DanielLC comments on Is there a list of cognitive illusions? - Less Wrong

1 Post author: DonaldMcIntyre 06 May 2015 04:25AM

You are viewing a comment permalink. View the original post to see all comments and the full post content.

Comments (26)

You are viewing a single comment's thread.

Comment author: DanielLC 07 May 2015 06:07:00AM 0 points [-]

I'd consider personal identity to be an illusion in the same way as free will. I would not consider the other three to be illusions. Time goes hand-in-hand with free will and personal identity, but it's still a thing. If you start with differential equations and boundary conditions, you will get time, where complex things emanate from the simple boundary conditions.

Comment author: DonaldMcIntyre 07 May 2015 05:47:26PM 0 points [-]

I agree that identity is similar to free will.

Can you point me to some articles or content about differential eq and boundary conditions? (I am lazy w/ math!).

Comment author: DanielLC 07 May 2015 06:55:35PM 1 point [-]

I don't think you need to know much math to understand it. The way we understand the universe is that there are the laws of physics and the big bang. The laws of physics are a set of differential equations. The big bang is the initial condition. You specify how the universe is at t = 0, and how it changes, and from that you can deduce everything that will happen. You could also go on to deduce everything that did happen, and you'll end up with the arrow of time going the other way. Or you could follow the timeless physics route, and have some huge number of dimensions, and the arrow of time just generally points away from wherever you stuck the big bang.

You don't even need differential equations. A reversible cellular automaton will also work.