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.
There are a variety of problems with why "God did it' is actually discounted by Occam's razor. The issue here is somewhat subtle, but the basic idea is that "God did it" only seems like a simple hypothesis because of artifacts of human language. Any notion of "God" as usually used as an explanatory entity is actually an extremely complicated idea. Natural language doesn't reflect how complicated or simple something actually is. For example we have single words for "love" and "anger" and other emotional states that seem intuitively simple but actually are extremely complicated with a variety of predictions associated with them. It is only because of human intuition that such things seem simple. More careful formulations of Occam's razor such as using a Solomonoff prior will result in that hypothesis being registered as extremely complicated. (And in fact similar remarks apply to many versions of the "Matrix hypothesis".)