There are those who appear to be arguing for the existence of nothing.
Here is one such excerpt from a post made on this board.
I argue for a 'totality' that is inclusive of absolutely ALL possibilities derived from absolute nothingness, arguments that I've raised on this site in a few places also that get overlooked. It is just logical to me THAT multiple worlds exist precisely because otherwise it would make us oddly too unique....something 'symmetrically' unbalanced that puts some 'god' in the picture to have devised us as such. How can we be so 'uniquely' privileged as a universe otherwise?
One can easily search the internet for more arguments that absolute nothingness exists.
Generally the idea of absolute nothingness existing (and from where absolutely everything emerges) appears to be spurred on by as a means to argue for the non-existence of an intelligent creator-being which itself wasn't created.
So indeed, there are many people arguing that nothing exists.
I am prepared to accept that you are making yourself clear to yourself. It appears that you have introduced the word "recursion" as somehow relevant to something to do with Simulation Theory. Perhaps you are using the word in place of "simulated" - I don't know. It is unclear to me.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.
"Nothing" is just a word - and is commonly used in daily language. When it is used in philosophical argument, such as what I quoted above, it becomes far more problematic.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.
No. What I wrote was this;So the Big Bang came out of nothing? Even though nothing does not exist, it has causal properties?
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".
I will attempt to clarify that for you.
The idea some people have [such as absolutely ALL possibilities derived from absolute nothingness] is borne from the experience each of us have, coming from apparently 'nothing' into something.
The idea of The Big Bang Theory is based upon the same type of reasoning. That is all I was trying to point out, in relation to where the idea of 'nothing' most likely originates...
I am saying that I can accept either argument. I lean more toward the idea that we existed [not as humans] at a time prior to the creation of this simulated reality. I accept that it may be that the collective human consciousness which exists may have emerged from the programming itself. That is why I wrote "(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] )"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.
Either way is possible, as far as I can tell.
Just because consciousness is within the simulation does not mean that it has emerged because of the simulation. It is only 'part of it' while maintaining the experience of it. In the case of this reality simulation we are experiencing, we can experience it without even realizing that it is a simulation.
You: "I can't tell if "recursion" is a property of my mind; or the universe; or both. But I do know that recursion is computation."
Me: "I would see such as more evidence the we exist within a simulation."
You:
Is that why you brought the word "recursion" into the discussion/argument?I see it as evidence that it's just a language game.
I do not consciously understand exactly what the wiki-information re languages and the turning machine is saying, but the gist of it appears to be saying that some languages are recognized by said Turing machine.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.
I see such as more evidence we exist within a simulated reality.
I would add that it appears to be a misuse of language to say it is the machine which is doing the recognizing. The machine is pumping out data it arranged from data that was placed within it for that purpose. The data itself is not 'recognized' by the Turing Machine, but rather, is recognized by the sentient creatures who designed the machine and who use the machine for that purpose.
What do you mean by 'reality' in that sentence? Do you mean it as "That which is all that exists" or "That which is a simulation designed to be experienced as 'reality'?It seems like you are tripping over the mind-projection fallacy - you may be projecting that property of language (recursion/self-reference) onto reality.
Taking a cursory glance at the link re "Linguistic Relativity" I am unclear as to why you thought to bring it into the discussion.Almost as if you unconsciously subscribe to Linguistic relativity.
In relation to language, I am more interested in it's connection with simple mathematics [numbers] and how a words value can be calculated and how these calculations can sort words/word-strings under numeric values.
Calculate a word's value
Language itself is based upon sound. The written word is simply a code used to describe the sounds of language. Mathematics is simply a code used to calculate the value of the code used to describe the sounds of language.
I see such, as more evidence we exist within a simulated reality.
