Like, the idea that an entity simulating our universe wouldn’t be able to do that, because they’d run out of energy doesn’t pass even the basic sniff test.
I’m convinced you are not actually reading what I’m writing. I said if the universe ours is simulated in is supposed to be like our own/we are an ancestral simulation then this implies that the universe simulating ours should be like ours, and we can apply our laws of physics to it, and our laws of physics say there’s entropy, or a limit to the amount of order.
I also believe that if we’re a simulation, then the universe simulating ours must be very different than ours in fundamental ways, but this tells us nothing specific about that universe. And it implies that there could be no evidence, ever, of being in a simulation. Just like there could be no evidence, ever, of a god, or a flying spaghetti monster, or whatever other thought experiment you have faith in.
What I am trying to say is that you need a level of complexity to sufficiently trick intelligent beings in to not thinking they’re in a simulation, and that humans could not create such a simulation themselves.
If you aren’t postulating a soul, then we are nothing but complicated lighting and meat, meaning that we are entirely feasible to simulate.
Key word: complicated. Wrong word: feasible. I think you mean possible. Yes we are possible to simulate, but feasible implies that it can readily be done, which is exactly what I’m arguing against. Go read up about computer science, how simulations actually work, and physics before you start claiming things are feasible when they’re currently impossible and certainly difficult problems that may only be feasible to the entirety of humanity working together for centuries.
It’s even more bizarre to see you say that the claim of simulation makes no predictions, in response to me pointing out that it’s prediction (just us in the observable universe) is the reason to believe it.
The prediction something makes is never the reason to believe something. The confirmation of that prediction is the reason to believe something. You cannot prove that whatever prediction the simulation makes is true, therefore there is not a rational reason to believe we are in a simulation. This is the foundation of logic and science, I urge you to look into it more.
The lack of aliens isn’t proof of anything (absence of evidence is not the evidence of absence).
Could you give an actual criticism of the energy argument? “It doesn’t pass the smell test” is a poor excuse for an argument.
When I assume that the external universe is similar to ours, this is because Bostrom’s argument is specifically about ancestral simulations. An ancestral simulation directly implies that there is a universe trying to simulate itself. I posit this is impossible because of the laws of thermodynamics, the necessity to not allow your simulations to realize what they are, and keeping consistency in the complexity of the universe.
Yes its possible for the external universe to be 100% different from ours, but this gives us exactly no insight at all into what that external universe may be, and at this point it’s a game of “Choose Your God”, which I have no interest in playing.