This is a point of confusion I still have with the simulation argument: Upon learning that we are in an ancestor simulation, should we be any less surprised? It would be odd for a future civilization to dedicate a large fraction of their computational resources towards simulating early 21st century humans instead of happy transhuman living in base reality; shouldn't we therefore be equally perplexed that we aren't transhumans?
I guess the question boils down to the choice of reference classes, so what makes the reference class "early 21st century humans" so special? Why not widen the reference class to include all conscious minds, or narrow it down to the exact quantum state of a brain?
Furthermore, if you're convinced by the simulation argument, why not believe that you're a Boltzmann brain instead using the same line of argument?
Why not both?
Confession: my entire metaphysical worldview has been strongly shaped by reading Greg Egan's Permutation City, so I kind of subscribe to something like the Dust Theory/Max Tegmark's Mathematical Multiverse.
To return to your question: if your mind can be construed as existing within many different contexts, be they simulations, Boltzmann Brains, or boring old meatsacks in cosmoses... does it make any sense to say 'I am in _this_ one'? You're in all of them, so long as those contexts can be said to 'exist'. And what is stopping them from 'existing'?
Quodlibet, being able to prove anything, is widely seen as a problem.
Is that a fact?
Boltzman brains would certainly follow from that bold conjecture. However, something similar would follow from simpler assumptions.
You seen to be saying:
There are certain configurations of matter that could be conscious minds under a certain interpretation.
The required in