Certain kinds of philosophy and speculative fiction, including kinds that get discussed here all the time, tend to cause a ridiculous thing to happen: I start doubting the difference between existence and non-existence. This bothers me, because it's clearly a useless dead end. Can anyone help with this?
The two concepts that tend to do it for me are
* Substrate independence/strong AI: The idea that a simulation of my mind is still me. That I could survive the process of uploading myself into a computer running Windows, a cellular automaton run by this guy, or even something that didn't look like a computer, mind, or universe at all to anyone in the outside world. That we could potentially create or discover a simulated universe that we could have ethical obligations towards. This is all pretty intuitive to me and largely accepted by the sort of people who think about these things.
* Multiverses: The idea that the world is bigger than the universe.
My typical line of thought goes something like this: suppose I run a Turing Machine that encodes a universe containing conscious beings. That universe now exists as a simulation within my own. It's just as real as mine, just more precarious because events in my reality can mess with its substrate. If I died and nobody knew how it worked, it would still be real (so I should make provisions for that scenario). Okay, but Turing Machines are simple. A Turing Machine simulating a coherent universe containing conscious beings can probably arise naturally, by chance. In that case, those beings are still real even if nobody on the outside, looking at the substrate, realizes what they're looking at. Okay, but now consider Turing Machines like John Conway's Fractran, which are encoded into an ordered set of rational numbers and run by multiplication. I think it's fair to say that rational numbers and multiplication occur naturally, everywhere. Arithmetic lives everywhere. But furthermore, arithmetic lives *nowhere*. It's not just substrate-independent; it's independent of whether or not there is a substrate. 2+2=4 no matter whether two bottlecaps are being combined with two other bottlecaps to make four bottlecaps. So every Turing-computable reality already exists to the extent that math itself does.
I think this is stupid. Embarrassingly stupid. But I can't stop thinking it.
There exists a relationship between how many nuts squirrel B eats, and how many times squirrel A deposited a nut in the tree.
That relationship does not depend on my observations.
"1+1+1+1=4" is a statement of arithmetic that expresses one aspect of that relationship; specifically, the aspect of it related to counting.
"1+1+1=3" is a different statement of arithmetic that expresses the same aspect of a different relationship, one that could be implemented in a different story, and likely was.
"1000+1000+1000=3000" is yet another statement of arithmetic that expresses the same aspect of a different relationship, one that has probably never been implemented in terms of nuts and squirrels, although in principle it could be.
"1+1+1=4" expresses the same aspect of yet another relationship, one which probably has never been implemented that way, and which probably can't be.
And there are other kinds of relationships, implementable and otherwise, which can be expressed by other kinds of statements of mathematics.
None of those relationships depend on my observations, either. And you say that none of those relationships are arithmetic relationships, precisely because they don't involve us interpreting our observations.
For convenience, let's call them X, instead. You aren't denying the existence of X, merely asserting that X isn't arithmetic.
Well, OK. I'm not sure what I would expect to experience differently if those relationships were or weren't arithmetic, so I don't know how to evaluate the truth or falsehood of that statement.
But I will say that if that's true, then arithmetic isn't very interesting, except perhaps linguistically. Sure, maybe arithmetic only occurs in minds, or in human minds, or in English-speaking minds. I can't see why I ought to care much about that.
The interesting thing is X.
Thanks for sticking with this, I am trying to hone my arguments on this topic and you are helping.
Yes it does.
You are implying that there is some sense of reality that is independent of how we think about it. I agree with that. But your statement adopts a "human mind" centric interpretation which makes it false.
For example, from the perspective of the universe at the ... (read more)