in India, and learned most of the concepts associated with Eastern religions -- in particular Hinduism and Buddhism -- before I was twelve. The real problem with your entire approach is that there are NOT two kinds of Truths. There is only that which is true and that which isn't. In the latter category are many things -- half truths, lies, mistakes, nearly all beliefs (the ones that are true are a vanishingly small set in comparison to the set that is false), religious truths in general (even if some religion is true, by being true it usually makes the rest of them false). Truth doesn't come in "kinds". It just is. Next thing you know, you'll get all Obi-Wan Kanobi on my and say things can be true "from a certain point of view"... which even in the movie was avoiding the obvious fact that Obi-Wan lied to Luke.

      The second problem with what you argue is that we do not KNOW what is "true" outside of the immediate empirical truth of our own existence. Everything else is belief . You might say that there are two kinds of beliefs about the real Universe (where by Universe I mean "everything that has objective existence" quite independent of space or time) -- those that are consistent, supported by direct evidence, and that fit consistently into our general web of mutually supporting evidence supported beliefs. These are things that are most probably true, that are in some defensible sense best belief. Then there is the vast, enormous set of things that people just make up, that are from the beginning the fantasies of the mind and are -- usually -- themselves inconsistent (and hence overtly impossible to be true), inconsistent with other well-supported beliefs (and hence unlikely to be true), or are consistent and consistent with well-supported beliefs but are merely unsupported by evidence themselves (e.g. monopoles in my previous example). None of the latter are worthy of belief. They are at best -- at best, mind you -- not contradicted by experience and knowledge that does have a sound foundation. At worst they are nonsense, absurd, impossible. But not even monopoles are worthy of belief, and they are far more worthy of belief than any auto-hypnotic mental experience of union with the All.

      What makes you happy and what is true are not equivalent. Not even close to equivalent. What makes me happy is very likely the right mix of chemicals stimulating the right neurons in my brain the right way. What is true is what is objectively true. It might make me happy to close my eyes and "go to a happy place" where I fantasize about being on a beach, staring out at infinity, having my shoulders gently rubbed by a beautiful blond. But that doesn't mean that I am really on such a beach experiencing this, no matter how hard I try to believe that I am. Similarly when I am in direct, immediate pain, denying the reality of that pain or the source of that pain is utterly pointless.

      I suppose it might make you "happy" if you won the lottery and suddenly had ten million dollars. But would it make you happy if I just told you that you won, or were fated to win, when you didn't or won't, ever, win the lottery? Even if I told you on your deathbed, so that you could die thinking "at last, I am not poor!" in joyous triumph and totally happy, it still wouldn't make it true, and IMO would not justify the lie.

      India turns out Maharishis the way Italy turns out shoes, and for very similar purposes -- they have a high retail value and beat the hell out of living in not-even-genteel poverty but rather in real poverty, in India. Buddha preached fairly extensively about the abuse of the common people by the priesthood, and it continues today 2500 years later, and amazingly, it is often the victims themselves that defend the practice across all religions. Sometimes with arms and violence. As (I recall) Voltaire said, it is a small step from believing an absurdity to committing an atrocity. Because the alternative to defending

      --
      Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
    7. Re:allegory of the cave by yes-but-no · · Score: 1

      If you truly have an open mind and a keen alertness you will spot the diamonds among the glass beads. A person like Ramana lived in a cave for 7 years literally starving. In south-india advanced jivas care a damn about power/money; true some are on ego trips but there are true awakened souls. With good intellgence you can spot the 1 in a thousand/million who is not there to take a ride of others [btw in a bigger scheme of things, one person cheating a milllion is nothing wrong; the millions enjoy to get cheated.. who am i to tell them not to get cheated?]

      Your whole talk about brain and brain only controls emotions is as baseless as and as without proof as a fairies creating gravity. Did you enter into your brain and see these? Just because some scientist/PhD student desperate to come up with a paper, you believe these things? And are you sure after your body dies, you wont' be there? do you have proof for it? I tell you, when you die, you will watch your body just like you see your cloths when you remove them after work and lay it say on your bed. It will be just like that. Do you need to believe me? no, as I said, this is based on experience. When you hit life in its head, you will come to see those experiences. Those teachers I mentioned never asked anyone to believe them. They only tell there is something more. Osho says you need to experiment with yourself. It takes a zillion times more courage than to master say quantum physics or the reason for God-particle.

      Do you know where your thoughts come from? Do you know what dreams are? you too just believe in some mumbo-jumbo that signals firing in a huge feedback loop of neural net in brain. And happiness has nothing to do with chemicals in brains. That you can call it with another name, hmm may be high [like under a chemical like cocaine, you can reach it temporarily]. Yes, if your limbs are say removed, you can still not suffer - it is possible. But as I said you need to be willing to explore. Do you think this vast infinite universe is dumb that it doesn't have secret doors and chambers? Again these are all in the realm of spiritual world. You enter here only when you are bored with the world. People typically take two paths - suicide or meditation. You can't kid yourself long that what you see thru' the 5 senses is all ther is. People try LSD/drugs but that too (the fun) wears off quickly. Only if you are a true seeker and have tremendous courage, it's likely you will even explore and succeed in the meditation path. If you think the folks who have walked those paths are all hallucinating and imagining, please carry on in your scientific world and sooner or later you will be bored (ie u r not dumbing down your awarense with substances like drugs/alcohol/ego-comparison games with fellow humans). Again from what I can say, only if someone is really hit hard in life they will even consider the new path. The hit must be like a bolt from the blue; nothing short of it will do the trick.

      Your mind is like a CPU at 100% load. Lot of thoughts hit it. The Truth is behind these. Unless you reduce your CPu load, you can't see it. To reduce it is not easy at all. meditation will help you; this too won't work until you have given up utterly on the exteral world. The path is more scary than anything you can even imagine. Hence very few attempt. Of course if it helps to convince yourself that ..hey those guys are just imagining.. there is nothing there.. oh yeah you can live in the fantasy world for lot longer.

    8. Re:allegory of the cave by rgbatduke · · Score: 1

      our whole talk about brain and brain only controls emotions is as baseless as and as without proof as a fairies creating gravity. Did you enter into your brain and see these? Just because some scientist/PhD student desperate to come up with a paper, you believe these things? And are you sure after your body dies, you wont' be there? do you have proof for it? I tell you, when you die, you will watch your body just like you see your cloths when you remove them after work and lay it say on your bed. It will be just like that. Do you need to believe me? no, as I said, this is based on experience. When you hit life in its head, you will come to see those experiences. Those teachers I mentioned never asked anyone to believe them. They only tell there is something more. Osho says you need to experiment with yourself. It takes a zillion times more courage than to master say quantum physics or the reason for God-particle.

      On the contrary, it is based on close to a century of hard science. Even without double blind placebo controlled experiments, human damage their brains through accident, abuse, or their brains are damaged by simple aging. One can fairly precisely track loss of functionality through the regions that are damaged. My wife is a physician, but also completed her Ph.D. dissertation in neuropsychology and I typed her papers for her back in the day. Are you saying she was "desperate to come up with a paper" (published as the cover story in Science, BTW) and just made up all the stuff she discovered about afferent pathways in bat brains? Are you contending that neurotransmitters have nothing to do with your brain function, and that if you take drugs that occupy the receptor sites for specific neurotransmitters, your emotions will not change because your brain is special and its emotions don't involve hormones, neurotransmitters, and chemistry?

      Seriously, dude, you are completely disconnected from reality. This isn't a matter of point of view. The whole point of science is that when it is done right, the evidence will convince even those that have alternative hypotheses -- unless those people choose to completely ignore mere common sense, the idea that it is better to believe something supported by objective evidence over the arbitrary notions unsupported by evidence that our brains cook up.

      Look, we are evolved to be greedy pattern matching engines. We see fluffy sheep in the clouds and the face of Jesus in a piece of toast and extract meaning where there is no actual meaning to be found. We hallucinate. We can close our eyes and visualize entire three ring circuses in fantasy. And this is normal people, normal brains. When you get into abnormal, dysfunctional brains, bipolars, schizophrenics, depressives, psychotics, sociopaths, PTSD victims, the vast list of humans with brains what were broken when they were born with things like Down's syndrome, you at some point realize that even people -- like me (said without ego) -- who have highly functional brains that are capable of high levels of reason and objective analysis are still both bounded and in many ways broken. Our brains, and hence our minds, are far from perfectly functional -- I demonstrate that every day lecturing in physics, where I make mistake great and small as my speaking mind says one thing and my writing mind writes another. Our brains are complex, a multilayered cake of evolutionary baggage and modern additions, with our reptile core largely in control however much our primate cortex with its interior monologue wants to think it is in charge.

      I grew up with a brother (2 years older) with Down's syndrome. He could meditate and follow spiritual masters until the next Yuga and never do more than learn to write his own name, because you are so very, very wrong. His brain was broken, and no spiritual practice was ever going to heal it or allow him to think off in some imaginary space where you imagine that your thinking actually occurs simply

      --
      Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
    9. Re:allegory of the cave by yes-but-no · · Score: 1

      Okay you first declined to accept my basic assertion that there are two kinds of Truths. Next to impossible to carry forward because that is the door thru' which I can lead you ahead. All your talk is about ST (scientific truth); what I talk about more is RT (religious truth). As a man of logic, you should've understood when I said RT is not for mind-to-mind communication. symbolic encoding/language cannot transmit an RT. It must be felt/experienced by a single mind/jiva/human/limited-being. It's very easy to shoot down an RT saying the person is imagining.

      Of course, I accept the research people like your wife have done/are doing. What their papers may say is like a drop in the ocean of the unknown space. Again words like 'evidence', 'Is it repeatable/reproducible', etc belongs in the domain of ST; not RT. It's in the very nature of RT that no one can show you an RT; except you find it yourself. And once you find it, you are kind of tongue tied - you can't make another human see it. You can utmost point the finger in that direction (like what I'm doing now; I don't claim that I have reached levels like ramana/osho, but atleast I'm open/mature enough to not label them as hallucinating)

      About your brother or folks like them, how do you know they first have a problem? See for me a problem means, someone who can't experience bliss/happiness. If they can't find a job or manage to move their limbs correctly (for some definition of correctness), that doesn't mean they have an issue. Just because society/majority label someone has an issue (put the latest buzzword from the psychiatric department), doesn't mean the issue is real.

      I don't believe in eternal life because it gives me comfort; I want to know the Truth; what is happening behind the scenes. I have had great peaks of happiness and deepest valleys of misery, that if I have to vanish into the void, I don't feel any regret - been there, done that from 5-senses experience point of view. What you say is things get recycled. Your body gets recycled. There is something .. people call it Awareness..which is eternal -- again this is an RT; don't ask for proof, I can't trasmit it to you.

      How do you explain things like that friend who suddenly got crazy ideas that his professor is poisoning him? If I tell you, your thoughts get streamed to you, would you believe. But again this is an RT.

      Yes brain does pattern matching. But again the very basic thing is a thought. It's an atomic thing. Unless you decode and understand a single thought, whatever you build on top of it is like a castle in thin air. And why should collective agreement with a collection of minds should yield a better quality truth? on what basis? It's like taking a random 1024 bit number and asking a group of say 100 first primes to check if that number is prime. Just because these 100 agree and say, oh we can't divide it, doesn't make that number prime. Basically quantity doesn't mean quality.

      chemicals in brain affect emotions only if you not highly aware. A highly evolved person (go to buddist monks, the real ones; or some real spiritual practice persons) can drink a lot of alcohol and still be totally alert. He can take drugs, still his mood/emotion won't change. That he is flies above these effects. He becomes a witness of whats happening. See unless you experiement with your own body and mind, you can't even confirm one RT. language is totally useless in RT; in fact it hinders. I don't see RT as something scary or mysterious. It's just that you have to experiment and find out for yourself. 200 years ago when electricity/magnetism was unknown... no body knew that you can create a current of charge ;and then see it disturb a magnetic compass. Who would've thought to get a curretn to flow and a get needle next to it. Similarly some spiritual practice, if you subject your body and mind to it, will let you experience new experiences. For me, I'm not interested in those experiences but to know the source of happine

    10. Re:allegory of the cave by rgbatduke · · Score: 1

      It's very easy to shoot down an RT saying the person is imagining.

      Because that's what it is? Fundamentally? Beyond any possible doubt?

      However, you are still missing the point. There aren't two kinds of truth. This is muddy thinking. There is just truth. Any proposition or belief concerning reality is either true or false, but (with the single exception of the proposition "I am existing as I think this thought") we don't know which. Seriously. And Bertrand Russell even took issue with the "I" in the statement. I prefer to be more conservative and state that I am certain that something (as opposed to nothing) is existing, some part of which is my experiencing.

      You made a number of statements concerning the real world, for example that when I die I will be looking down in some non-corporal form at my dead body as if it was a set of old clothes. That is a specific prediction about a specific event. It is either a true prediction or a false prediction. There is no middle ground. Even granting some poetic license (maybe I won't be looking at it as if it was old clothes specifically) it comes down to you asserting that I as an ego capable of perception of the real world and thought about the real world will survive independent of any body and brain supporting my perceptions and thoughts once that body and brain die. You could not begin, in a million years of contemplation, to describe the mechanism of my thinking or perceiving, because you have arrogantly placed yourself above the need to concern yourself with little details like that. You can't specify what it is that will be looking, how it will "look" (in physics, light is an electromagnetic wave and all interactions are two way, with the observer interacting with the observed), how the energy and information present in whatever it is looking with and at is processed into thought. You complain about the fact that neuroscience hasn't yet worked out every detail of how we think with our brains as if it is proof that we don't think with our brains, but you haven't any theory of any use whatsoever about how we could exist, and interact, and think, with nothing to use to think with, or with something you cannot even begin to describe interacting in ways you cannot imagine to think with, and think that this is a better hypothesis, something that you can assert as a certain "religious" truth?

      Of course, you could be right. Heck, the spirit of Louis Armstrong serenading me could be right. Anything you want to assert as "certain truth" could be right, except for one thing. You are no more certain of its truth than I am, because neither of us can be certain that our experiences and thoughts are precise maps of objective reality. The best we can do is make inferences based on observed patterns and stable structurings and orderings of our experience, and inferences are not certain truths.

      About your brother or folks like them, how do you know they first have a problem?

      I won't dignify this with an answer. As Buddha once observed, "suffering exists". And most of the suffering of the world is utterly beyond our control. It extends throughout the animal kingdom (at least). Humans are just better than most animals at inflicting additional suffering on their fellow humans, although, to be fair, we are also better than most at alleviating it. Well, OK, I will answer. The answer is "compassion". Give it a try. My compassion (and growing up with it in the next room) assures me that Down's syndrome is not equivalent to a special lobotomy that leaves you perpetually happy, or Enlightened, or any other bullshit. It sucks, for absolutely everybody involved, on the best day of its existence. As do strokes. As does mental illness. As does arthritis as you age, spending every day in at least some pain. Suffering exists.

      Yes brain does pattern matching. But again the very basic thing is a thought. It's

      --
      Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
    11. Re:allegory of the cave by yes-but-no · · Score: 1

      [I wish I can inline my comments; but I find it a bit hard to use the editor here and the ways to quote specific parts; so I will respond in a continous reply giving quoting enough context]

      Okay I see you have difficulty in accepting two kind of Truths; in fact it only differs in the way of proving. Both lets say are the same kind of Truth. ST you can prove and show a fellow mind (which using the 5 input senses can confirm); RT is a Truth which the fellow mind can't be shown using his 5 senses. But that dosen't mean the person cannot confirm the Truth -- he needs to work on himself, using his mind/body to realize that the RT is indeed True.

      I don't believe in gravity because I read it in high school or Newton told me so. I believe because I experience it. I see it happen. I can perceive it. I don't believe in some RT because osho told me or ramana told me. I confirm it with my own experience. Until a person experiences himself, he cannot know. And how to experience it? this is a hard task. In my very first reply I told you ..may be you climb a mountain and see sunrise. It's just a clue; each mind has to look inside and figure out how to see the higher truths. A singer once she reaches her peak performance may get a glimpse; if you are teacher, may be if you excel in your teaching career, you may get a glimpse. A mass murderer when he murders 100s of people might have a glimpse; I don't know what each mind is designed to do. The path is unique and your job is to figure it out. My path, I found it myself. Osho didn't tell me or ramana didnt' tell me. Once I figured out a bit, I see these folks are in perfect alignment with what I had already found myself.

      I think that answers what is True/Truth. It's basically what you deeply experience yourself and without doubt you know it. Not because someone told you, even if he is a God or displays magical powers. Also my pursuit as I repeated is the source/nature of happiness. I know external objects/praise/even a loving partner is not going to provide that happiness. It is something else. My test for a Truth is to see if it takes me along that path; am I becoming more n more blissful, calmer, happier. It doesn't matter if I believe in gravity or fairies, as long as it is increasing my SSH - steady-state-happiness/calmness, I'm on the right path. This may be different for different humans; someone cracking a hilbert problem might get this peace as he solves more n more hurdles in proving/his attempt to prove say the RH (Reimann hypothesis). I would say it has to bring down your CPU load on your mind; the tps is another term (thoughts per second)..again these are all RT, trying to borrow some terms from usual physics world to create an analogy.

      Suffering - no it doesn't exist in reality. And yes there is no good or no bad. Your thinking makes it so. e.g let's say a child got abused by an adult . She grows up and thinks that something wrong had been committed to her. The society supports her view and she too thinks so; she suffers. If she looks clearly, there is hardly any damage or hurt - it's just the idea, the thought that makes her suffer. About your brother, I said he doesn't have to suffer or not suffering. People around him, like you and your parents might keep telling him.. 'oh we are so sorry for you' kind of talks. The guy may be perfectly enjoying even doing nothing. The happiness is inside you; you can beg in the street and be drowning in bliss (knowing that you may starve to death or someone can feed you).

      I mentioned a few RTs just to whet your appetite. It is not to make you beleive it. When you cross that bridge and know it for yourself, you will know that oh yeahh I have heard of this before, kind of feeling.

      You seem to be in physics; so why electricity&magnetism was not discovered until 200 years ago. Intelligent brain probably was available for 100,000 years ago. The reason is the tickering was missing. First find a way to build up large static charge. Then find a way to create

    12. Re:allegory of the cave by rgbatduke · · Score: 1

      No, you continue to miss the point of what I am saying. The term "truth" has a specific meaning in ontology. From Webster:

      Truth: 1. The quality or being true; as: (a) Conformity to fact or reality; exact accordance with that which is, or has been; or shall be.

      It has nothing to do with how you feel, or your state of happiness/bliss/etc. It is a real, correct correspondence between a stated belief or hypothesis and an objective reality that is, will be, or has been. It is time independent -- a truth does not become a falsehood, it just is.

      The problem is that we do not know a priori which beliefs are true and which ones are false. Beliefs all live in one place -- our minds. The real world lives (mostly) outside of our minds by all appearances, although of course I cannot disprove solipsism if you are silly enough to advance the proposition that you are just making me up in your head, creating something to amuse yourself with all of these annoying observations.

      It is here that you make your major mistakes. You consider your mental state and feelings and success at optimizing a particular, desired mental state as personal, non-reproducible or transmissible evidence of Truth with a capital T. If thinking a particular thought or practicing a particular discipline makes you blissful, then that thought must be True. You seem to miss the obvious possibility that it is a documented fact that people can become quite blissful thinking thoughts that are, in pure fact, false, not in conformity to fact or reality. In fact, two groups of people can become blissful thinking diametrically contradictory "religious thoughts", thoughts that differ in explicit content. This is what cognitive dissonance is all about -- the ability of the brain to "make do" to avoid suffering. It is "sour grapes" -- if we cannot reach the grapes, they must have been sour anyway. It is believing with all of your heart that space aliens will take you and your family away at a prophecied time to save you from the evil and destruction of the world, and then -- even after the aliens fail to show up and the prophecy is proven false making up an excuse so that you can continue to have the thoughts about how special you are and how you weren't really wrong. It is a child, praying "Now I lay me down to sleep, I pray the lord my soul to keep, if I should die before I wake, I pray the lord my soul to take." as an imaginary defense against the imaginary monsters under the bed and fear of this word "die" that involves birds and goldfish that one day stop moving and are flushed away or buried in a shoebox in the back yard. It is part of how we comfort ourselves in a world that we at best only partially control and that reaches out and hurts us. Or makes us feel good. Or leaves us excited, or bored. But which nearly always makes us afraid.

      You really should read e.g. Joel Shore's book on Cognitive Dissonance, if only so that you can recognize it in yourself. I am not a Buddhist, because Siddhartha wasn't a "Buddhist". He was just somebody trying to figure out the world. He made some major mistakes. He also had some brilliant ideas, especially in the field of practical, empirical, social ethics. His "sermon for lay people" is with a single exception a very excellent prescription for living a virtuous life even today, wisdom, not knowledge per se. One of his brilliant ideas, amplified by his followers, is that a person seeking Enlightenment with the capital E should try to see the world exactly as it is, without the invention and complication of cognitive dissonance. This ability to not fool themselves is clearly visible in the writings of zen masters and buddhist thinkers alike. Enlightenment is truly nothing special, but it is also not easy to lay aside all of your wishful thinking for a God and an elaborate fantasy of structure "behind the visible world" to make it all better o

      --
      Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
    13. Re:allegory of the cave by yes-but-no · · Score: 1

      Seriously you assume so many things which are never stated. You state all the common traps people fall into and assume I have also been a victim to such a trap. I am a man of science and math; I think in my last physics exam I scored probably the highest because I never heard of any other student with a higher score. To me there is absolutely no contradiction between RT and ST; ST is like a kid before RT; ST is for the observed/things/objects; RT is about the observer.

      And ST is group-dance; RT is a one-man journey. You dont start into religious path until you kind of mastered the scientific one. RT is a solo performance. You figure out things for yourself and only you confirm or deny things. You don't ask for confirmation with fellow travellers. Then it becomes like a circular linked list; how can you rely on his mind? why is that superior than yours?

      suffering is real if you want it to be real. It's as simple as that. I can create the same external conditions; one person will be in bliss another will jump-upn-down crying 'suffering!'.

      For me eternal existence is as real and true as for you 1+1 is 2. I didnt' go find it to comfort me; I was just doing my journey and it just happened to me. I was perfectly fine even before that to accept death. I never understood why people are scared of death. In fact in one lives consciously 24 hours; he/she should be bored to live the next 24 hours. Only a man of mystery can expect the next 24 and look forward to it. Willing to see what game the cosmos has for him. Sorry physics/maths are all just a tiny thing; they can help to make external life a bit comfortable. That's all. And I don't know what else could be more important to a human, than to find a way to keep him happy. To me, all human endeavors are centered around being happy. Of course they take wrong trails like pursuit of power/money/fame/knowledge-accumulation will lead them there.

      BTW to make my analogy in previous post without confusion.. radio/am/fm stand-for mind/ST/RT

      BTW until you are ready to jump, you can't jump. Your thoughts are not yours. And when you need to move, you will get a thought that will propel you to act [in fact it will move your limbs/body]; utmost you can witness..this is awareness.. the light you were asking... btw the laws of physics..they are not constant..they keep getting refined n refined..the deeper you see, you will find an exception to your so called 'law'. It's a never ending process. Again how do I know these? it's like someone asking Ramanujan how he came up with the math results.

      I see you give too much important to modern medicine/science....like tramissters, serotinin.. please it's like a kid trying to explain how the recent alpha-go beat the world go champion. And please your quoting of a dictionary explanation is even more funny. who wrote the dictionary? I'm sorry you need to wait.. when the student is ready, the teacher will arrive.

  120. Whats wrong with your argument? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What's wrong with it is that its the same sort of reasoning religions use. No-one can explain where thunder an lightning come from. Therefore it HAS to be a god
    wielding a massive hammer battling it out with some monster or other. Because we all KNOW, right, that hitting stuff with a big metal hammer causes sparks and
    makes a lot of noise. Only its a god doing this so of course you get lightning and thunder...

  121. extrapolation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you assume any rate of improvement at all, then the games will become indistinguishable from reality, even if that rate of advancement drops by a thousand from what it is now.

    So I will just leave this here....

  122. Recursion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We are simulations played by creature that are simulations that are played by creatures......

  123. Sqreater's Law by Sqreater · · Score: 1

    A thing cannot make an artifact as complex as itself. It is an asymptotic goal. Like the speed of light, it would require more and more energy and effort the closer you approach the goal. That is what is wrong. Elon Musk makes straight-line projections into the future, which are almost always wrong.

    --
    E Proelio Veritas.
    1. Re:Sqreater's Law by in10se · · Score: 1

      All you've done is prove that the "parent" universe must be more complex than ours.

      --
      Popisms.com - Connecting pop culture
    2. Re:Sqreater's Law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "A thing cannot make an artifact as complex as itself."

      How were you born? How do amoebas divide?

    3. Re:Sqreater's Law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "A thing cannot make an artifact as complex as itself"

      How were you born? How do amoebas divide?

    4. Re: Sqreater's Law by Sqreater · · Score: 1

      And its parent more complex than it and....to infinity. For surely if we are a simulation so are the parents. Where then is the reality?

      --
      E Proelio Veritas.
    5. Re: Sqreater's Law by Dagger2 · · Score: 1

      At the top. The odds for any given universe might be that it's a simulation, but that doesn't mean that every universe is a simulation.

    6. Re: Sqreater's Law by Sqreater · · Score: 1

      Interesting, but really nothing more than what i call "busy think." Unprovable, and leads to nothing.

      --
      E Proelio Veritas.
    7. Re: Sqreater's Law by Dagger2 · · Score: 1

      Probably, yeah. Still, it might be possible to come up with an experiment that gives us a hint one way or the other. I think that would be worth spending some effort on.

  124. Not a valid atgumrn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can tell you what's wrong with that argument, Elon: it commits the slippery slope fallacy, or some variant of that: If A happens, B will happen, then C, then D, all the way to Z. Therefore, Z will/has happened. That's not valid. It doesn't follow from the premises that Z's occurrence is definite, it's speculative. It's not the same as saying: "If I leave this coffee sitting out, it will get cold, if it gets cold, I won't drink it, and if I don't drink it, I will be cranky". That shows a pretty clear chain of cause and effect.

  125. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by pipingguy · · Score: 1

    Space and time-travelling Sasquatches. So THERE!

  126. Lately it seems to me that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    whenever this joker farts, Slashdot will publish it.

  127. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by Rockoon · · Score: 1

    Let's say you have a computer program with 10,000 lines of code in it..

    Why would we say that? Simulations often have very little code. Everything is emergent.

    --
    "His name was James Damore."
  128. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is the part where I feel like you're Chucky from Good Will Hunting, and I'm Matt Damon from Good Will Hunting 2: Hunting Season, because I'm tired of hearing about goddamned "Vickas" and I want to blow your head off with a shotgun. How do you like dem apples? Applesauce bitch!

  129. Non-Causal Relationship by ytene · · Score: 1

    Elon's argument has a lot of integral logic, but I wonder if it has one significant gap - a failure to demonstrate a causal relationship between what we know with certainty due to historical evidence or current measurement, and a potentially uncertain future.

    Put another [entirely inaccurate] way: "From Earth, the moon looks to be pale blue and crumbly with craters. Blue cheese in pale blue and crumbly, with craters. Therefore, the moon is made of blue cheese..."

    Even if the first two statements are correct and factual, there is no demonstrable causal relationship that links the third statement in an irrefutable way.

    As evidence for an alternative, I would suggest "the coin toss". If you take a coin and toss it a bunch of time, in the vast majority of cases it will result in a coin landing with heads or tails uppermost. But there is an (incredibly narrow) realm in which the coin may land and balance, perfectly, on it's edge. So if we extrapolate that to the observable universe and if we look at all the "coincidences" [such as the rate of the expansion of the universe], for a bunch of reasons what we see might be the equivalent of the universe's coin landing on it's edge.

    Problem is, we just don't know how many times that universal coin could have been flipped *before* it landed on it's edge - i.e. before it generated a set of universal laws that has resulted in the mostly-stable universe we occupy. I'm not for one moment suggesting that Elon is wrong and we are living in an extremely-low-probability iteration of a universe, just wanting to make the observation that there are a range of different "configurations" that could result in what we observe today.

    I am not sure if it is entirely relevant to the topic [or, if it is, how best to apply it] but perhaps Occam's Razor [given two broadly competing explanations for the same observed phenomena, the simplest explanation is usually correct] has a role to play here. Or, if that doesn't work, how about Bloore's Corollary to Occam's Razor [given two broadly competing explanations for the same observed phenomena, pick the one which is funnier]...

    Lovely theoretical debate, just not sure how knowledge of the actual truth is going to affect us as we believe we exist today...

    1. Re:Non-Causal Relationship by in10se · · Score: 1

      But there is an (incredibly narrow) realm in which the coin may land and balance, perfectly, on it's edge.

      As Lawrence Krauss likes to say, "Rare events happen all the time because the universe is big and old."

      --
      Popisms.com - Connecting pop culture
    2. Re:Non-Causal Relationship by rgbatduke · · Score: 1

      As evidence for an alternative, I would suggest "the coin toss". If you take a coin and toss it a bunch of time, in the vast majority of cases it will result in a coin landing with heads or tails uppermost. But there is an (incredibly narrow) realm in which the coin may land and balance, perfectly, on it's edge.

      Unless there is a Sourcerer who has come into power, of course, which really, really significantly shifts the odds. And that's one of many, many problems with Musk's argument. He is basically proposing that our Universe is literally shaped by a Sourcerer, instead of considering the entire idea to be an amusing satire invented by Terry Pratchett...

      Who is probably metaphorically rolling over in his grave (and no doubt, landing on his edge:-) to hear this idiocy advanced by an egotistical nut as something to take seriously (in the absence of actual evidence). Pratchett was a better philosopher in his Diskworld series than Musk will be if he lives -- sorry, if his simulated existence as a non-player AI character in my solipsistic game continues -- until he is a hundred.

      Solipsism or neo-solipsism or Vedantic Monist Hindu avataric solipsism (where we are all fragments of Brahma, personae of the Visvarupa of the Mahavishnu revealed by Krishna to to Arjuna above the fields of Kurukshetra) or religion in general seems to inevitably be an invention of the narcissist to justify their own probable survival as an ego in a world where every single piece of evidence suggests that life is ugly., nasty, brutish and short (at least some of the time) and then you die, dead, with your ego irreversibly erased into the general field of entropy for (effectively) all time. Do we KNOW that this is true? Of course not. It is just the best bet, given an objective appraisal of the information at hand unbiased by our wish to live forever.

      To bet any other way is equivalent to being down to your last thin quarter in the rastiest casino in Las Vegas, and confidently pop it into the slot saying to yourself -- "This is all REALLY just a simulation of a slot machine, and I'm playing this simulated reality game for fun, so I can be absolutely certain that the game will let me win on my very last pull rather than being reduced to panhandling -- again -- on the street to buy my daily sterno ration until my liver fails and I die and am buried in an unmarked grave by the state".

      Honestly, life is full of pain (mixed in even to lives that are, on the whole, enjoyable and pain free). Experiencing the pain should be enough to convince Elon that even if he is in some sort of massive simulation, he is at best an NPC AI cursed with self-awareness, but I'm certain that he's telling himself that really, he is a play-ah ...

      rgb

      --
      Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
    3. Re:Non-Causal Relationship by ytene · · Score: 1

      Exactly, and if you are willing to consider the idea that the instance of the universe which we find ourselves could be one of many, either because it is cyclical, or because it is one entity within a multiverse... Taking just the cyclical universe to start with... If the universe ultimately ends with a "big crunch", what is to say that it cannot "rebound" back out with a new "big bang", forming an entirely new universe (one which perhaps varies in some small way from it's predecessors) as it does so? Alternately, if the universe is part of a multiverse, could there be parallel alternates with various differences between them? Ultimately, any of these scenarios seem potentially as likely as the one Mr Musk suggests...

    4. Re:Non-Causal Relationship by ytene · · Score: 1

      I'm not disagreeing with you. In fact, my difficulty with Elon's point of view is actually his perspective.

      Specifically, if we were to agree that our context was a single universe [i.e. the one we observe today], then there are a bunch of properties in this observable universe that are utterly remarkable - the rate of the universe's expansion, the precise value of various forces including gravity, the mass/energy values of most of the fundamental particles - which, if any one of which was even slightly different, would mean that this universe could not have come into being in the first place.

      Elon looks at that and thinks, "Wait up, the odds of this happening, just like this, are just too extreme... This has to be a simulation - one that is too advanced for us mere 3-dimensional, carbon-based life forms to comprehend..."

      A spiritual person may look at that and think, "No, that's not it. This is proof of the existence of {the supreme Deity of that faith, as appropriate}. Clearly, without the invisible hand of the All Powerful, we would not be. Therefore, our very existence is proof of the existence of the Deity..."

      I was respectfully suggesting at least one more alternative - specifically, that it is inappropriate to take the universe we observe as a single frame of reference. If we compare this universe to a coin toss that has resulted in an "edge landing", then yes, absolutely, the universe we see is an incredibly rare and precious event. But it is still entirely possible with nothing more than the equivalent of a single coin and an awful lot of coin-flips ...

      The only difference here is, effectively, perspective. The probability is the same. The scale, inputs, time, *everything* remains unchanged. The only difference is that what seems completely implausible as a "try this once and get this one result" becomes a bit more realistic if we take as a "try this a gazillion times and you might get this one result" ...

      But one of the nice things about this specific topic is that [scientific breakthrough notwithstanding] we have no realistic way of figuring out the truth of it, but, best of all, it largely makes absolutely no difference to our lives... Which means that we can enjoy an intelligent, informative and thought provoking debate, absorb new perspectives and points of view, without the outcome having to be some stressful, life-or-death situation.

      I can't, personally, say that I have enough information on which to agree with Elon. I find his conclusions a little implausible to my personal world-view, but at the same time I'd relish the chance to sit and debate it with him, and better understand his reasoning [which, while briefly covered, is sadly lacking from the original article]. Good topic though!

    5. Re:Non-Causal Relationship by rgbatduke · · Score: 1

      I was respectfully suggesting at least one more alternative - specifically, that it is inappropriate to take the universe we observe as a single frame of reference. If we compare this universe to a coin toss that has resulted in an "edge landing", then yes, absolutely, the universe we see is an incredibly rare and precious event. But it is still entirely possible with nothing more than the equivalent of a single coin and an awful lot of coin-flips ...

      No arguments, except that one has to imagine somewhere a giant urn, filled with Universes, and a big hand pulling them out, one at a time, and saying "B-8" until somewhere, someone cries "Bingo!". So let's call this the bingo hypothesis.

      Sadly, we cannot sensibly infer either the urn or the hand any more than we can infer anything at all about the antecedent state of the Universe, so far. And there may be no urn, and no hand. One cannot apply the concept of probability theory to a single observation outside of Bayes' theorem (which sadly requires priors like assumptions about the urns) and even so, the best one can say from the single observation is that the probability of the outcome was manifestly not zero. And so it is. Here is the Universe. One can literally count the infinite improbability of it even internally. And yet it exists.

      rgb

      --
      Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
  130. Technological growth rate completely flawed by tomxor · · Score: 1

    Elon's mistake (among many others) is to assume an oversimplified exponential model of growth. This looks correct when studying a small enough period of time but there are serious issues with this assumption:

    • Technology as a whole is not one dimensional and can't be summed up by a one dimensional function.
    • Real systems are almost never infinitely exponential due to physical limits (e.g physical limit of nanoscale lithography).

    I'm not saying that we are entirely limited by things like the limit of lithography and atomic width of interconnects, of course we will find ways around... however those breaking points in hardware development are where the growth model breaks, it's no longer continuously exponential, we have to switch to developing parts of the system that have different physical or practical limitations or even change the underlying physics of the technology entirely which will give us a varied and undulating history of growth over longer periods of time with stages of plateau when we exhaust one approach and switch to another.

    1. Re:Technological growth rate completely flawed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "of course we will find ways around... "

      We'll find ways around atoms. I see.

  131. Plenty of problems with argument by sjbe · · Score: 3, Insightful

    s there a flaw in that argument?"

    There are lots of flaws in that argument. It's basically a version of the brain-in-a-jar argument. It is an argument possibly from a false premise. It has no physical evidence and (so far) no testable model to verify it. It's a mathematical and philosophical argument based on extrapolations and probabilities and axioms, not a (yet) physics argument based on empirical evidence.

    This is one of those times where somebody from physics tries to play in philosophy without knowing that this is ground that has been covered before.

    1. Re:Plenty of problems with argument by rgbatduke · · Score: 1

      I was going to post to say basically the same thing. It is identical to teleological arguments for God, and (similarly) it ignores the anthropic principle altogether. It also leaves one with a serious problem in nested probabilities, iterations of the same argument. OK, so we are (brain in a jar players? advanced enough AI NPCs that we cannot tell that we are NPCs?) in some sort of massive MMRPG -- a point of view that is almost identical to that promoted by theists only they name the chief programmer "god". But then, how precisely can the programmers and players in THAT "reality" be certain that THEY are not being simulated and only THINK that they've written a vast simulation written by a still more advanced and older civilization one notch up. Rinse, repeat ad nauseam -- at NO level can one be certain that one is observing the "true reality" because all one knows of the reality one is in is sensory information that by hypothesis is being simulated. One doesn't even have to ACTUALLY run simulations inside simulations (which has scaling problems) -- because individual consciousnesses are always individual threads and one massive simulation can do the whole thing unless your "mind" can trace every single execution in the massive computer rather than infer them from (possibly simulated) sensory data that APPEARS to look like the game you've written is running.

      To be frank, even things like the Bell inequality are only valid "given that our experiences are of the real Universe" and not a simulation, because I can compute the predicted results from the inequality and design a fully deterministic simulation that will always appear to give the right answer to the appearance of the actual experiments. So it in no sense proves the absence of hidden variables, it just requires one to throw common sense and the principle of parsimony (Occam's razor) out the window in order for there to be any, but nobody can prove that reality has to be sensible or parsimonious without begging the question -- it is simply the simplest assumption to make.

      It looks like Musk has watched The Matrix trilogy too many times, ignored Hofstader's Godel, Escher and Bach which advances, IIRC, the braided chain of teleology for God, where at no level can even GOD be certain that there are not external levels of reality superior to the level in which God functions assuming God, which is silly in the ABSENCE OF ACTUAL EVIDENCE. One wonders if he has read James Gunn's The Joy Makers and somehow gotten himself confused, or is so trapped in Plato's Cave that instead of interpreting the shadows on the wall as the best possible projection of reality available that he invents an entire mythology to explain the lifestyle and motivations of the beings that are putting on the shadow play. It is, as you say, ground that has been covered so well, and so many times, by individuals ranging from philosophers to science fiction authors that to hear it as if it is somehow something to take seriously from a self-appointed pundit of reality is just sad.

      Sigh.

      --
      Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
    2. Re:Plenty of problems with argument by avandesande · · Score: 1

      I find the fact that he isn't aware that this argument has been made in one form or another since at least Greek times pretty hilarious.

      --
      love is just extroverted narcissism
  132. "Billions" is far too low a number by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 1

    If we make the assumption that it is possible to simulate this reality multiple times, it follows that the odds of living in the "top universe" are practically nil.

    That first part is already a huge leap, but it would make much more sense to estimate: "how likely is it that we will (eventually) be able to simulate this universe", and just assume that we are living in a simulated universe if and only if this is possible.

    --
    -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
  133. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    A bug is just deviation from defined behaviour. If you do not know how the behaviour is defined, it is hard to judge whether a behaviour is as intended or not.

    For example, when a process attempts to access a region of memory, the operating system will terminate it. This may be a discrepancy from desired behaviour, but it is not a discrepancy from how a modern computer works.

    That sucks if you happen to be that process. But within the rules of the system there is a perfect explanation for that. When you attempt to load data from a memory address that cannot be translated a page fault is raised, which is passed to your operating system. It then realises what you are trying to do and will end your life.

    So when you happen to be a cat in a dark box, being unsure whether you are alive or dead - it simply is how the universe works.

  134. And so on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And our simulators must be living in some other civilizations simulator as well.

  135. Doesn't that defeat his reason to go to Mars by r3pl4y · · Score: 1

    Doesn't this defeat Elon's argument of why he wants to go to Mars? He keeps saying we need a plan B in case some catastrophic event destroys Earth, what's the point of that if it's all just a simulation anyway?

    1. Re:Doesn't that defeat his reason to go to Mars by Ihlosi · · Score: 1
      what's the point of that if it's all just a simulation anyway?

      That you don't get a high score if you're wiped out by an asteroid impact.

  136. All that energy.. by audi100quattro · · Score: 1

    I just want to know what the energy source is for the large scale simulation we're in.

    1. Re:All that energy.. by Ihlosi · · Score: 1
      I just want to know what the energy source is for the large scale simulation we're in.

      The system the simulation is running on is not subject to the second law of thermodynamics and hence runs on arbitrarily small amounts of power that are continuously recycled. It's also running really, really slowly, but we don't notice since we exist in simulated time.

    2. Re:All that energy.. by audi100quattro · · Score: 1

      It's also possible that in such a world there is no need for simulating anything since the perfect answers can all be found through quantum computers and looking elsewhere. Why simulate us or the universe? At that point, it's equally likely that there is a creator and/or that we are in a simulation.

      The extent to which a simulation can be completely divorced from the abstractions running it, (i.e. quantization and the speed at which things happen) is just asking for more energy, orders of magnitude more, if possible at all in the first place, but I am sure Godel doesn't apply either.

    3. Re:All that energy.. by zwarte+piet · · Score: 1

      Yeah exactly, the energy inside the simulation obviously only exists in the simulation. Also as with most first person games, only the visible part of the "world" gets rendered.

  137. It's a ploy by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 1

    ... Is it just me or does it start to seem like ol' Elon is going senile?

    .... He's rich, so he's just eccentric. And by that, I mean his axis is off center ...

    I see it as a dual-use ploy

    1. Free Advertising
    Works something like Donald Trump's campaign - using media as his free ad launchpad for his business endeavors

    Tone of ad can be ridiculous but as long as it is not overtly ridiculous, people / fanbois will buy it in droves

    2. Insurance Policy
    Both is electric car business and his space vehicle business carry risks, BIG RISKS so this will become his insurance policy when things come crashing down ---- 'after all, it's a simulation as we are all inside a grand simulation'

    Clever chap

    --
    Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
  138. He is kind of right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know that looks like an absurd. But he is somehow right. The real life is pretty much like "AVATAR" Movie, where we connect through the "day" and disconnect during the "night". It is proven that the space time have several dimensions that we are not able to experience, and just like an onion, there are several layers of reality. It may look stupid, but these are the evidences of last scientific discoveries. The first person that explained little more deep this subject was Allan Kardec. Regards !

  139. Cokehead by internet-redstar · · Score: 2

    Typical talk of a cokehead... And even if we live in a 'simulation', who cares; it's OUR REALITY... get sober Elon!

  140. Simulator == God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seems to me this is another way of arguing for the existence of God .

    In any simulation that is created and controlled by some entity, that entity is effectively God in the context of that simulation. So people who believe in God are effectively already saying they think our universe is a computer simulation.

    The interesting part comes about the reality that such a "God" inhabits. They would also be in the position of not knowing whether they were in a simulation, or whether they were at the fundamental level of reality. There could be many layers of simulations in which the inhabitants of each only know about the lower ones in the chain but none know whether they are at the top level or not.

  141. Realistic coming soon. We must be in one of them! by SomeoneFromBelgium · · Score: 1

    Did you spot the flaw?

  142. Would the simulation allow Elon to talk about it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because that sort of defeats all the effort the programmers put into hiding that there's a simulation.

    I conclude: no simulation, no solipsism.

  143. We can boil water by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This does not mean there's a "One In Billions" chance we are boiling in water.

  144. It goes far beyond '1 in billions' by vistapwns · · Score: 1

    Technology advances to the physical limitations of the universe, we are not quite there. A civilization at those limits, will have atomically precise nano-robots and real AI. They will also probably live forever. Putting those together, along with the fact that this is probably the most interesting time to live in (much before this, people usually died in the same hospital they were born, much after this, nanobots and AI will make crime, dating, disease, getting resources and other of today's hardships a non-issue) means that this particular time will probably be simulated in games and historical research an infinite number of times. They say science requires a 5 sigma for proof, the likely hood of us being in a simulation is 0.99999... with an infinite number of 9's after it.

    --
    "...I think the Microsoft hatred is a disease." - Linus Torvalds
    1. Re:It goes far beyond '1 in billions' by vistapwns · · Score: 1

      To clarify, that's 0.99999.. out of a 1, the standard format would be 99.99999 with an infinite number of 9's percent likely hood this is a simulation.

      --
      "...I think the Microsoft hatred is a disease." - Linus Torvalds
  145. Of course there are bugs by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 1

    ... As for those that think this level of simulation is impossible, it isn't ...

    ... Without ANY bugs? Really?

    Fact that you questioned the system in itself is a BUG as there shouldn't be anyone or anything asking such kind of question

    But as a given system goes, when there exists a bug a patch is always nearby ... lots of patches, actually --- look at the people around you, try discussing with them about this universe being a computer simulation and you got .... blank stares , as the patch is designed such that questions that aren't supposed to be asked will never be answered

    --
    Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
  146. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by skovnymfe · · Score: 2

    Or it could just be this is the umpty infinitillionth run of this particular simulation, where the bugs have, for the most part, been fixed?

  147. Because... God? by thesupraman · · Score: 2

    Why, because he does not believe in a mystical being floating somewhere that refuses to confirm or deny 'the rules' but will judge and punish/reward every single human when they die based on those rules?
    Or because he takes a more pragmatic path to considering a little further away from the normal 'on no, we are going to die, but we dont want to, god!' crowd, but still wants to perhaps believe in some purpose, therefore considers this to be a possibility?
    Or perhaps because he is willing to openly state what he HIMSELF may think, rather than hiding behind the skirts of an organised religion?
    Or because he is not making a claim that would lead to greater power for any particular involved group?

    Or, most likely, because he does not agree with your own personal worldview?

    Right or wrong, good on him for talking about it.

    1. Re:Because... God? by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 2

      Why, because he does not believe in a mystical being floating somewhere that refuses to confirm or deny 'the rules' but will judge and punish/reward every single human when they die based on those rules?

      Sounds like you're taking an opportunity to inject an anti-religious argument where no pro-religious argument has been made. Besides, if we were in a simulation, wouldn't this still be the case? There would be someone else on the other side who has created rules, and hasn't confirmed or denied them?

      Or because he takes a more pragmatic path to considering a little further away from the normal 'on no, we are going to die, but we dont want to, god!' crowd, but still wants to perhaps believe in some purpose, therefore considers this to be a possibility?

      He doesn't consider it a possibility. He's stating that it's a reality with the smallest improbable chance (1 in 1 billion) that it's not the case.

      Or perhaps because he is willing to openly state what he HIMSELF may think, rather than hiding behind the skirts of an organised religion? Or because he is not making a claim that would lead to greater power for any particular involved group? Or, most likely, because he does not agree with your own personal worldview?

      Maybe you're not replying to the parent post, but if you are, it's pretty crazy that you were able to read all of this into a comment someone made about Elon Musk losing his faculties.

      Right or wrong, good on him for talking about it.

      Why would it be good if he was talking about something that is wrong?

      --
      Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
  148. SpaceX goals by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Isn't the entire purpose of SpaceX to get to Mars? The rocket launch business is just to fund things and develop the technology.

    Not in its current incarnation. Oh, Elon has talked a lot about Mars, but as a business there is nothing structural about what SpaceX is currently (publicly) doing that solves most of the huge pile of technical challenges in getting a human safely to Mars. SpaceX is currently 99.999% about lowering cost to space. And that is hugely important and a vital first step to the future of exploring space. Without substantial economic improvements in cost to orbit a trip to Mars or anywhere else in space could never be more than a very expensive vanity project for a nation state.

    So maybe SpaceX has a long term goal of getting to Mars but it's going to be a while before they get humans there no matter what bold claims Elon might make. I think it's achievable but I don't see it happening in the next few decades unless a new cold war starts up. My guess is the earliest we would see boots on Mars would be somewhere around 2050 without a crash program.

  149. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Singularities could be a bug.

  150. Hardly by CODiNE · · Score: 1

    You can use the exact same logic to prove we're living in a dream or characters in a book like Gumby.

    "There are so many stories in books, imagine a universe full of books with the characters within unaware."

    Someone posted this is just a fancy solipsism. Here's a good reply to solipsistic people... "You're all just characters in my dream" .... "Actually, you're a character in MY dream" (slap them hard) "Notice how you didn't wake up?"

    Oh and if you're going to accept this simulation argument you may as well also accept the ontological argument for the existence of God. That's an equally absurd "if I can imagine it" sort of argument.

    --
    Cwm, fjord-bank glyphs vext quiz
  151. Simulation, Multiverses, Panspermism = faiths by Herve5 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Like the idea of Multiverses (you know, this thing when everytime you make a decision, the whole Universe duplicates in two branches, and in the other branch you made the alternate choice), like the theory of Panspermism (life never born around here but brought by some intergalactic comets from unreachable places), we face here a nice theory that completely eliminates the risk of being tested.

    In other words, it is not a scientific proposal : it's a faith that is proposed to you.
    And a low-grade one at that. The Matrix movie did much better.

    We'll soon have enough such topics to start a dictionary, whose first historical chapter would address Angel's sex debates in the Middle Ages.

    My concern is, that historical chapter probably will relate the Angel's thing to the time and place where the quarrel happened -the famous city of Byzantia, just when it was about to be destroyed.

    History tells us that when a society's intelligence falls this low, its end is very near.

    --
    Herve S.
    1. Re:Simulation, Multiverses, Panspermism = faiths by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      Nothing is more maddening than the concept of Quantum Suicide. It postulates that consciousness can't be eliminated, but rather slip into an alternate universe in the event the current one in focus comes to an abrupt end. For example, take someone that's schizophrenic that's hell bent on committing suicide. The've gone mad because no matter how many attempts at suicide, they always fail from there perspective. So in our universe, someone really does pull the trigger and they die. But for that person, they pull the trigger and *click*, nothing happens! Because in all the universes in which his live was ended, the conscious slips into a universe in which the attempt failed.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    2. Re:Simulation, Multiverses, Panspermism = faiths by The-Ixian · · Score: 1

      But what happens to the consciousness of the person whose body the fleeing consciousness enters?

      --
      My eyes reflect the stars and a smile lights up my face.
    3. Re:Simulation, Multiverses, Panspermism = faiths by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      That the consciousness is in fact in all bodies spanned through the multi-verse, and that which verse you currently take focus is up to the sub-conscious??

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    4. Re:Simulation, Multiverses, Panspermism = faiths by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Insightful? I thought this was more funny than anything else.

      You start by saying there are a bunch of unoriginal concepts that have been done in the past (multiverses, panspermism, etc), and you end your comment on yet another unoriginal concept that literally dates back thousands of years: That we are at the end of times; humanity is too stupid to recover from its grotesque failures.

    5. Re:Simulation, Multiverses, Panspermism = faiths by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In other words, it is not a scientific proposal : it's a faith that is proposed to you.
      And a low-grade one at that. The Matrix movie did much better.

      The original Matrix maybe, the movie no. They used the whole "Humans-as-batteries" concept because they didn't feel the "Humans-as-souls" or "Humans-as-creativity engines" concepts originally planned would make sense to the average viewer. If a defective super-Human-AI were created it would make sense for them to simulate reality with Humans inside it to drive some aspect of consciousness or creativity they themselves lack, but the battery concept is provably idiotic.

    6. Re:Simulation, Multiverses, Panspermism = faiths by RKThoadan · · Score: 1

      While I generally agree that this is mostly navel-gazing that I don't care much about there have been some testable hypotheses: http://www.huffingtonpost.co.u...

    7. Re:Simulation, Multiverses, Panspermism = faiths by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If interpretations of quantum physics, such as Everett-Wheeler, were 'a faith that is proposed to you', they wouldn't be called 'interpretations'.

    8. Re: Simulation, Multiverses, Panspermism = faiths by jo.smith.beckett · · Score: 1

      We are able to simulate a few atoms at the moment. In a few decades we will be able to do lots more. If in hundreds of years, we are able to simulate a sizeable chunk of the universe, surely it would stand to reason WE might be a similar simulation. It might not be provable, but certainly in a different category from angels.

  152. More turtles! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've been watching the entertaining discussion, and here's a question to the smart folks:

    If one can meaningfully assign some (admittedly rough) estimate to the probability that we're in a simulation, then there's some probability that some simulation is running within that (now c'mon, don't chuckle!).

    Thinking that further, we might be in a level-2 simulation, or level-3 or... you get the idea.

    Now here's the question: can you come up with a probability distribution P(N) for "we are in a level-N simulation", over N?

    As a convention, let's set "N=0" for "we do really exist, honest".

    Following Musk, P(0) ~ 10e-9 or something like that. Do we get a Poisson distribution?

  153. The flaw is the basis of his argument by beanpoppa · · Score: 1

    If we are a simulation, then we aren't bound by the rules and laws of the 'physical' universe in which we were created. So the fact that computing power has progressed so rapidly in OUR world serves as no evidence that the same level of progress is possible in the REAL world, so you can't use our advancement as proof for anything.

  154. Simulating what??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So there are beings living in a realm where atoms are genuine and we are simulating them. What bolloks! I bet they're wondering whether they are in a simulation themselves. Must be a gazillion levels of indirection here up to the non - simulated.

  155. This is why he is wrong by Zorpheus · · Score: 1

    It makes no sense why anyone would put all this effort and energy into building this simulation. Energy is a limited resource. Whatever beings are harvesting the energy will use it to keep up and spread out themselves.
    This thought is the result of the current abundance of resources on Earth, but this is just a temporary state. It has always been, and the end is already in sight.

    1. Re:This is why he is wrong by fieldstone · · Score: 1

      It all just sounds like slavery with more steps, Rick. :-D

    2. Re: This is why he is wrong by Zorpheus · · Score: 1

      For some reason they need humans to produce a certain substance. Not just a bunch of cells, not something without a brain. No, it must be a complete, awake and conscious human, with a machine keeping the brain busy.
      This is only good for a movie story. In reality it is a very inefficient solution in any case.

    3. Re:This is why he is wrong by randomlygeneratename · · Score: 1

      I think that's actually an argument in favor of simulation, not the reverse. It usually takes less energy to do a simulation than it takes to actually do the thing, because simluations make approximations. Industrial processes simulate reactions and processes to see if they are feasible, before they actually invest in doing them. Which is cheaper, sending a million people into space, or having a million people play a space video game?

    4. Re: This is why he is wrong by Zorpheus · · Score: 1

      But that simulation must have a purpose. It costs energy that must be supplied somehow, but it does not create anything that makes it worth to do that.

    5. Re:This is why he is wrong by EvilSS · · Score: 1

      It makes no sense why anyone would put all this effort and energy into building this simulation. Energy is a limited resource. Whatever beings are harvesting the energy will use it to keep up and spread out themselves. This thought is the result of the current abundance of resources on Earth, but this is just a temporary state. It has always been, and the end is already in sight.

      You are making the assumption that physics inside a simulation is the same as it is outside. This doesn't have to be the case. Energy abundance outside the simulation could be many orders of magnitude greater than inside. For that matter the physics of the simulating universe may be vastly different than the simulated one. We do this now when we want to simulations of our own universe to account for the computational power available vs what would be required for a more realistic simulation. We simplify where we can.

      Of course we will never know (unless the programmers of the simulation tell us, of course). Real or simulated, we are limited by boundaries our universe. Any attempt to step outside of it will, by its very nature, become a philosophical, and not a scientific, discussion.

      --
      I browse on +1 so AC's need not respond, I won't see it.
    6. Re:This is why he is wrong by zwarte+piet · · Score: 1

      Energy is a limited resource inside this game because that is how it is programmed.
      eh? harvesting simulated energy from a game? Also mom says that dinner is served. Could you stop playing that stupid life-on-earth game?
      ~Pop

  156. Goals by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When it comes to goals, either set the bar high or don't bother with it at all.

  157. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How many bugs have we seen in reality? I don't mean "Oh, _that's_ interesting" and later we figure out general relativity - I mean bugs, the shit bluescreens, or if you look in a certain direction, things are different. How many have we found?

    AFAICT, we've found _zero_. Every time we find a discrepency in the universe, later we figure out that it wasn't a discrepency, it's how the entire universe works, and our previous understanding was simply wrong. EVERY TIME. So either the bugs self-heal and become consistent universal features, or they weren't bugs in the first place.

    "Its not a bug, its a feature". And you use that as an argument against the universe being a simulation?

  158. Forget turtles... by CODiNE · · Score: 1

    It's simulations all the way down.

    --
    Cwm, fjord-bank glyphs vext quiz
  159. ground state by mpeaton · · Score: 1

    I have trouble seeing the justification for sustaining the matrix. It seems to ME that Elon's argument only makes sense if the ground truth universe (simulation) does not have energy / resource constraints similar to my own perception.

  160. Let's see... by SkyLeach · · Score: 1

    Argument from ignorance. It's a pseudo-religious approach.

    Could we be in a perfect simulation without knowing it? Yes.
    If we were, could we prove it? No way to know, depends on its complexity and our technical sophistication.
    There is no point to the premise.

    The whole point to the philosophies of Mathematics and Science are to prove what we can prove through statements which can be verified and proven true or false in order to build a firm foundation of understanding.

    More rich people need a minion (slaves are sooooo uncool these days) to follow them around and remind them they are only human. Memento mori.

    --
    My $0.02 will always be worth more than your â0.02, so :-p
  161. The flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Tell me what's wrong with that argument. Is there a flaw in that argument?"

    I believe that in formal logic, his line of thought would be an analogy, not an argument. Siting our "current and future history" is an example, not a cause-and-effect progression. Claiming the conclusion based off of the observation is a leap in logic when it assumes a meta-reality. It is the equivalent of trying to use Science (the process of observing the physical universe to determine the answer to a binary hypothesis) to prove the existence of God (a being whom by definition would be outside of the observable universe).

  162. "The Matrix" phantasie -- Non-linear TIME by redelm · · Score: 1

    This is an ex-post fallacy -- just because something will [likely] become possible, does not mean that it already has happened. I have direct, personal experience of the past, and have examined artifacts from much further back. If what Elon postulates is correct, some future advanced civilization has VRd 2016 and erased all traces of 2017+, ala Matrix. It badly fails Occams Razor.

  163. Found one! by Idou · · Score: 1

    per-occupied

    #Dear Divine programmer, please fix above bug.

    --
    Sdelat' Ameriku velikoy Snova!
    1. Re:Found one! by mongothesecond · · Score: 2

      Your bug has been accepted to the roadmap. A fix is tentatively be scheduled for four universes from now. -Divine TechSupport

  164. The following is wrong with the argument by gweihir · · Score: 1

    1. He assumes computing power will continue to scale. There are rather strong indications that it will not. And no, we are still very far removed from "fotorealistic" (and may never get there) and we do not have "millions" of people interacting on the same servers. At best, we can manage a few thousands and that not in real-time.

    2. He assumes there is such an other civilization, completely without any basis for it. At all.

    3. It is very likely that there are other problems than computing power and software for the necessary degree of immersion to be feasible.

    4. He assumes a physicalist world model without any scientific basis to that assumption. The scientific state-of-the-art is very much "we have no clue" on that question,but there are some rather strong indicators that Physicalism may be the wrong model.

    In short, his statement about the likelihood is unmitigated nonsense. It _is_ one possibility, but one among a great many others.

    --
    Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
  165. Thirteenth Floor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Enough said...

  166. Re: 'Senile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You may have mi's'sed the point 'slightly.

  167. This is Philosophy 101 by nintendoeats · · Score: 1

    probably a third of all the philosophy courses I have taken started with Descartes' Meditations, which I think makes it the most basic and read philisophical text of modern times. Elon must (heh) have read it at some point. The takeaway is clear and I have yet to encounter a convincing refutation.

    It is impossible to accurately speculate about the nature of an external world which we are not able to percieve. The nature of things in the world as we know it may or may not bear any relation to that "true" external world. We cannot claim to truly "know" anything about that which we can percieve, it is absurd to claim that we have knowledge of that which we don't. Descartes himself tried, and to most readers failed, to rescue our knowledge of the external world.

    The point is that claims either that we are or are not in a computer simulation are meaningless because they must always be built enitrely upon assumptions about the claimed "real" world. In this case, there is a further problem that in Elon's world there must be a near infinite regression of simulations because the same logic that he uses to prove that we are in a simulation must apply to the society which created it as well.

    Further, he is ignoring the issue of whether or not somebody would WANT to create this simulation. That is another giant assumption. His argument is assumption upon assumption, and his premises are by definition untestable because they are about a world which we cannot even demonstrate the existence of.

    Seriously, read Descartes and just replace God with a pantheistic entity. It's one of the best things a person can do for their intellectual development.

    1. Re:This is Philosophy 101 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All you've done is diagnose why it's a dumb thing to say. Non falsifiable and not possible to accurately speculate about. So why do we make a big deal out of it when somebody speculates about it, then act like the skeptics are closed-minded?

    2. Re:This is Philosophy 101 by nintendoeats · · Score: 1

      He isn't just speculating, he is making a positive claim about the probability. Refuting unfounded claims is a generally useful thing to do because it hones the reasoning of everybody involved and can reveal logical conclusions of our knowledge which we had not previously considered. It is an exercise.

      As to the last part, who said that skeptics are closed minded? The only people who say that are people who have just had their core beliefs discounted by reason and evidence.

  168. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    General relativity is a workaround/bugfix that preserves the old behaviour.

  169. Not Even Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now Musk, like NdGT before him, has gone full "not even wrong", the greatest fallacy a pop-science figure can create and the quickest way to cause people to lose respect. At least I have (not for the first time with either gentleman).

    1. Re:Not Even Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me guess, you lost respect for NdGT when he talked about the delusions of space enthusiasts?

    2. Re:Not Even Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, just something about the universe being a simulation. I'm only referring to one subject, stop reading more into it like the typical Slashdot troll.

      Though I guess if they mean there is a one in billions chance that your every move isn't contained within a huge NSA-run computer simulation, and thus fully predictable with 99.9999999+% accuracy... well, maybe so. He'd know better than we.

  170. Re:When the rats start to understand the experimen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is a theory which states that if ever anyone discovers exactly what the Universe is for and why it is here, it will instantly disappear and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable.

    There is another theory which states that this has already happened.

    Douglas Adams

  171. The answer is 42. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We're still trying to figure out the question.

  172. Burden of Proof Fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Elon needs to take a refresher course in basic logic. It is fallacy to make an outlandish claim and then demand others prove you wrong. This is the whole basis of modern Religion.

    He also appeals to probability.

  173. His argument doesn't even make any sense by rebelwarlock · · Score: 1

    Summarized: computers are getting better. Therefore, we are in a computer simulation.

  174. Self awareness by JustNiz · · Score: 1

    I can't exactly explain why, but somehow it feels to me that we wouldn't have self-awareness if we were part of a simulation. Something to do with it not actually being us thinking, but some external entity. Cogito ergo sum.

    1. Re:Self awareness by barfy · · Score: 1

      Sure we could. It doesn't take a rocket scientist, well maybe in this case he can, to understand that it shouldn't be possible to create sentient code. We control the inputs, (senses), We control the world (reality), you grow, become sentient, and apparently interact with the world. And remember, you don't need to simulate EVERYTHING, all those people on the road, never going to meet them or interact with them. I only need to create a certain number of sentient beings. Everything else is distant simulation. This doesn't in any way diminish Cogito Ergo Sum. YOU ARE, you always ARE. Just the physicality isn't real.

  175. Welcome to Buddhism and Taoism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Chuang Tzu dreamed he was a butterfly. Did Chuang Tzu dream he was a butterfly, or was it the butterfly dreaming he was Chuang Tzu?

    Do you exist, Elon? Can you reflect on that question outside the limited context of literalist concretism? If so then the ultimate nature of reality within the limitations of scientific viewpoint may not seem so ultimate or compelling.

  176. ant farm maybe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i doubt its a computer simulation more like an ant farm for beings either in our own spacetime or other dimensions. As we search for life in our cosmos its becoming clear that life is not something to be taken for granted and its a precious resource. Why? Who knows. Maybe its Rise Of Nations for 6 dimensional beings or maybe it all boils down to dumb luck.

  177. Ancient Aliens? by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1
    I think Musk is simply making the same argument that the producers of Ancient Aliens makes:

    Humans are too stupid to do anything by themselves, so something something POOF and here we are!

    Wrong. It seems a little like a replacement religion.

    But its wrong. For all of our shortcomings like a seeming need to kill each other, humans are actually pretty clever, and have done some pretty impressive things over the years.

    If we are merely a computer simulation of some advanced intelligence, is the advanced intgelligence a simulation in a yet more advanced intelligence? On and on

    In other words. is it turtles all the way up?

    --
    The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    1. Re:Ancient Aliens? by barfy · · Score: 1

      Dude, that isn't the argument at all. The argument is, that from a human standpoint this is doable. From a human standpoint this is done. IF this is true, then eventually somebody IN a simulation asks this question.

    2. Re:Ancient Aliens? by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Dude, that isn't the argument at all. The argument is, that from a human standpoint this is doable. From a human standpoint this is done. IF this is true, then eventually somebody IN a simulation asks this question.

      No, he is saying that there is 1 in billions chance that we are not a simulation. Despite the whackadoodle "Billions" - after all b billion billion billions is as much billions by that weird statement, lit's just use one in 1 billion, apparently the bottom end. of his certainty.

      1 chace in a billion that we aren't a simulation is about as certain as you can get that we are. Perhaps there is no such thing as reality.

      This whole thing reeks of stoners having deep discussions about how our universe is just a grain of salt on their Frito's.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
  178. The flaw in the argument is that the game sucks. by phozz+bare · · Score: 1

    If all humans are just a figment of a computer simulation then we wouldn't actually 'be' here in the sense that we experience life from within our bodies and minds rather than observe them externally (as we observe a computer simulation).

    Since I am experiencing my life, I am either 'real' or I am an external entity who is busy playing a very very very long and immersive computer game (in which case everything else around me is possibly a simulation). But if this were a game, why does it suck so bad? Surely the external me would have had the sense to choose a more fun game or at least change a few settings before starting. Sorry Elon but no, I think I'm real. Or some green tentacled creature who doesn't read game reviews.

  179. I'll prove we're not in a video game... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ....because when I played Excitebike from inside of Animal Crossing, the universe didn't collapse.

  180. strong AI by pD-brane · · Score: 1

    Not senile, maybe naive.

    There is a different but related statement to be made. If we are able to create strong AI (including consciousness as we experience this ourselves), there is an extremely small chance we're not living in a computer simulation.

  181. Allegory of the Cave by bigpat · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The idea that we are living inside a simulation is far from original from Musk.
    Perhaps the most prominent contemporary proponent of this idea is the philosopher Nick Bostrom.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    It's also peripherally related to the idea of a Boltzmann brain
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    Also there is Plato's "Allegory of the Cave" which describes prisoners in a cave viewing the shadows on the wall as their reality and similarly our own view of reality being perhaps like a "shadow" of a meta reality.

  182. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by Alioth · · Score: 1

    The simulation need not be complex, merely large. You could have a simulation that merely applied (relatively) simple rules then simulated every particle, photon etc. It would not be possible to differentiate between a bug that was consistent (and in a simple ruleset, it probably would be) and an intended rule.

  183. Ok, what kind of sick eff guy in charge... by barfy · · Score: 1

    Programmed SlashDot??????

  184. I suppose this makes sense... by RogueWarrior65 · · Score: 1

    ...When you consider the possibility that he is a virus and leftism throughout the globe is crapware, bloatware, ransomware grinding the simulation to a halt.

  185. Roku's Basilisk by dcollins · · Score: 1

    Anytime someone starts in with this "simulated reality" bullshit, I now ask them their opinion on Roku's Basilisk. Because the same personality is also likely to believe in that, freak out, and finally shut up/run away.

    http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Roko%27s_basilisk

    --
    We know where leadership by an anti-intellectual "strongman" who scapegoats minorities and likes boisterous rallies goes
    1. Re:Roku's Basilisk by fieldstone · · Score: 1

      It amazes me that they don't recognize this as what it is: simple superstition.

  186. Why Would a Blind Belief be Crazier than Any Other by silvergeek · · Score: 1

    Hey, if it is considered reasonable to believe in a grey-bearded guy in the sky who controls everything, why can't Elon believe we are living in a video game?

  187. Musk Is A Nutcase by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or ... is it he is a computer simulation or ... just on lots of cocaine and opioids?

  188. penis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Whats wrong :

    It looks like it took 13 billion years to come up with pong, once.

    At the same time, we developed a way to cause our own extinction.

    Both of these are side effects of intelligence.

    Simulations never get to the point where theyre conscious, because its a natural, inevitable tendency of intelligence to destroy itself. Intelligence has its checks and balances : it is its own recursive solution to itself.

  189. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

    Bugs are a function of cost. Not of LOC.

    Most teams I worked with never had any bug in production code. As far as I can tell I myself had never any bug in production code either (unless it was found long after I left the team and I got not informed about it).

    The question basically is how much efford do you want to put into the QA part of development before you ship.

    --
    Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
  190. Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, he's a tool. Give me a fucking break. Who is it that keeps heralding these post-pubescent retards as geniuses? It is almost a certainty that Tesla is a computer simulation with little bearing on anything that actually happens within the realms of physics, nature, or reality.

  191. But what does he think of Roko's Basilisk? by QilessQi · · Score: 1

    http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/R...

    http://www.slate.com/articles/...

    Remember: the first rule of Roko's Basilisk is you must never tell anyone about... oops, my bad.

    1. Re:But what does he think of Roko's Basilisk? by fieldstone · · Score: 1

      Blech. Roko's basilisk is just Pascal's wager for the new millennium.

  192. The problem with this notion by mark-t · · Score: 1

    ... is that it is basically the same thing as Intelligent Design, since it does not even attempt to address the nature of whoever designed the simulation we are living in, does not offer any predictive power, and is absolutely no more scientifically testable, since absolutely anything that we could try to do to test it would be part of the same system that it is trying to test, and that system cannot be isolated in scientifically reproducible contexts.

  193. 10+ years ago part of this theory was published. by Yonsy · · Score: 1

    Read and UNDERSTAND this science fiction book and related works, without any sentiment-related emotion, only with thinking. And maybe, maybe ..... you can understand nothing because you don't know which version of your life is running now, and in which simulation universe, and if is in realtime, slower or faster ... Written 10+ years ago, the people say that "this is only for hackers..." now ... the truth is ... ? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... http://www.antipope.org/charli...

  194. Is Elon going McAfee on us? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just wondering if he is about to pull a McAfee. Anyone knows if he's bough a house in Venezuela or some other country like that?

  195. Scott Adams already called it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I'm afraid the Holodeck will be mankind's last invention." -- Scott Adams, "The Dilbert Future"

  196. Elon Musk needs to take the red pill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He's been watching The Matrix movies too much.

  197. He's a looney by valnar · · Score: 1

    Case and point: If Trump had said this, the Interwebs would be all over him as batshit crazy (which he probably is, but for different reasons). Why does Musk get a pass? I can't believe some of the favoritism I'm reading here.

  198. Not sure which fallacy, but not logical by fieldstone · · Score: 1

    Just because Timeless Decision Theory says it is so, doesn't mean that's actually the case. *sticks out tongue at Roko's basilisk*

    Perhaps his argument is even valid, from a probability standpoint, but it's also unsound. There is no such advanced civilization that we know of. The fact that a thing *could* happen does not mean it *did* happen.

    It seems to me he's been watching What the Bleep Do We Know too much, and focusing mainly on what "Ramtha" says instead of the scientists.

  199. By the third trimester... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    https://xkcd.com/605/

  200. Why sentience? by Progman3K · · Score: 1

    I understand creating video-game simulations so real they're hard to distinguish from reality but why bother giving the characters sentience?

    If you *do* give your creations sentience, then aren't they as real as you?

    --
    I don't know the meaning of the word 'don't' - J
  201. Ehhh? by Tribeca1248 · · Score: 1

    And the necessity of thinking that we're living in a VR world is? I've read about hypotheses from reputable scientists that the universe is actually a massive simulation running on some unimaginably immense computer, so Elon Musk's musings at least have predecessors. But again, what is the necessity of thinking this? What question is otherwise unanswered except by imagining that this scenario is actually true? It's an interesting thought, but I think "The Matrix" was there first.

  202. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by shess · · Score: 1

    Yeah, but what if bugs are the result of living in simulation? What if "base reality" is so much more such that it is possible for mathematics to be both complete and correct and has solutions for the halting problem? That would actually make it possible to eradicate all bugs in a system.

    That's way out there. Once you have that, just ask the question you want answered, why bother with a simulation at all?

    Also, the incompatibility between Einsteinian, classical and quantum physics is a pretty big "discrepancy" in the universe, and there may be more exotic physics to be found to explain Dark Matter and Energy.

    This applies equally to all reality, though, so it's not a bug, it's a feature. Just because your user cannot understand a feature doesn't mean you didn't intend it to work that way. A bug is a thing that the creators of the software don't understand and didn't intend, and invariably you have a ton of bugs which don't happen uniformly, and thus are really challenging to fix. Reality doesn't have those.

  203. It's turtles all the way down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is ludicrous. Any simulation would be absolutely unable to be detected from within the simulation, so what's the point in even navel gazing about it?
    We're bound by our own universe and there's nothing you can observe or calculate or do that will change that.
    If we are a simulation, we would only be able to "prove" it if we are permitted to by whomever or whatever is running the simulation.
    And why would they do that?
    It's a silly self centered conceit to think that this simulation would even be running for us with the vastness of the universe.
    I think this is a silly delusional fantasy the Elon participates in because it makes him think he looks more aloof and brilliant than other people. And the Yes men around him make it sound really cool.
    It's turtles all the way down, you see...

  204. Smart as he is, he is forgetting something huge... by PmanAce · · Score: 1

    He is forgetting the fact that the advanced civilization that can create simulations of this magnitude had to evolve FROM where we are today, thus making the odds practically ZERO.

    --
    Tired of my customary (Score:1)
  205. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by shess · · Score: 1

    How many bugs have we seen in reality?

    Given the percentage of a population that are about to vote for someone who's running on a platform of building a wall around the country, I'd say the bugs are in the 100s of millions :)

    They all arrived at their decisions using the same underlying systems of operation. Just because one chaotic system has different emergent properties than another doesn't make it a bug.

  206. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by shess · · Score: 1

    Singularities could be a bug.

    Singularities are a feature, because it is generally agreed that they work pretty much the same wherever they exist throughout the universe. A bug would be if you could prove that one super-massive black hole was a singularity, but another was _not_ a singularity.

  207. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by shess · · Score: 1

    General relativity is a workaround/bugfix that preserves the old behaviour.

    Is your argument that before Einstein formulated general relativity, the universe worked differently?

    A bugfix would be where a creator changed something, not where the contents of the simulation changed their understanding of things.

  208. Teapot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    On his way to Mars, he may stop and take a break and have some tea out of Russel's Teapot.

  209. This has been talk about before Elon said it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here I'll post a link to a video to a gamer, who quotes other scientist who have already put this argument forward...

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7KcPNiworbo&list=PLTAr9jSzvNbimHxjXmaOyRFwwSRSlyAnV&index=26

    It's a fun video to watch. I'll honestly say it's strange, yet cool, to watch a video of some guy absolute slay in a fist
    person shooter talk about science. Mr.Siff is under-rated...

  210. so, you see... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    a computer simulation is one possible explanation of "reality". there are more. because they have not been disproved, they are considered "possible".

    the number of explanations we haven't thought of yet likely outnumbers those which we have.

    so to claim "nah, I got it guys - reality it x!" is... well, you know.

  211. Turtles all the way down by Tough+Love · · Score: 1

    Then what is the advanced civilization living in? Takeaway from this: there are no easy answers, Elon.

    --
    When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
  212. Just what kind of sick bastards designed the level by iamacat · · Score: 1

    It's not that we have to fight so much that bothers me, but I demand medkits, transporters to other parts of the level and respawn 30 seconds after getting killed!

  213. Wrong Example by Thyamine · · Score: 1

    I think he picked the wrong example. And it may just be me getting into the semantics of it, but he talks about how everything looks, not how everything thinks. Our versions of AI are not all that great in mass produced form. Current games and those MMORPG simulations that get referred to have terrible AI. Maybe not 'terrible', but compared to a human or real thought they are terrible. Just this morning I watched a companion in a video game attempt to run through a wall to get me, then ran the wrong way around the building. It looks really good, so I agree that before long we will be able to have photo realistic games, but I doubt they will think much better. Now on the galactic scale, I might be splitting hairs, in that it won't be 1000 years but maybe 10 or 100 thousand years before we can get AI to that level. And if the naysayers have anything to add, they'll tell you we'll blow ourselves up or poison ourselves or INSERTCATASTROPHYHERE.

    --
    I will shred my adversaries. Pull their eyes out just enough to turn them towards their mewing, mutilated faces. Illyria
  214. Extrapolating by DarthVain · · Score: 1

    Elon Musk should read this comic:
    https://xkcd.com/605/

    I mean clearly he is a smart guy and an astute businessman, but either this was out of context, off the cuff, or not a clearly thought out comment.

    Just about everything follows the same general premise. In the beginning there is a lot of advancement, because there is a lot to discover, progress is rapid. Eventually things get a bit tougher, as generally speaking the low hanging fruit has already been picked. Near the end, as whatever it is we are talking about matures, there is less and less to work with, advances are small and subtle, and grind to almost nothing as you go.

    Add to this, typically the reason we do things, capitalization, there comes a time where sure you can make something go 1/100ths faster or whatever, but due to costs which unless they go down (which there is also limits to), makes the incentive to advance any further increasingly diminish. Law of diminishing returns in general. Sure if you take that particular diminishing curve as it approaches infinity, you can predict pretty much anything. However that is an abstract concept and construct, not a real thing in reality. In reality things are not so simple and mathematical. The spherical cow joke for example.

    Yeah we have come a long way with AI and VR, etc... in the last 20 years, I've seen it. Yes I agree we have ample room to grow with these technologies. However to assume that the last 20 years of growth is representative of the next 20 years, let alone the next 10,000 is silly. Indeed extrapolating that far out considering all the factors and variables that could occur in that period is literally nothing more than fantasy.

  215. Which simulation is running our simulation? by sinequonon · · Score: 1

    If the odds are high that we're living in a simulation, then the odds are almost as high that there's a simulation that is running that simulation. Just how far down do the turtles go? It's a useless belief that can lead to nihilistic thinking. Plus it isn't scientific until we can test for it.

    --
    -Bob-
  216. Is Elon Musk the new Bennett Haselton? by gmiller123456 · · Score: 1

    Just curious if they're the same person, or if there's a different person getting their hair brained ideas posted here for no reason.

  217. Aha by jacekm · · Score: 0

    I always thought that Elon Musk is not quite normal. Now I have a proof of it.

  218. All that Elon is saying ... by Rambo+Tribble · · Score: 1

    ... is that God's a gamer. (And, no, I do not intend to imply any defence of that hypothesis.)

  219. Chances of him being right one in trillions. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because, for example, he has FUCK ALL idea how to calculate the probability of this not being a simulated reality.

    And, frankly, Elon's cliams can be dismissed as wrong without evidence, since they were promulgated without evidence.

    Godel doesn't change the fact that there's nothing supporting the claims.

  220. Might explain why there's no time travel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If there was time travel, we would have been visited by people from the future by now. Since there's not time travel, it's possible that the simulation does not allow for it. Constraining everything into chronological order (thus avoiding dealing with paradoxes) greatly simplifies the requirements for operating a simulation.

  221. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by rgbatduke · · Score: 1

    the bugs are in the 100s of millions

    Sorry, was that a typo? Did you mean "borgs"?

    --
    Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
  222. I'll never smoke weed with Elon again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I always heard that his herb was top shelf
    Lord I just could not wait to find out for myself.
    Well don't knock it till you've tried it.
    And I've tried it my friend.
    I'll never smoke Weed with Elon again!

  223. If it is a game? by Sheik+Yerbouti · · Score: 1

    If this is a game once we get to Alpha Centauri is it game over?

    1. Re:If it is a game? by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      Like most mobile games, our universe is one that is played once then never started again.

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
  224. Believing in simulated universe religions by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

    Believe one to be in a simulation Is not significantly different from believing there is a God that created our universe and talks to you. It's an irrational assumption that cannot one cannot proven or disprove and cannot be scientifically tested. The model of the universe that one constructs for religion or for simulation universe is such that it neatly ties up any possibility of rational debate because the answer to everything is "God/simulation did it".

    --
    “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
  225. not "a billion or so" by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

    It's closer to 6 or 7 billion.

    --
    “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
  226. gezus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    his argument is flawed. blathering about game development to the point that "it follows" that we must be in a simulation is logically flawed.
    why has no one referenced the matrix, or nick bostroms bullshit.
    or this

    all metalanguages resolve back to natural language, therefore all simulations resolve back to the default natural reality

  227. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by thegarbz · · Score: 1

    Actually you're right. I guess the inputs to our simulation were given by a bunch of team fortress players. What the world is going through at the moment seems very like the kind of thing some 13yr old would come up with while playing Civilisation and threatening to teabag his opponent while exclaiming over and over again how good she was in bed.

    The world could just be a giant troll for the lolz. It certainly is getting like that.

  228. On a side note... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm planning to build a full-scale model of Earth. 1 mile equals 1 mile. Maybe Elon can help me solve 2 minor hurdles - where to get all of the materials and where to put the model when I'm done.

    Oh, wait! I'll just use The Force (tm)!

    I've finished my full-scale map of the western hemisphere. Sheesh, that thing is a bitch to refold.

  229. He's Not The Only One by friedmud · · Score: 1

    Philosophers have been talking about this idea for a REALLY long time. The idea is called "Simulated Reality": https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... and many philosophers have mused over it over the years... including big names like Descartes.

    Here is a nice little interview that describes some of the basic ideas of how VR relates to philosophy: https://aeon.co/videos/new-rea...

    It's funny to me that so many people here are dismissive of the idea or think Musk is off his rocker... you just haven't taken enough philosophy classes (or thought long enough about the ideas!) :-)

  230. What are the Odds that is unsupported stupidity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Also a billion to 1?
    Is the simulation leader God?
    Does he have anything besides thought experiments to prove it?

  231. Amen, brother. Testify! by mmell · · Score: 1

    :^D

  232. The Deceiving Demon strikes again.... by camazotz · · Score: 1

    Actually it technically goes all the way back to Rene Descartes and his "deceiving demon" scenario. The principle is exactly the same, but Descartes is at least grounded in reality...he recognizes that there's a consciousness/experience issue, and that while one cannot assert that reality is not a fabrication/illusion, you can assert your own personal existence (cogito ergo sum). The computer simulation is just the latest feasible model for suggesting we cannot trust our experiences to represent actual reality. For this to be a computer simulation, knowing what we know, it implies at least the following: 1. the simulation can not only simulate the physical world, but can also simulate consciousness 2. Our definition of consciousness as simulated excludes the existence of external awareness, suggesting we're all part of the program. But if the program is being experienced by programmers/users anyone reading this who is not a progammer or user is likely not "real" in the conventional sense 3. However, since we know we are conscious, or programmed to think we are, then it raises questions about the definition of both this awareness and actual sentience. In fact it cascades into a whole mess of questions that soon leads to the same line of thought about how our universe works, how we relate to it, and where it came from. It is almost tautological, in fact.... 4. Leading to the notion that if a simulation is sufficiently indistinguishable from "the real thing" then how do you recognize when you're in the real world vs. the simulation? 5. And if it is a simulation, all it proves is that there's an operant higher level of reality which we haven't ye developed an empircal method of detection for, and may never be able to due to programming issues 6. And if that's true, then we're back to square one, with Descartes' demon, realizing that the only certainty we have is that we are able to perceive our self-awareness --even if that self-awareness could be a simulation, it is still something we each indelibly hold in our personal experience to be the point of definition for who we are, regardless of our sensory experiences. ....So yeah, from the philosopher's view all Elon Musk has done is reframe the question Descartes already posed with a more contemporary framework.

  233. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Earth 6.0.0 was flat, then 7.0.0 came out and made it round :)

  234. I think, therefore I am ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    .. but I can't prove you think, so you may be a manifest of my imagination.

  235. simulation-argument.com has the best summaries by JimGleaves · · Score: 1

    If you are really interested in this topic than probably the best place to review the current thinking is: http://www.simulation-argument... .

    Personally I don't find it useful to spend much time thinking about it. The idea we are in a simulation is pretty much the same as "everything is a dream." Even if it's true it's untestable with no clear implications for how we relate to the world or make decisions. As William James said, "A difference which makes no difference is no difference at all."

  236. Changelog by goarilla · · Score: 1

    The World version 2.5.11.4 (codename "TRUMP and Musket"):

    - Agent update: Change the Trump's wig with real hair.
    - Agent update: Upped Trump's mysogeny index to 267 again.
    - Agent update: Allow the junior gamemasters to control the Musk's public announcements.
    - Fix: A sanitisation flaw in player_dream() could allow a player to glimpse date from the world's state and/or allow remote code execution.
    - Fix: A null dereference in player_create() could allow births to fail unexpectedly.
    - Fix: mutated the AIDS pathogen again to thwart player's latest medical advances.

    Signed, "The Author"

  237. TLDR: you agree with Perens. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    TLDR: you agree with Perens.

  238. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bugs are only noticeable from the outside. From inside the program, the bug is simply the way it is. Perhaps natural disasters are a "bug" from unoptimized or unbalanced weather conditions. From the inside for us, it's an undesired, but natural, event.

  239. And what if our simulation is a child's plaything? by ravyne · · Score: 1

    This kind of argument has been around for awhile, and its almost religious in that you can't really ever prove whether its true or not from the inside -- which I suppose is comforting, since it also doesn't matter whether its true so long as we can't know. If we did break through, talk about existential crisis!

    What's an even more interesting conclusion to me, is that if you assume an advanced technological society has pulled this all off for a first time, it would follow that eventually this capability would become commonplace. You'd assume at first blush that our simulation *must* be running is some grand institute of science, but you'd be foolish to assume so. If you accept the argument on premise, its much more likely that our simulation is running in a mass-produced plaything, or is their version of a college freshman's D+ work.

    You can't even assume that they think our simulation is anything special. There's no guarantee of a body that holds the ethical duty of keeping our simulation running, no five-nines, or even proper backups. We'd never be able to observe from the inside anyways, but it also follows that, eventually, the simulation will run so fast and be such a commodity that this original society doesn't think anything more of creating and destroying simulations than we think of turning our televisions on and off.

    Or what if our simulation is a virus -- they may curse us and actively seek to wipe our simulation out.

    And whose to say that our creators are the origin. Maybe our existence is just an experiment into their own. Its turtles all the way down until its not.

  240. bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    " Is there a flaw in that argument?"

    Yup.

    '' then the games will become indistinguishable from reality,"

    There it is. Absolute bollocks, unsupported by any evidence.

  241. What's wrong with the argument? by Macdude · · Score: 1

    Nothing can continue to expand at a geometric rate forever -- that's what's wrong.

    Now that you have proposed this concept, your next task is to develop a way to test it. If there is no way to test it then it's a meaningless distinction.

    We are bound by reality, the nature of reality is a moot point as it's unknowable, you can't step outside of reality to examine it. Anything outside of reality is, by definition, unreal. So your theoretical simulation is, by definition, unreal and therefore does not exist. QED.

    --
    "Grab them by the pussy" -- President of the United States of America
  242. So what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While I personally think this whole computational universe idea is ridiculous to begin with, even if it was the case, just knowing it to be true doesn't mean we could do anything about it.

    I also like to think, that this idea is only possible because we have computers now. No one had (that I'm aware of) this idea before computers existed.

    Saw something about turtles earlier, I like turtles.

  243. Has Elon applied to legally change his name to.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... MR. ANDERSON?

  244. advancement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    advancement is slowing; multicore procs are masking that

  245. Arch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can not find it.

  246. Nonsense by bigtech · · Score: 1

    For each atom simulated, the simulator would have to have at least one atom. So a universe simulator could be no smaller than the size of the universe. How does that make any sense?

  247. M.a.l.t.h.u.s. by CSMoran · · Score: 1

    Then you just say, okay, let's imagine it's 10,000 years in the future [...] So given that we're clearly on a trajectory to [...] Tell me what's wrong with that argument. Is there a flaw in that argument?"

    Malthus called. Wanted to have a word with you.

    --
    Every end has half a stick.
  248. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just run it in a debugger. You get a discrepancy, the simulation breaks and stops for seventy billion years as it gets patched by an infinite number of space monkeys, then continues where it left off. From inside the simulation, there's no evidence that the discrepancy ever occurred.

  249. Depends on if... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The timestamp counter, the elapsed time counter, and the 'real date' polling mechanism are all accessible in-world. If so you can account for it by drift between what the tsc/elapsed time is at any point and what it changed to when polled against the real time value. :)

    It is one tool in determining if you're in a VM or on bare hardware for deciding if certain routines should attempt to run on the 'hardware' or not.

  250. THE flaw.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, the chances are very small... but this is the flaw.

    Someone had to be the first civilization to actually grow in 'real' reality, and frankly, there's nothing to prevent multiple civilizations doing that independently.

    Since its possible, just because the odds are near zero doesn't mean it's zero.

    This is kinda like the old 'how much will the human population grow'. If we were to become a galactic civilization with billions of worlds consisting of billions of people each, your odds of being born now would be very small. And yet, you were born now. So the argument would be either we don't become that galactic civilization, or you beat these infinitely small odds. Its a mathematically flawed argument, because beating small odds is done everyday. Lotteries are won, all the time.

  251. Yah, Elon, here's the problem: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can seriously advocate we're in the a construct after you experience the following:

    1) Be someone whose job was downsized, your savings long exhausted, you didn't get hired the last two years, and next month your unemployment benefits end. Now, survive.
    2) Get sentenced to a medium-security prison and have Bubba start looking at you *that* way.
    3) Be a pre-teen and have your parents massacred because of their ethnicity.
    4) Be a girl and face a squad of Boko Haram.

    When you've got the world swingin' from your nuts and you will never truly worry about anything but first world problems, ever again, it's damn easy to be philosophical. Be one of the powerless masses and the flaws become kind of apparent.

  252. a moron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, fine chain of reasoning there, you moron!

  253. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's a pretty stupid argument. No being capable of running such a simulation would do it in any of the limited ways you can think of. Blue screen, "bugs"... Give me a break.

  254. Debug Mode. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So does that means we can run in debug mode and strip Ellen Page again?

  255. Only works if the laws of physics are wrong. by Tyr07 · · Score: 1

    You would have to be able to harness the break down of reality in a black hole to pull it off or otherwise violate the laws of physics as we know them for /our/ universe to be able to generate another full universe like a video game.

    Thermal limits among other things prohibit what he is saying. Just because we haven't hit the limits doesn't mean there isn't a limit.

  256. he really liked the Matrix by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    a little lost if this means we are not 'real' but simulations or just all watching one someone else is running. Seems like a huge waste of code to simulate all the crap I think about if it's really for someone else to watch. Why would they care - what is the point of simulating something at this level if you are evolved enough to have the ability. Shouldn't you be going trans dimensional or something much cooler that this

  257. zero/zen sum philosophy by TheRealHocusLocus · · Score: 1

    IF we are in a game, one can only gain points by not treating it like one. Because you lose points for anything that dulls your survival edge... be it that angst that arises from loss of your cherished sense of existential uniqueness, or anything that softens the sharp tang of death.

    IF this is not game, same rules apply.

    Ergo, there is no game.
    And there is no spoon.

    --
    <blink>down the rabbit hole</blink>
  258. where would tech be in a million years? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So we could custom design DNA? travel to other star systems? seed that DNA there? are we sure that intelligent design has not occurred here if it is such a likely thing that we would do ourselves?

  259. Nothing to see here.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why, the Universe is, obviously, a "hardware" (matter as a "solid state" or a form of energy) while life, no mater how complex, is a "software". Crude, primitive analogy.

    Some people, by the way, called this simulation "Brahman" for a few thousands of years.

  260. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by black3d · · Score: 1

    Well, you're restricting your imagination somewhat. The clock inside a simulation is self-referencing. It doesn't half to self-heal. The operator could run a single cycle, see what happens, then make adjustments before continuing. It doesn't matter how long it takes to calculate or process the physics of the universe, since the referential time-frame of the subjects of the universe is part of the simulation itself. One second in the simulation could take 10 seconds, 10 years, or a hundred million years to process in the "outside world", but it wouldn't make any difference to the operation within the simulation.

    A lot of commenters have posted arguments like the scale being impossible (why? our simulated universe could be 10^200 times smaller than the universe one level above us, there's no reason to think it'd contain the same amount of information), or that things like quantum physics would break the bounds of the computer running the simulation (sincere lack of imagination - if it's a simulation, these quantum physics don't "exist", the simulation of them is part of a running program), and other such arguments which keep forgetting that they're talking about a simulation, not something physically real.

    It's basically comes down to this - if we postulate that given enough time (billions of years? trillions of years? pick a number) and sufficiently advanced technology, we could eventually simulate the entire physics of our universe (the nature of the physics) and accurately simulate a universe (even if much smaller than our own) right down to every aspect of the physics, then it immediately becomes more likely that we're in such a simulation than not.

    Why? Because if we were able to have an accurate simulation of the physics, then it would be possible for the inhabitants of our simulated universe to also do the same, on a smaller scale. And so on and so forth. There's an analogy in computers in that we can write an emulator which accurately emulates in software the hardware of a computer. Then, in that emulated computer, we can write another emulator which accurately emulates in software the "hardware" of the simulated computer, etc etc. The limit of this recursion is only the processing power of the initial "seed" computer. However, each computer in the chain acts as if it is the seed computer, and its processing power is the first step.

    Likewise, in a universe simulation, the inhabitants of each universe would think they're the top level "seed" universe. As it's a simulation, there's no way they could ever escape the bounds of the simulation as they don't "exist" outside of it. Thats what makes this simply a thought exercise, because even if simulated, it's still our "real", as you mention at the end of your post.

    But, if we accept the initial premise that we'd eventually be able to produce such a universal physics simulation, that makes it logical that we're in such a simulation, and by no means the "seed" universe. After all, if we could run one such simulation, why not multiple. And why would the inhabitants of those simulations once they too were able to do the same (given they have the same physics, it would be possible within the simulation), also not run multiple simulations? If we accept the initial premise, then we have to accept that there could be an uncountable number of simulated universes, only one seed universe, and no way for the inhabitants of any simulation to ever know if they're the seed or a simulation.

    And it doesn't matter. If we're in such a simulation, we could never know. Even if the operator decided to program the simulation to be aware of itself, it would still only be operating within the bounds of the simulation. What we think of as self-awareness would just be part of the physics simulation running its course, meaning that although the inhabitants of the simulation would 'act' self aware to an observer, they're only doing so because of the accuracy of the physical simulation.

    It's all a fascinating thought exercise, but has no real world applications. For us, the simulation and reality would be one and the same.

    --
    "The true measure of a person is how they act when they know they won't get caught." - DSRilk
  261. The odds seem unlikely to be what he says by cfalcon · · Score: 1

    If executing a step of simulation in our universe (U) takes some nonzero amount of effort, E, in the universe one above us (U'), then there's an upper limit to how many universes U' can simulate. If U' is also a simulation in U'', then all that effort lays upon U''. The E amount grows exponentially.

    This doesn't disprove the hypothesis, but it does mean that U' (or U'', or up to infinity) is at some point *fundamentally* different. Our ability to simulate universes is definitely finite, but to make Musk's argument compelling (that since we could maybe simulate a universe, we are likely to be inside of a simulation, or a deeply nested one) to the "one in billions" number, something above us needs to essentially have infinite energy, or not even have the concept of energy.

    The idea that we are being emulated by an entity or realm with endless energy does not seems as appealing or interesting- that's pretty much positing something so alien and all powerful as to be a technologist's take on a divine realm.

    If we discard the idea of infinite energy / no need for energy, then the odds of us being a simulation could still be large, but not massive. All of this assumes that such a simulation is possible, would be able to have consciousness or the illusion thereof, and qualia- all big assumptions given that, based on the materialist worldview, all this should be testable, should be provable, but that has not happened.

    If we are simulated, and our universe uses data compression (say, not determining state exactly until interaction calculus need be performed), then maybe we could test it with some effect that generates a lot more decisions-per-moment in a space than the universe normally supports. Maybe when they see the sim taking longer, or drawing more power, they'll pull us up in a debugger, eh?

    Anyway, the whole idea makes a bunch of assumptions. These could be true assumptions, but they are not proven, and many could be tested, and haven't been. I think it is too early to say it is overwhelmingly likely, or even possible at all.

  262. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The biggest argument I can find that this universe isn't a simulation, is it's unnecessary complexity.

    All of matter, sufficient to give rise to us and our consciousness necessary to perceive it, could be accomplished with an up and down quark and an electron.

    So why the different particle generations? Why do we have 4 other quarks? Why do we have taus and muons?

    Any coder worth his salt would have optimised those away long ago.

  263. consciousness in a game by ananda59 · · Score: 0

    Is he suggesting the game simulates conscious beings or that we are actually avatars for conscious beings that do not remember being players? That part of Musk's idea troubles me, but most of all is the flaw that he fails to distinguish between possible in the virtual world and what is possible in the physical world. Just because it could be done and likely will be possible by an advanced civilization doesn't mean we are likely a part of that. In the real world it is very likely that life evolved in many millions of places. Doesn't that imply that there are really good odds on us being real beings?

  264. Elon assumes there is a base reality by zwarte+piet · · Score: 1

    hahaha

  265. Science Smience by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Okay, we all know how foolish it is to believe in God, well because Science tells us not to. Religion just makes up things because they don't understand them.

    Then from The Anointed Ones we are supposed to accept (without ANY scientific evidence) String Theory, Multiverses and now this crap.

    Hmm.. perhaps our Existence Programmers made a Universe with a God in it just to screw with the Anointed Ones.

    In one hundred years they will laugh at some of the scientific beliefs we had. I say why wait?

  266. Might be a simulation, but doubt this argument by amoreperfectvacuum · · Score: 1

    I had thought about this fairly lately. Seemed suspicious to me that the universe seemed to be composed of tiny tiles, which it is, if I am understanding Planck's constant correctly. This makes things seem very like the design of a video game, where it is possible to lay out all the tiles and calculate them sequentially and then assemble the grid. It also seems suspicious that there is no evidence of other technological species. It occurred to me that, if one wanted to give the simulated species complete free reign, you would have to allow computational power for it to create multiple simulations of the evolution of the universe it found itself in. Each one of these could eat up quite a lot of computer time, but if one limited things to one species, you might be able to manage things. It would also allow one to render the universe to perfect detail from the one point of view, but allow the rendered resolution to be reduced the farther you looked from this view point. I expected we would be living in the social model of a grad student. If he were a professor, he would have more computer power available.

  267. Scientist he's not by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

    Ok, so we have definitive proof that Musk isn't a scientist if he thinks that's proof.

  268. Thou shall not commit logical fallacies! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    “Is there a flaw in that argument?” Elon asks. Why, yes, Elon there are many. Take your pick: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fallacies

    Firstly, there’s the appeal to probability fallacy: just because it is probably so, doesn’t make it so.

    Secondly, there is the propositional fallacy: if A, then B; B, therefore A. (this might be a stretch – any scholars of logic want to weigh in)?

    Thirdly Well, I got bored and stopped trying to match any more fallacies to his reasoning. But, there is likely one or two lurking among the informal fallacies.

  269. I think someone has way too much time on his hands by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I suppose splinters, bee stings, hemorrhoids, sand in your undershorts, bitter tea, too much caffeine, headaches, those twitchy eyes, farts, jock itch, irritable bowel syndrome and so much more are programmed in as well.

    So much potential and he wastes it on irrelevant crap.

  270. Simulations by Keith+Henson · · Score: 1

    The current cottage industry in philosophy departments of speculation about our living in a simulation stems from a conversation I had with Hans Moravec at the Artificial Life conference in 1987. (I was invited because I knew the organizer, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... when he was a volunteer at the L5 Society.) Hans was rapping about the ever falling cost of computation and waving around a two inch thick paper draft of “Mind Children.” On the spur of the moment, I stopped him and said, “Hans, do you realize how unlikely it is that this is the first time we have had this conversation?” Hans gave me this really blank look, rare on one of the brightest people I have known. I explained that, given the ever falling cost of computation, we would eventually simulate history, including this conversation. And like Civil War reenactments and SCA, we would do it many times, making the chances of this being the first time virtually zero. Hans went away sandbagged. He later wrote “Pigs in Cyberspace,” references here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    We also discussed the conversation and the topic on the Extropian mailing list in the early 1990s.

    Thinking back, I must have had in the back of my mind a book, Simulacron-3, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... that I read many years before.

    Elon Musk doesn’t take this speculation seriously because he consistently works hard to make our world a more interesting place. You can’t take a chance that this is not the base reality.

    On the other hand, perhaps making the world more interesting is a way to keep the simulation sysops from turning it off. :-)

    Keith
    PS Speaking of making things more interesting
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
    Shorter version that was shown at the White House recently
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

    --
    End MGM. Get prospective parents of boys to Google: Men do complain
  271. Re:And what if our simulation is a child's playthi by Dagger2 · · Score: 1

    Here's a worse one: you can't even make the assumption that they know about us. We might just have evolved off-screen, in some part of the sim that nobody is ever going to look at.

  272. Finally Slashdot has something great to read! by neoRUR · · Score: 1

    Wow, So happy that this thread is here. Finally something nice to read and ponder. I think about this stuff all the time, but it's nice to know there is more to talk about than the normal boring day to day stuff. Glad to read everyone's ideas on this.

  273. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by toddestan · · Score: 1

    Not necessarily. You can have a bug that causes undesirable behavior, but that undesirable behavior would still be consistent everywhere. Like if the creator had fat-fingered a physical constant or something. Since we have no idea what the value is *supposed* to be, we'd have no idea that the value we observe isn't what was intended.

    And even if we discover something like that some super-massive blackholes are not singularities, would we be like "A ha! We are in a simulation!" or would we assume it's a natural phenomenon and we get to work on coming up with new physical theories to try to explain it? I mean, a lot things in cosmology are pretty strange and there's no obvious reason why things are that way. Things like the Hubble constant and dark energy could be explained as a physics simulation that was created to model a solar system being scaled up way beyond what it was designed for.

  274. Re:I guess he's never worked on hardware or softwa by djinn6 · · Score: 1

    It's not a bug, it's a feature!

    Really, how do you identify "bugs" in the physical reality when you don't know the intent? QM is incredibly complicated, but we assume it's just working as intended.

  275. Elon disproves his own existence by lylefile · · Score: 1

    A couple of points:
              1. There is no way to disprove the claim because it's based on a hypothetical metaverse that is presumed to follow Moore's law, like our own.
              2. There are many possible implementations ranging from simulating the perception of a single person (me, of course) to simulating the entire universe in total. The first is far easier (to which my friends could attest), and thus far more likely. This makes it likely that I'm very special. Certainly good news for me!
              3. If one accepts the assertion the simulation is wide-scale, and that the metaverse hosting our simulation obeys Moore's law, and further posit that Elon is right, then it follows that:
                                      a. There is a one in 1 in (10E9 - 1) chance that that metaverse is also a simulation inside a yet higher level metaverse with the chance of 1 in (10E9 - 2), etc.
                                      b. So then we would almost certainly in a long, long chain of simulations,
                                      c. The chance of any one of those losing energy, funding, or interest is certainly much, much greater than the chance of it being a simulation. This is especially true given the inefficiencies of running a virtual machine (which would mean that optimistically we are running at 10E-81 of real time).
                                      d. So the fact that we still exist means almost certainly that it's either a) not a simulation, or b) one with a simulated history that's about to end soon, so it doesn't matter. Unless, of course, it's just me being simulated.

    I was hesitant to post for a few seconds until I realized that none of you are at all likely to exist anyway (least of all Elon), so I have nothing to lose :)

       

  276. "Is there a flaw in that argument?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes. Wotaloadabollax
    This is the kind of arbitrary unsupported random walk of guesswork that in the middle ages led to the determination of how many angels could stand on the head of a pin. Just about as useful too.

  277. What's the flaw with that argument by spkay31 · · Score: 1

    How about it's simply ridiculous. Can't believe I'm even wasting time commenting on this. Wait - maybe this IS a simulation......

  278. Um... What? by dragon-file · · Score: 1

    I get where he's coming from but I think to say that there's a 1 in a X number of billions chance we aren't in a computer simulation is a bit off. For example, the rate at which computer game development can in fact be traced back to computers. In fact, our advancement in the past 50 years or so in most fields has been very fast. Cars, Computers, Engineering, Medical. All of these fields have been advancing rapidly and computers are the cause. Each generation of computer is being used to build then next. The result is better miconization. Fitting more data in the same physical space. More processing. Faster throughput. Each advancement is directly used to make the next and these computer advancements bleed over into other fields. So which is more likely? Video games are so advanced because we are in a computer simulation or the rampant video game development is simply a byproduct of computer design leap frog?

    --
    Whenever a player quits EVE to go play WoW, the Average IQ of both games increase.
  279. Bugs [Re:Just Solipsism and Faith-Based Nonsense by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    Kind of like, "That's not the giant hand of the server admin, that's swamp gas kicked up by a weather balloon trapped in a thermal pocket and reflecting the light from Venus."

    If things get too out of hand, the server admin may just restore the last good reality from backup tapes/turtles/thingies.

  280. Yes, a sim, but for other reasons... by rocket+rancher · · Score: 1

    Why can our universe can be characterized by two sets of rules that are mutually incompatible, yet are each fantastically precise (15 digits of precision!) My core belief is that the real universe operates by one set of rules and one set only. As people have noted in other posts, inconsistencies (bugs, if you will) in the way our universe works would be evidence that there is a different reality than the one we observe.

    That our two most successful theories of how the universe operates are mutually exclusive is one such bug in my view. There are other bugs. Like the fact that there are 19 unknown (read: underivable) dimensionless constants that we have to plug and chug into our theories -- they just exist and none of our current crop of theories can provide a reason for their values. (String theory does, yes, but ST is still religion at this point -- no testable hypotheses.)

    The kluges and the hacks we have to deploy to patch the two existing mutually exclusive frameworks that we do have also argue that there is something we are fundamentally missing. GR's cosmological constant, and QM's mathematically regrettable renormalization are two such kluges.

    Finally, there's the almost inescapable conclusion that reality is discrete -- there seems to be a limit to what quantities we can observe about systems. Recent data from the LHC suggests that Heisenberg's initial intuition about complementary attributes of physical systems is alive and well at every energy level we can measure. That physical systems even have complementary characteristics (e.g. position/momentum) is a pretty strong argument for a discrete universe, and a good sign that whoever designed this particular simulation wanted to makes sure the simulation couldn't bootstrap itself into their universe.

    There are other annoying things that we've observed about our universe that could be explained by it being a simulation. Right now, we have to appeal to either the weak or strong anthropic principles to account for the distribution of energy in this universe that produced objects (us!) capable of existing long enough to formulate questions about the universe. Even the multiverse theory relies heavily on anthropics to account for why a universe with an inverse square law for gravitation would be favored over one with an inverse cube law. And we simply don't know why the matter/anti-mattter ratio in the universe is what it is.

    All of these things, and a few others (why is the universe so damn homogenous?) could be explained most simply by it being a (flawed) simulation.

  281. Elon Must beiieves in God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The only way to posit that we live in a simulation (and take that suggestion seriously) is simply to posit the existence of God, e.g. a 'superior being that created the Universe that we can neither prove or disprove the existence of'...now I don't personally care what you call that, but in MY simulation (reality) people who posit such things are 'positing the existence of God'....woopdee doo! Let's role some gunja, sit back & relax.

    Now, for 'serious work', the existence or non-existence of God doesn't matter 1 iota, the only question to be answered is 'what will you do with your time left?'. To that extent is running around building virtual reality simulators the best use of our resources? Social media sites? etc. People's choices are their own, that's the point of 'free will' but I would argue that Elon should stick to trying hard to get us to Mars (though I'd settle for a Moon colony etc.) and elsewhere so we can expand beyond our limited capacities on this tiny little rock that WILL go 'poof' eventually, e.g. 'civilization on EARTH' will end 'eventually'...the only question then is if that means the 'end of humans' (advanced or otherwise)...if we can't get off this little rock it certainly will be.

  282. May 2016: hottest on record. by Layzej · · Score: 1

    Hey ebv, I have an update on our global mean temperature bet. Last month was the hottest May on record. The year-so-far average global temperature is a whopping 1.15 C, well above the hottest full calendar year we’ve yet seen, 2015’s record-breaking 0.86 C. - https://tamino.wordpress.com/2...