So, this emerged from my ass not twenty minutes ago after reading a bit of I Am A Strange Loop by Hofstadter (of G.E.B fame), and I haven't really had much time to think about it much myself. Nonetheless, it's compelling enough in its annoying existentialism that I feel the urge to inflict it on you all.
Say there's a scientist (or a pilot, or a dog, it doesn't really matter much) that has a procedure. That procedure is the procedure that runs our universe. He has a word processor with unlimited page space, and maybe a calculator for aid, but otherwise no other tools. It takes him an incredibly long time to run through the procedure of course, so let's say that the scientist is immortal, but let's not call him God, because that brings up all sorts of irrelevant things like whether or not he might be distracted by salisbury steak or not. Let's just call him Steve.
Steve begins the procedure, but of course it has as much of a foreseeable end as our own does. He doesn't understand its final result, or anything in between save the infinitesimal fraction devoted to his own existence. He continues the procedure for as long as we like, and it ends at some point. It doesn't matter where.
Where does the universe exist in this process? Is it Steve's understanding and following of the process? Is it the stored manipulations inside the document? Some combination of the two? Neither? Both? How many universes are there - you could argue that there's more than one coming into "being" very easily. What happens to the universe when either gets lost - when Steve dies, or when the document is erased?
The fact that there's a procedure at all to run our universe says that the universe is procedural. I'd rather not get hung up on the perception of randomness in our own reality - to me, elements of quantum mechanics have been proven to appear in some ways unpredictable, but that doesn't mean something predictable and mechanical isn't creating patterns that are stochastic and meaningless to us. The (assumed) fact that the universe can be stored in writing as the result of a procedure means that editing any part of this procedure but the next step is essentially meaningless for its final outcome, but the final outcome must also be editable by Steve. Can those edits be considered part of the procedure?
Is it weird that thinking about this crap makes me not want to think about it too much? If everything's one long incredibly mechanical story, how am I thinking about that? What does that mean? Where on the page does it have me thinking about the page, and what notation is Steve using to scratch that part in? Worse, if older parts of the simulation are lost as the procedure is run, the final result of the procedure may not be that interesting by itself, and for some odd reason that makes me irritable.
Yeah, I know a lot of this stuff has been hashed and rehashed by various authors (including, especially, the one I'm reading now), but I was bored so here's this long-winded post about nothing.