I have made it clear where I stand.
It's not possible to discern whether the universe we live in is recursive; or whether the instrument we use to understand the universe with (our minds and our structural formalisms) is recursive.
That does not diminish the utility of computation/recursion in any sense.
Observe that you are the one who argue against "nothing". There isn't anybody arguing for "nothing".
It's just a word. Much like Wittgenstein said "whereof one cannot speak thereof one must remain silent."
Similarly, Quine argues that by using a word in (what you assume to be a coherent argument) you are ontologically committed to it.
To argue against X is to insist X be removed from an ontology. The way you do that is you stop talking about it.
So the Big Bang came out of nothing? Even though nothing does not exist, it has causal properties?VVilliam wrote: ↑Fri Jun 26, 2020 7:08 pm In relation to that and the idea that "nothing" represents a blank-state such as what we experienced emerging out of and into this experience of being human [on a planet, in a Galaxy, in a universe] the 'null pointer' is represented as the beginning point [entry] - sometimes referred to as the "Big Bang".
So are you; or are you not saying that consciousness is within the simulation? If it's within the simulation - it's part of it.VVilliam wrote: ↑Fri Jun 26, 2020 7:08 pm My understanding of it is that everything within the simulation except for consciousness, is part of the structure of the simulation.
(I am okay considering that it is possible that [our] consciousness is created through the overall workings of the simulation if the algorithm involved in the process was designed to become self aware [be conscious] )
I see it as evidence that it's just a language game.
The most commonly accepted model for computation is the Turing machine. From the lens of formal language theory Turing machines are also seen as language recognisers. The languages a Turing machine can recognise are classified in the Chomsky hierarchy.
Type 0 grammars are the most powerful grammars (read: languages) we have to describe reality with. Note that Type 0 languages are EXACTLY the languages which can be recognised by a Turing machine. Type 0 languages are recursively enumerable.
It seems like you are tripping over the mind-projection fallacy - you may be projecting that property of language (recursion/self-reference) onto reality.
Almost as if you unconsciously subscribe to Linguistic relativity.