Greetings, denizens of the lower areas of the forums. A certain thought had crossed my mind and I have come to share it with you in hopes of getting feedback and hopefully making some of you think about matters you've made up your mind about long ago. Please treat it as a thought experiment.
The thread is inspired by a part of chmod's article in which he says this about Dwarf Fortress:
Humans are incapable of storing a logical graph of that size in their heads. Which is why we put it into a computer in the first place.
But allow me to start at the very beginning.
I was born to a catholic family. Generally adhering to catholic law and being a spiritual and religious person I have nevertheless come to a point where the Church and myself couldn't come to an agreement on certain ontological matters. This made me try want start anew. I have cast away all dogma and began building my faith from the ruins of the previous ones. The process (which I invite you to reenact and share the results) was as follows:
A)Asking myself a question, starting with the most fundamental one and moving on to the less important ones.
B)Deciding whether the answer is important/has an influence on my actions
C)Coming up with a simplest answer possible (impossible in my case, I just LOVE to complicate things).
1
What is the point of religion and faith?
To overcome the fear of death and old age in hopes of a continued existence afterwards. I understand that there are other possible ways of achieving this but to me they all seam like trying to forget about the reasons behind this fear instead of actually overcoming it. Religion is faith that what we DON'T KNOW to be true will turn out to be true in the end.
2
How can an existence after death be possible?
The only way possible is to have your entity* recreated in some way.
*consciousness, personality, memory, instincts, "soul"
3
What defines our consciousness?
According to my best research, we owe our self-awareness and ability to make decisions to the nervous system. In other words, what the Buddhists call "soul", (an immaterial entity that controls the body, is released upon the body's death and placed in another body afterwards), is in fact an intricate part of the material body itself, a system of specialized cells, synapses and electric or electrochemical signals (nevermind the details).
4
How can this consciousness be preserved if the cells die along with the body?
There are only two options for this: either the whole body (or just the nervous system but in a matter that allows it to thrive and function) is copied and recreated elsewhere in our universe (instantly or sometime in the future) or the body (or, again, just the nervous system) is recreated in a world higher in hierarchy above ours. Since the first one is (according to our knowledge) very highly unlikely, allow me to explain just how likely the second one is.
5
What does "a world higher in hierarchy above ours" mean?
Let's look at the world as a set of data (taking the form of particles and whatever they're made of) that follows a rather simple set of rules (algorithms). Now imagine we are able to learn ALL the basic physical laws of our universe. Next we run a virtual physical simulation on a computer. We start by placing a model of a cube-shaped room with a strong source of gravity underneath. Next, let's fill the room with air particles and finally- a full virtual model of a human being (presumable scanned in our own world). If you did all that right, you end up with a CONSCIOUS, LIVING, BREATHING "CLONE" of that very human. This human is fully aware of his existence and surroundings just like you are. Place a lightsource in the room (to make him comfortable?), then a speaker and you can talk to him! Voila, you have achieved a WORLD of LOWER hierarchy and it is now inhabited by one human being.
A running copy of Dwarf Fortress is exactly that- a world that follows some physical rules, only the creatures that inhabit it are not complex enough to possess self-awareness.
It is therefore entirely possible that OUR OWN WORLD is exactly the same- a seemingly "virtual" simulation running on a computer or an equivalent of it.
Now this is the fun part where you shout: "but our world is real and a simulation is virtual!!". Hah, I say! Give the human in our box-room an electron microscope and tell him to start observing his surroundings. He will perceive them in the very same way that we do and will quickly decide that HIS world is REAL. And in fact, he will be correct! The difference between a perfect virtual simulation of a world and what YOU consider a real world is unnoticeable, unexplainable and therefore irrelevant (or possibly nonexistent).
Therefore, the existence of a world with a "computer" running a "virtual" simulation that is our world is entire possible. This "computer" can be anything that can store data about the present state of the world and carry out algorithms (laws of physics), apply them to the world and then evaluate the state according to them.
6
Why is the "world computer" there?
Two possible answers. It either appeared there because of natural processes occurring there or someone put it there. Now don't get me wrong, the first answer is very tempting (heh) but doesn't do much in terms of giving us hope. So for all this faith business to have any sense, we assume there is a being in this "higher world" which is supervising the simulation (or, at the very least, started it). Just for the heck of it, let's call the being "God".
7
What are my hopes towards this God?
I hope that he recreates my body after I die and lets it live for quite some time afterwards
So far, I have found no serious reason for a God to do that.
Yep, this is about as far as I have come in terms of my faith. All the rest is currently speculations and ideas, and I would like to share the one I find the most interesting.
See, some people read books, watch movies, listen to music to enrich themselves, their personality by, in a way, living the stories being told, experiencing the stuff in a vicarious way, feeling the emotions presented by the creator. Dwarf Fortress may be considered a generator of such stories to live through (and apparently Toady is working towards making the stories richer and more interesting). And maybe our world is the same thing to God. I was thinking about the way he observes our lives though. Does he use a monitor and speakers? Is his mind hooked up to the "computer" and the data is transported directly to it? No, that's not crazy enough. Let's look at chmod's post again:
Humans are incapable of storing a logical graph of that size in their heads. Which is why we put it into a computer in the first place.
Well, yes. But we're talking about God here. A being we have always imagined to be omnipotent and omniscient, of ultimate ability and ultimate intellect.
As I have shown previously, just how exactly does the "world computer" work is irrelevant. It's enough that it can store data and change it according to some algorithms. Can YOUR BRAIN do that? Yes it can, provided that the data is simple enough. Can GOD'S BRAIN do that? Yes, and we imagine he can operate on very large amounts of data. Hmmm. Perhaps data about a whole universe? In that case, he doesn't really need a computer to run the simulation.
So the idea I wanted to present here is this: it is possible that we and our whole world are a thought process happening in the brain of a being of a world higher in hierarchy than ours. It is now 3AM here and I'm thrilled at the thought of reading your response tomorrow. Right now the article is getting more and more ridiculous and nonsense, I will hopefully make it better tomorrow. Good night!