Alright, so this is going to sound a bit silly. I'm fairly sure I've read this on the Sequences somewhere, but for the life of me I can't find it. A friend of mine insists that there is a fifty-fifty chance that we live in the Matrix. His argument is that every bit of evidence we have to say that we exist outside of the Matrix is already based off of the idea that we live outside of the Matrix, and that we really have no evidence either way. He says there isn't a way of falsifying that we're not in the Matrix.
Yet I feel like he's wrong, and just can't explain why. I keep repeating that we don't have any evidence to suggest that we live in the Matrix, so why would we bother believing it?
I feel like this could possibly be an analogy for the belief in God or something. >_> I'm tired, and I need help figuring this out.
First, an obligatory SMBC reference. Second, the probabilities might be guessed as 50/50, but the confidence intervals on those numbers are so large, they make the numbers themselves meaningless. And third, would you do anything differently if someone convinced you that you are simulated? If not, what does it matter? If yes, why aren't you doing it already?
It would depend on the simulation. If I was convinced that I was in an ancestor simulation, I would do things differently (an ancestor simulation implies a lower chance of human extinction).