• @bstix
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    1 year ago

    I think it’s a contemporary way of viewing the creation problem that religion has also been trying to address. Who created the universe, and who created the one who created the universe. What caused the Big bang. Etc.

    The whole thing is irrelevant in my opinion. It doesn’t matter, because whatever initialised existence is outside of our existence. That would be separated in dimensions, or even if we could interact with it, it would at least be in a completely different frame of time. The entire existence of our universe could be a blink of an eye in whatever is outside of it.

    It seems like megalomania to me for humans to believe that they can ever figure this one out. Just like the microbes in our bodies can’t interact with us, I don’t have any hope for humans to ever understand how the entire universe interacts with it’s creator, whether it’s a simulation, a devine creation or the result of physics.

    If it’s a simulation and we are just variables in a sub-routine, then its futile to claim that we can ever figure out what is outside our loop. We can catch global variables from the main loop, like natural constants, but we’ll never see the code that calls our sub.

    The only reason to believe it is that we can also not prove that it isn’t so. Someone claims that it’s statistically unlikely that it’s not a simulation but I’m not so sure about that argument. It’s based on an extremely deterministic view, that everything can be simulated with enough computer power, which itself is a questionable view.