The fact that quantum mechanics exists, and there are specifically allowed states, is exactly the type of thing I’d expect from a universe driven by a computer simulation.
I’m not sure I understand your point. Are you saying that a simulation which is just a mathematical construct would probably not result in a quantized universe?
I was intending to say the opposite; that a quantized world would seem like it would take less computational power than a continuous one, therefore the fact that we live in a quantized world is evidence of being in a simulation.
I was intending to say the opposite; that a quantized world would seem like it would take less computational power than a continuous one, therefore the fact that we live in a quantized world is evidence of being in a simulation.
That’s not an unreasonable point, but I think it goes more to the issue of simulation versus non-simulation than the issue of computer-based simulation versus mathematical construct simulation.
I’m not sure I understand your point. Are you saying that a simulation which is just a mathematical construct would probably not result in a quantized universe?
I was intending to say the opposite; that a quantized world would seem like it would take less computational power than a continuous one, therefore the fact that we live in a quantized world is evidence of being in a simulation.
That’s not an unreasonable point, but I think it goes more to the issue of simulation versus non-simulation than the issue of computer-based simulation versus mathematical construct simulation.