Are We Living Inside a Computer Simulation?

The popular film trilogy, The Matrix, presented a cyberuniverse where humans live in a simulated reality created by sentient machines.

Now, a philosopher and team of physicists imagine that we might really be living inside a computer-generated universe that you could call The Lattice. What’s more, we may be able to detect it.

In 2003, British philosopher Nick Bostrom published a paper that proposed the universe we live in might in fact really be a numerical computer simulation. To give this a bizarre Twilight Zone twist, he suggested that our far-evolved distant descendants might construct such a program to simulate the past and recreate how their remote ancestors lived.

He felt that such an experiment was inevitable for a supercivilization. If it didn’t happen by now, then in meant that humanity never evolved that far and we’re doomed to a short lifespan as a species, he argued.

To extrapolate further, I’d suggest that artificial intelligent entities descended from us would be curious about looking back in time by simulating the universe of their biological ancestors.

As off-the-wall as this sounds, a team of physicists at the University of Washington (UW) recently announced that there is a potential test to seen if we actually live in The Lattice. Ironically, it would be the first such observation for scientifically hypothesized evidence of intelligent design behind the cosmos.

The UW team too propose that super-intelligent entities, bored with their current universe, do numerical simulations to explore all possibilities in the landscape of the underlying quantum vacuum (from which the big bang percolated) through universe simulations. “This is perhaps the most profound quest that can be undertaken by a sentient being,” write the authors.

Before you dismiss this idea as completely loony, the reality of such a Sim Universe might solve a lot of eerie mysteries about the cosmos. About two-dozen of the universe’s fundamental constants happen to fall within the narrow range thought to be compatible with life. At first glance it seems as unlikely as balancing a pencil on its tip. Jiggle these parameters and life as we know it would have never appeared. Not even stars and galaxies. This is called the Anthropic principle.

ANALYSIS: Building the Universe Inside a Supercomputer

The discovery of dark energy over a decade ago further compounds the universe’s strangeness. This sort of “antigravity” pushing space-time apart is the closest thing there is to nothing and still is something. This energy from the vacuum of space is 60 orders of magnitude weaker that what would be predicted by quantum physics.The eminent cosmologist Michael Turner ranks dark energy as “the most profound mystery in all of science.”

We are also living at a very special time in the universe’s history where it switched gears from decelerating to accelerating under the push of dark energy. This begs the question “why me why now?” (A phrase popularly attributed to Olympic figure skater Nancy Kerrigan in 1994 when she was attacked and crippled by an opponent.)

If dark energy were slightly stronger the universe would have blown apart before stars formed. Any weaker and the universe would have imploded long ago. Its incredibly anemic value has been seen as circumstantial evidence for parallel universes with their own flavor of dark energy that is typically destructive. It’s as if our universe won the lottery and got all the physical parameters just right for us to exist.

Finally, an artificial universe solves the Fermi Paradox (where are all the space aliens?) by implying that we truly are alone in the universe. It was custom made for us by our far-future progeny.

Biblical creationists can no doubt embrace these seeming cosmic coincidences as unequivocal evidence for their “theory” of Intelligent Design (ID). But is our “God” really a computer programmer rather than a bearded old man living in the sky?

Currently, supercomputers using a impressive-sounding technique called lattice quantum chromodynamics, and starting from the fundamental physical laws, can simulate only a very small portion of the universe. The scale is a little larger than the nucleus of an atom, according UW physicist Martin Savage. Mega-computers of the far future could greatly expand the size of the Sim Universe.

ANALYSIS: Artificial Universe Created Inside a Supercomputer

If we are living in such a program, there could be telltale evidence for the underlying lattice used in modeling the space-time continuum, say the researchers. This signature could show up as a limitation in the energy of cosmic rays. They would travel diagonally across the model universe and not interact equally in all directions, as they otherwise would be expected to do according to present cosmology.

If such results were measured, physicists would have to rule out any and all other natural explanations for the anomaly before flirting with the idea of intelligent design. (To avoid confusion with the purely faith-based creationist ID, this would not prove the existence of a biblical God, because you’d have to ask the question “why does God need a lattice?”)

If our universe is a simulation, then those entities controlling it could be running other simulations as well to create other universes parallel to our own. No doubt this would call for, ahem, massive parallel processing.

If all of this isn’t mind-blowing enough, Bostrom imagined “stacked” levels of reality, “we would have to suspect that the post-humans running our simulation are themselves simulated beings; and their creators, in turn, may also be simulated beings. Here may be room for a large number of levels of reality, and the number could be increasing over time.”

To compound this even further, Bostrom imagined a hierarchy of deities, “In some ways, the post-humans running a simulation are like gods. However, all the demigods except those at the fundamental level of reality are subject to sanctions by the more powerful gods living at lower levels.”

If the parallel universes are all running on the same computer platform could we communicate with them? If so, I hope the Matrix’s manic Agent Smith doesn’t materialize one day.

To borrow from the title of Isaac Asimov’s novel I Robot, the human condition might be described as I Subroutine.

Telepresence Today: How You Can Live By Remote Control

Telepresence technology offers people a physical presence thousands of miles away, often allowing them to move around and manipulate things, for example via a robot. It’s already changing warfare and medicine, and as the technology becomes ever more immersive, it promises to challenge the law and transform how we interact with one another.

From top to bottom, left to right

A) Long before Skype, one of the first telepresence systems in the workplace was at the US labs of Xerox-PARC in the 1980s. Via cameras and video screens, workers in Palo Alto and Portland were wired up so that they could converse face-to-face in their office or communal areas. (Image: PARC, A Xerox Company)

B) The military has adopted telepresence in a big way. It is now routinely used to control drones for surveillance and air attacks from hundreds of miles away… (Image: Rex Features)

C) …while telepresence also saves lives by keeping soldiers out of harm’s way. The Packbot, for example, permits bomb-defusing from a distance. (Image: iRobot)

D) In less hostile environments, surgeons use telepresence to control robotic arms, for example in prostate operations. This photo shows one of the most impressive instances, when surgeons in New York used the technology to remove the gall bladder of a woman in Strasbourg, France. (Image: Dung Vo Trung/Sygma/Corbis)

E) In the past few years, mobile telepresence bots such as the Anybot, Double and VGo (pictured) have entered the mass market. One use they’ve found so far is to allow children to attend school remotely. (Image: VGo Communications)

F) The telepresence robots being developed in labs – such as this one being controlled at University College London by a person in Spain – suggest the technology will become ever more immersive. Eventually these surrogates will feed back a sense of touch to their controllers, and could be operated by thought alone.(Image: courtesy of David Swapp)

Computerized Contact Lenses Could Enable In-Eye Augmented Reality

Over past 125 years, contact lenses have come a long way. What started off as relatively thick brown glass eye coverings first created by German ophthalmologist Adolf Fick has evolved into biosensor-laden polymer lenses that can measure eye movement, glucose concentrations in tears and intraocular pressure. Now a team of researchers is investigating whether the integration of light-emitting diodes (LEDs), circuitry and antennas into modified contact lenses can transform them into miniature augmented reality displays.

University of Washington associate electrical engineering professor Babak Parviz and his colleagues are starting off modestly. In the Institute of Physics Publishing’s Journal of Micromechanics and Microengineering on Tuesday (pdf), they report having developed a contact lens that when worn can display a single pixel to the wearer. The ultimate goal is to create a multipixel display that would let the wearer view digital text and images over his or her view of the physical world without so much as batting an eyelash.

Computerized Contact Lenses Could Enable In-Eye Augmented Reality

Over past 125 years, contact lenses have come a long way. What started off as relatively thick brown glass eye coverings first created by German ophthalmologist Adolf Fick has evolved into biosensor-laden polymer lenses that can measure eye movement, glucose concentrations in tears and intraocular pressure. Now a team of researchers is investigating whether the integration of light-emitting diodes (LEDs), circuitry and antennas into modified contact lenses can transform them into miniature augmented reality displays.

University of Washington associate electrical engineering professor Babak Parviz and his colleagues are starting off modestly. In the Institute of Physics Publishing’s Journal of Micromechanics and Microengineering on Tuesday (pdf), they report having developed a contact lens that when worn can display a single pixel to the wearer. The ultimate goal is to create a multipixel display that would let the wearer view digital text and images over his or her view of the physical world without so much as batting an eyelash.

Animatrix

‘Beyond’

Animatrix

A Kid’s Story

Accepting Interconnections Within and Without This Physical Universe

Science of The Mind: Consciousness Within a Reality

Consciousness being our brain, reality being the environment of neatly packed complex energy particles. A consciousness powered by the Brain, which has enough pieces to form what we feel is a sense of self and a sense of awareness which accumulates through time into what the consciousness is through our natural senses (think, feel, see, smell, touch, create, hear). And what you and I call “me” is an accumulation of all these senses put together.

It makes other things simpler for us to process when you feel disconnected from it and thus don’t ever really think of it. So you tend to move to other explanations like ‘I’m a separated entity, my mind and body are not one’. You don’t say it but you feel it, this is your own mind playing tricks on you.

So depending on what you feed that collection of experiences stored in the brain, your consciousness feels itself to be an entity in a reality when in reality it’s a part of it. A manifestation of what the sponge like brain acquires while the information throughout nature and the experiences you live through act as the water you soak up.

If you soak up too much belief, too much assumptions and deem it believable despite its lack of credibility, your consciousness feels outside, separated, not of Earth. Which would explain for many religious doctrine’s beginnings, you acquire this false sense that if your body is gone your mind lives on. This is not the case. When the brain stops working, so does that sense of self it conjured up.

If you soak up truth, your consciousness feels connected, one with Earth. A kind of science of the mind. Treating your brain like a Universe in charge of an even larger Universe (your body and its processes/ survival), and you dictate its laws and what goes on as a creator to better fit or accommodate reality.

And as you look at the current Universe you’re a part of, you can make educated guesses with observations that as you go further outwards into the Universe into a Multiverse or inwards into subatomic to quantum it all gets stranger but if you notice.. it’s all energy deep down, arranged energy to form more complex creations. But this is the Universe/ Dimension that allows for beings such as we to form and have the machinery to ponder questions such as the one you pose all thanks to the collection of compiled organisms (neurons) working together to form your nervous system and consciousness.

I think we’re as real as it gets, the consciousness while being a manifestation of our brain and thus is biased to think sometimes that it is unique and special forms a sense of disconnection with the outside world needed in order to perpetuate that false sense of disconnection. Despite other species carrying similar capabilities with minor tweaks through genetic coding. In a sense we’re all just strange collections of energy.

Yet, on this planet, we’re the only ones who understand that, have the evidence that says so, and still deny the obvious and elegant interconnections in our Universe. I believe it is perhaps because it may be too bizarre and perplexing of an implication on our reality to even fathom.

Much much easier to say this sense of self is something else and I will survive without this body. It gives you false hope and a misguided reasoning based on that assumption. You can see such disconnectedness all over our society, policies, and even our own species is divided by gender, eye color, nations, sexual orientation. Fully coming to the logical conclusion that these are worthless aspects but still ignore it.

Mentally bending the truth and reality of things, all to make our consciousness feel special and accommodated.

Accepting Interconnections Within and Without This Physical Universe

Science of The Mind: Consciousness Within a Reality

Consciousness being our brain, reality being the environment of neatly packed complex energy particles. A consciousness powered by the Brain, which has enough pieces to form what we feel is a sense of self and a sense of awareness which accumulates through time into what the consciousness is through our natural senses (think, feel, see, smell, touch, create, hear). And what you and I call “me” is an accumulation of all these senses put together.

It makes other things simpler for us to process when you feel disconnected from it and thus don’t ever really think of it. So you tend to move to other explanations like ‘I’m a separated entity, my mind and body are not one’. You don’t say it but you feel it, this is your own mind playing tricks on you.

So depending on what you feed that collection of experiences stored in the brain, your consciousness feels itself to be an entity in a reality when in reality it’s a part of it. A manifestation of what the sponge like brain acquires while the information throughout nature and the experiences you live through act as the water you soak up.

If you soak up too much belief, too much assumptions and deem it believable despite its lack of credibility, your consciousness feels outside, separated, not of Earth. Which would explain for many religious doctrine’s beginnings, you acquire this false sense that if your body is gone your mind lives on. This is not the case. When the brain stops working, so does that sense of self it conjured up.

If you soak up truth, your consciousness feels connected, one with Earth. A kind of science of the mind. Treating your brain like a Universe in charge of an even larger Universe (your body and its processes/ survival), and you dictate its laws and what goes on as a creator to better fit or accommodate reality.

And as you look at the current Universe you’re a part of, you can make educated guesses with observations that as you go further outwards into the Universe into a Multiverse or inwards into subatomic to quantum it all gets stranger but if you notice.. it’s all energy deep down, arranged energy to form more complex creations. But this is the Universe/ Dimension that allows for beings such as we to form and have the machinery to ponder questions such as the one you pose all thanks to the collection of compiled organisms (neurons) working together to form your nervous system and consciousness.

I think we’re as real as it gets, the consciousness while being a manifestation of our brain and thus is biased to think sometimes that it is unique and special forms a sense of disconnection with the outside world needed in order to perpetuate that false sense of disconnection. Despite other species carrying similar capabilities with minor tweaks through genetic coding. In a sense we’re all just strange collections of energy.

Yet, on this planet, we’re the only ones who understand that, have the evidence that says so, and still deny the obvious and elegant interconnections in our Universe. I believe it is perhaps because it may be too bizarre and perplexing of an implication on our reality to even fathom.

Much much easier to say this sense of self is something else and I will survive without this body. It gives you false hope and a misguided reasoning based on that assumption. You can see such disconnectedness all over our society, policies, and even our own species is divided by gender, eye color, nations, sexual orientation. Fully coming to the logical conclusion that these are worthless aspects but still ignore it.

Mentally bending the truth and reality of things, all to make our consciousness feel special and accommodated.

it looks like he’s moshed and opened pits before

"There’s a real poetry in the real world, science is the poetry of reality"

Prof. Richard Dawkins

"There’s a real poetry in the real world, science is the poetry of reality"

Prof. Richard Dawkins

"There’s a real poetry in the real world, science is the poetry of reality"

Prof. Richard Dawkins

Not to be confused with the Membrane theory. This has more ties with the science fiction but I would read it just for that small chance that any of it is true. It’s a fun read regardless, just don’t take it too serious.

Could someone or something switch us off? Could it possibly be true that our world is just a computer program, or a hologram, or a dream? Although it’s about the weirdest thing you could think of, there are some tantalizing clues this might indeed be the case. The stuff we call ‘reality’ simply isn’t very real after all.

Welcome to the outskirts of reality. Welcome to the place where theoretical physics and philosophy meet, and where religion and science loose their meaning. Better fasten your mental seatbelts. What we’re about to tell you is just too weird. Too mind-boggling. And quite disturbing, really.

Here we go: the place we call reality may not be real at all. It may look real, and feel real, and smell real. But if you know where to look, and you look real close, you can see the cracks. Just like a Hollywood actor that suddenly realizes he’s not surrounded by real buildings — but by props made of cardboard paper.

If that sounds like lame science fiction; I agree. Indeed, we’ve all seen The Matrix. But could such a thing be conceivable? Could it be true? Are we really here? Or are we, as one reader of Exit Mundi suggested, only a computer simulation, run by an alien race?

Perhaps the simulation is getting boring, and the guy running the program is about to switch it off. We’d see some kind of huge ‘game over’-sign, and that would be it. One moment, we’re here. And the next – we aren’t.

If you’re easily disturbed, or prone to paranoia, better stop reading now. You may not like the answers to questions like these. What you are about to read may change the way you see things — forever.

Read more via:Exitmundi