Today I'd like to share with you a thought experiment I devised while reading about the Simulation Hypothesis. In a nutshell, are we living in the Matrix? This one might be hard to follow, so make sure you can take it slowly and absorb everything.
The Theory of Everything
Advancements in physics over the last few centuries has given us a good understanding of matter, and how it interacts to form the reality we perceive. Atoms and electrons (protons and neutrons are not so important to this discussion) are the first fundamental particles that we learn about, and for the purpose of this thought experiment, is as far down the rabbit hole as we need to go. (Those interested in quarks, gluons, and quantum mechanics, need not apply).
Our reality is built with atoms, combining in myriad ways, all the way up to the macro scale. Rocks, computers, sandwiches, cats, dogs, and even you, are all built from atoms. Our biological sensors we use to perceive this world is also built from atoms, and their very function governed by those same atoms and electrons.
For this mental exercise, suppose we have in our hands the holy grail of physics, the Theory of Everything, such that we can perfectly describe all particles in existence, and determine their interactions with mathematics alone. The results of such equations would be indistinguishable from observations made of reality.
3 simple simulations
Scenario 1
If we write down, on a piece of paper, the mathematical equations that describe the motion and interactions of a single atom, for 1 second, then we have created an atom for that slice of time. It exists only for 1 second, and no more.
Scenario 2
Let us take our single atom from Scenario 1, and extend the time of our simulation from the beginning of the observable universe (~14 billion years ago) to the known end of the universe (a helluva long long long time). You're going to need a lot of paper for this one.
Scenario 3
Let us take scenario 2, and create 100 atoms, all mutually exclusive from each other. We can confine the space to a the size of a sugar shaker, such that they can have meaningful interactions over the billions and billions of years of the life of the universe. Accounting is definitely going to flip their lids on this year's paper budget.
If we create each of these 3 scenarios in real life, and subsequently make observations on what happens, they would perfectly match the predictions made by our mathematical representation. We can simulate the universe on a piece of paper, if we're so inclined.
The BFS (Big F***ing Simulation)
Imagine unlimited computing power. This isn't so far-fetched, considering the pace of growth of our computing capacity. Or, if you can't conceive that we'll reach it before we as a species will kill ourselves, consider a hypothetical alien race who does have this technology. If you still can't agree, then get off my lawn you damned hipster!!
Now imagine that some scientists of this alien race have just discovered the Theory of Everything, and they want to test it by simulating the universe on their shiny unlimited-processing-power computer that can also run Crysis. It's also not very far-fetched, considering our scientists have already done so on a weak-by-comparison computer.
Some housekeeping assumptions:
1) The computing power available to the scientists allow them to run their simulation at a resolution at least as small as the Planck Length (most likely even smaller).
2) Let's stop there as far as technicalities go, and assume we get a nice, warm universe pop up in our simulation.
The story of the universe
Starting their simulation, they reproduce the big bang, the first galaxies, right through to the end of the universe. It takes only a few moments from start to end. Feeling proud of themselves, they celebrate with a good ol' fashioned alien booze fest. They archive all their work, and go home for the day. They'll come back tomorrow to analyze the results.
One of the assistants is an avid gamer, and stayed back to finish off her thesis. In reality she was curious whether any life emerged spontaneously, like a souped-up crazy version of The Sims. There was way too much data to sift through manually, so she wrote a script that would search on her behalf. To her delight, she finds the universe teeming with life, and begins exploring the evolution of life wherever she could find them.
She zips across the universe, jumping from one galaxy to another, honing in on planets that harboured life. Rewinding time, fast-forwarding time, freezing time, slowing down time. She did all these at her leisure to sate her curiosity of the beings she found. Amongst them, she finds a planet the inhabitants call Earth. A nice-looking planet, but nothing I haven't seen, she thinks to herself before moving on.
Soon, she gets bored. This turned out more boring than I thought it would be, she thinks to herself. She closes the simulation and makes sure to remove all traces of her access, and performs one final check to ensure no data was modified. Then she turns out the lights and heads home.
-------------------------------------------------------
One of the main things you need to accept is that it is perfectly reasonable for a whole universe to exist within a simulation. The question of whether our reality is a simulation or not cannot be answered with our technology today. If the simulation is accurate enough, the resolution fine enough, we actually can never know for sure. So don't get hung up on this point.
Rather, think beyond this question, and consider the implications for religion, philosophy, existence, purpose etc etc etc.
Form your own questions and your own answers. I'd love to see if anyone could draw the same conclusions I did, and even more profound ones that I haven't even considered!!
The Theory of Everything
Advancements in physics over the last few centuries has given us a good understanding of matter, and how it interacts to form the reality we perceive. Atoms and electrons (protons and neutrons are not so important to this discussion) are the first fundamental particles that we learn about, and for the purpose of this thought experiment, is as far down the rabbit hole as we need to go. (Those interested in quarks, gluons, and quantum mechanics, need not apply).
Our reality is built with atoms, combining in myriad ways, all the way up to the macro scale. Rocks, computers, sandwiches, cats, dogs, and even you, are all built from atoms. Our biological sensors we use to perceive this world is also built from atoms, and their very function governed by those same atoms and electrons.
For this mental exercise, suppose we have in our hands the holy grail of physics, the Theory of Everything, such that we can perfectly describe all particles in existence, and determine their interactions with mathematics alone. The results of such equations would be indistinguishable from observations made of reality.
3 simple simulations
Scenario 1
If we write down, on a piece of paper, the mathematical equations that describe the motion and interactions of a single atom, for 1 second, then we have created an atom for that slice of time. It exists only for 1 second, and no more.
Scenario 2
Let us take our single atom from Scenario 1, and extend the time of our simulation from the beginning of the observable universe (~14 billion years ago) to the known end of the universe (a helluva long long long time). You're going to need a lot of paper for this one.
Scenario 3
Let us take scenario 2, and create 100 atoms, all mutually exclusive from each other. We can confine the space to a the size of a sugar shaker, such that they can have meaningful interactions over the billions and billions of years of the life of the universe. Accounting is definitely going to flip their lids on this year's paper budget.
If we create each of these 3 scenarios in real life, and subsequently make observations on what happens, they would perfectly match the predictions made by our mathematical representation. We can simulate the universe on a piece of paper, if we're so inclined.
The BFS (Big F***ing Simulation)
Imagine unlimited computing power. This isn't so far-fetched, considering the pace of growth of our computing capacity. Or, if you can't conceive that we'll reach it before we as a species will kill ourselves, consider a hypothetical alien race who does have this technology. If you still can't agree, then get off my lawn you damned hipster!!
Now imagine that some scientists of this alien race have just discovered the Theory of Everything, and they want to test it by simulating the universe on their shiny unlimited-processing-power computer that can also run Crysis. It's also not very far-fetched, considering our scientists have already done so on a weak-by-comparison computer.
Some housekeeping assumptions:
1) The computing power available to the scientists allow them to run their simulation at a resolution at least as small as the Planck Length (most likely even smaller).
2) Let's stop there as far as technicalities go, and assume we get a nice, warm universe pop up in our simulation.
The story of the universe
Starting their simulation, they reproduce the big bang, the first galaxies, right through to the end of the universe. It takes only a few moments from start to end. Feeling proud of themselves, they celebrate with a good ol' fashioned alien booze fest. They archive all their work, and go home for the day. They'll come back tomorrow to analyze the results.
One of the assistants is an avid gamer, and stayed back to finish off her thesis. In reality she was curious whether any life emerged spontaneously, like a souped-up crazy version of The Sims. There was way too much data to sift through manually, so she wrote a script that would search on her behalf. To her delight, she finds the universe teeming with life, and begins exploring the evolution of life wherever she could find them.
She zips across the universe, jumping from one galaxy to another, honing in on planets that harboured life. Rewinding time, fast-forwarding time, freezing time, slowing down time. She did all these at her leisure to sate her curiosity of the beings she found. Amongst them, she finds a planet the inhabitants call Earth. A nice-looking planet, but nothing I haven't seen, she thinks to herself before moving on.
Soon, she gets bored. This turned out more boring than I thought it would be, she thinks to herself. She closes the simulation and makes sure to remove all traces of her access, and performs one final check to ensure no data was modified. Then she turns out the lights and heads home.
-------------------------------------------------------
One of the main things you need to accept is that it is perfectly reasonable for a whole universe to exist within a simulation. The question of whether our reality is a simulation or not cannot be answered with our technology today. If the simulation is accurate enough, the resolution fine enough, we actually can never know for sure. So don't get hung up on this point.
Rather, think beyond this question, and consider the implications for religion, philosophy, existence, purpose etc etc etc.
Form your own questions and your own answers. I'd love to see if anyone could draw the same conclusions I did, and even more profound ones that I haven't even considered!!