- Simulation hypothesis
The Simulation Hypothesis proposes that
reality is in fact asimulation of which those affected by the s are generally unaware. The hypothesis itself relies on the development ofsimulated reality , currently regarded as afictional technology . This technology has been a centralplot device of manyscience-fiction stories and films, most notablyStar Trek ,The Truman Show ,The Thirteenth Floor andThe Matrix . The Simulation Hypothesis has become the subject of serious academic debate within the field oftranshumanism , via the work ofNick Bostrom and others.Bostrom, N. , 2003, [http://www.simulation-argument.com/simulation.html Are You Living in a Computer Simulation?] , Philosophical Quarterly (2003), Vol. 53, No. 211, pp. 243-255.]On the surface, the Simulation Hypothesis is an example of a
skeptical hypothesis , a proposal concerning the nature of reality put forward to question beliefs. As such, there is a long history to the underlying thesis that reality is anillusion . This thesis (which can be dated in Western thought back toZeno of Elea andPlato and in Eastern thought to theAdvaita Vedanta concept of Maya) arguably underpins themind-body dualism ofDescartes , and is closely related tophenomenalism , a stance briefly adopted byBertrand Russell . However,Nick Bostrom and other writers postulate that this is not the case, and there are empirical reasons why the 'Simulation Hypothesis' might be valid.b] Davis J. Chalmers [http://consc.net/papers/matrix.html The Matrix as Metaphysics] Dept of Philosophy, U. o Arizona; paper written for the philosophy section of the Matrix website.] It is related to theOmphalos hypothesis in theology.According to Bostrom, one part of this
trilemma must be true:#Almost no civilization will reach a technological level capable of producing simulated realities.
#Almost no civilization reaching aforementioned technological status will produce a simulated reality, for any of a number of reasons, such as diversion of computational processing power for other tasks, ethical considerations of holding entities captive in simulated realities, etc.
#Almost all entities with our general set of experiences are living in a simulation.Dream argument
The
dream argument contends that a futuristic technology is not required to create a simulated reality, but rather, all that is needed is a human brain. More specifically, the mind's ability to create simulated realities duringREM sleep affects the statistical likelihood of our own reality being simulated.References
See also
*
Dream argument
*Simulated reality
*Simulism
*Zeno's paradoxes
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