Re: Are we simulated by some massive computer?

From: Frank Cizmich <logical.domain.name.hidden>
Date: Sat, 1 May 2004 00:39:00 -0300

wow..

>
> 2) A "Nothing" has an interesting logical problem: It can not answer any
> meaningful question about itself. Assuming there is a relevant meaningful
> question a "Nothing" would be incomplete. An inescapable meaningful
> question is its own stability. This is not only meaningful it is
> impossible to avoid answering.
>
> 3) To attempt to answer this question a "Nothing" randomly and
> spontaneously "decays" towards an "Everything" to resolve its
> incompleteness. But this is not sustainable since an "Everything" is not
> independent of a "Nothing". Therefore a "Nothing" rebounds from the
decay.
>
> 4) Thus the definition or boundary between the "Nothing" and "Everything"
> pair is randomly dynamic equivalent to a random sequence of normal reals.
>
> 5) A universal computer is a good way to model a selector of a random
> sequence of normal reals.
>
> Hal
>
>
Received on Fri Apr 30 2004 - 23:43:11 PDT

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