zlacker

[parent] [thread] 0 comments
1. notepa+(OP)[view] [source] 2025-12-06 18:09:15
Isn't there a deeper philosophical question on what it means to be a simulation?

Is the constraint of the "simulation" definition that the thing "simulating" the universe would be a computer less complex than the universe itself?

Consider a game world in a computer, we call it a simulation, and it is, but is it any less real than our reality, when thinking in terms of realities? In other words, we feel like our reality is more real because the game is less complex, we understand it fully and it is run using mechanisms we know and understand. So what would make us think it is a more real reality than our own?: If we didn't understand how it works? If its workings and rules are more complex than ours?

Taking a step back, are we as humans even capable of understanding a reality that isn't ours, even as a concept? Things like time, space, and fundamental logic are properties of a reality. I can't imagine a reality without them (at least time and space). We keep thinking in terms of "another place with time and space", how about a place with just one or neither? Imagine a computer program trying to understand a reality that isn't memory and clock rate. memory isn't space as in the space we know, it is capacity. clock rate isn't time as in the time we know, but it is very similar. In an SMP system you have "clock rate" spread across cores and processors so it is a concept different from our concept of linear time. If our reality is in an SMP, there would be multiple separate parallel but converging timelines, but then again is dejavu speculative/preemptive execution?

I know I'm all over the place with this post, but my goal is to question the entire concept of a "simulation". Is it simply a relativistic and human-centric way of expressing our perception of reality relative to other realities? When We dream, is that dream world any less real than ours? Certainly, for us it is no different than any unreality, but that's only for us.

I'm thinking the whole concept of "simulation" stops making sense if there are multiple realities (which I'm only talking about hypothetically, I don't actually believe that). In terms of a single reality within the same time-space and rules of physics and all that, what does it mean for the universe to be a simulation?

With multiple realities, you have to stop presuming things like time and space as we understand them, just the same as time and space in a dream, or in a video game (or any program). Is the world of bits, bytes, processor instructions and memory addresses any less real or more of of a simulation than ours would be in a multiple-reality scenario?

Consider the very basic assumption of causality, that things originate from somewhere and sometime, if the space-time assumption isn't a given, then the very concept of causality might not apply in some realities, and thus in the relationship between realities, and therefore the whole concept of our reality being a simulation depends on causality being a thing, because we're saying our reality is caused by another reality. For there to be a causal relationship, not only does space-time need to exist but it needs to be in the same space-time reference-frame for one to cause another. But again, we can't assume the rules of causality are the same or that there isn't some other fundamental element of reality that makes it all work when talking about inter-reality relationships.

I think we are too tethered to things like mass, energy, time, space. 1+1 resulting in two. What I would like to see explored more (by people smarter than me) is the fundamental element of reality that is information. Before all of those things (time,space,mass,energy, rules,etc...) there is information. Similar to the realities we create in our computers and how they need information to exist first and foremost, and then things can be done with that information and our own little primitive proto-reality is created. All those other things may be different from the perspective of a computer program, but information, while transformed in the way it is represented and processed, at least in our simulations (or proto-realities), the information from our reality is the whole point of that sub-reality's existence.

You can infer things about our reality as a computer program if you focus on the information. no matter how well it is described to a computer program, it can look at a picture and think "hmm.. an apple" but it simply cannot perceive things as we do. it does not experience time,space, color,taste like we do.

So, if we consider reality relative to the experience of the observer as defined by the properties of the world they're in, then the concept of a simulation is entirely relative to our experience in our world and its properties. But if our reality is "caused" by and "executed on" (presumptive concepts) elsewhere, then we would need to understand elsewhere's world's properties and perceive that super-reality, and only then can we experiencially claim that our reality is simulated?

It's a bit like motion and relativity isn't it? if you can't define the frame of reference you can't measure the motion in any meaningful way. You can't tell how fast a car is going if you can't define from what perspective you're measuring from. That sounds silly at first until you consider the entire planet is in motion around the sun, and the solar system hurtling through the galaxy. Not to mention another car traveling at the same speed would not observe any motion in relation to itself. We're trying to measure simulation, but from our perspective (we're the thing that's "moving" if it were motion), we can potentially measure it from the other reality's perspective but not without knowing what that reality is.

Can a computer program tell that it is in a computer reality?

Can you write code that can do that? Certainly it can print output that claims as much, we can even simulate the entire computer system within a program running in that system. But it still can't figure out what "space" means or "time" means as we experience it, it can learn about energy, rules of physics,etc..but it can't experience them. So when it determines that that is in a simulation, its definition of things is still relative to its own experience so it isn't really determining that it is in a simulation, it is just describing things we told it via information transfer about our reality. When you tell that program "We created your reality" its concept of "created" or "originated" is vastly different from ours, so unless it can test for things it can't even conceptualize, how can it truly tell that it is in a simulation?

Sorry for the really long post! I just wanted to sort of dump my philosophical thoughts on this (and I was bored). I think theoretical physics and philosophy need to work very closely together. Questioning philosophical assumptions is important before talking about theoretical physics. The title says "Physicists prove", that's what I keyed on, you can't prove something whose definition we (at least I?) don't entirely agree on, or haven't resolved. If we can't write a computer program that can prove it is in a computer on its own, how can we prove that we're in a simulation?

[go to top]