Are you sure this world is real now?

Cheyenne 2022-03-23 09:02:47

This movie aside, I ask one thing: Can you guarantee that the world you are in now is real?

I'm sure you'll be amused. Where's the two fools who have heard some hearsay and come to me to show it off.

Even if you put aside Marxist philosophical materialism, you think you can laugh at me: I can see and hear it, the cold in winter and the heat in summer, the discomfort when I have a headache and a cold, the irritability and exhaustion of going to school and going to get off work all day, which one is not Are they really better than Putian Nike shoes? You can also pinch your thigh and try to see if it hurts, telling yourself that the world is real and that there is nothing wrong with it.

really? (Hume has asked for a long time) The five human senses: sight, hearing, taste, smell, and touch are actually the contents of the rearrangement of the brain. These reasonable contents that have been repackaged and packaged by the brain are actually It is a series of interpretations made by the brain when it receives unknown stimuli. You don't really touch the real world, it's your brain that makes you think that what you're in touch with now is the so-called real world, and you believe it yourself, that's all.

You can also use Occam's Razor theory to counter what I said: the simplest and most effective is the truth, and all complication is unreasonable. Of course, there is another explanation for what I'm saying: it's true in itself, and the brain's explanation is correct, and of course I continue to believe it.

Okay, let's continue along the line of who is simple and who is correct.

If reality is real, if all present reality is all that our science can observe.

So I have to ask: how to explain the Fermi paradox?

The universe is so big, even if the probability of intelligence like humans is small, there should be hundreds of billions of civilizations, even if there are very few civilizations that are only a few million years ahead of the civilization of the earth, they should have long ago. came to us. Then why didn't one come to pinch?

First of all, in the case of the Fermi paradox, it cannot be explained according to the existing logic.

At present, there are many explanations for the Fermi paradox. I will now propose one of the most fundamental, reasonable and simple explanations:

There is no external world, there are no billions of planets in the universe, the universe has only one brain.

The basis of the experiment is that everything a person experiences is ultimately translated into neural signals in the brain. Assuming that the universe is just like a brain, the world experienced by the brain is actually a kind of virtual reality created by external stimuli. Can the brain realize that it lives in a virtual reality? Can't.

Because all the brain stimulation for you is far simpler than generating this real thing. So do you think it is easier for the universe to generate a brain, or is it easier to generate a universe that contains at least 7 billion brains?

It's like we usually play the simulation game "The Sims". For the characters in the game, it may take decades from birth to death, but for us, the time is very short. For another example, in the world of movies, the transition of a scene may be a day or even years later, but for us, it is only 1 second.

Then, I'll go on, don't you think the world you're used to is full of bugs?

Test 1:

Think about the song "Love Me China" first in my heart, and then look at the lyrics with me:

Fifty-six ethnic groups, fifty-six flowers, fifty-six brothers and sisters are one family...

There's nothing wrong with the lyrics, I think so too, and so do most people.

Some netizens posted that the lyrics of "Love Me China" in their memory have always been "fifty-six ethnic groups and fifty-six flowers", but now I don't know why the lyrics on the Internet have all become "fifty-six constellations five. Sixteen Flowers", deeply doubting whether the world line has crossed.

After seeing this blogger's post, many netizens also felt that the lyrics in their memory were "Fifty-six Nations", but they blurted out the song and hummed "Fifty-six constellations".

Test 2:

Is the full name of the movie "Those Years" called "The Girls We Chased Together in Those Years" or "The Girls We Chased Together in Those Years"?

Test 3:

Are there "three horizontals" or "two horizontals" in the words "true", "fit" and "value"?

Recently, a netizen accidentally discovered something that was very confusing to him. When he was reading a book, he found that the word "true" printed on the book had three lines in it, but when he usually wrote it, it was always two lines. Ah, and his language teacher never said that what he wrote was a typo, so he posted his doubts on the Internet, wondering if his memory was messed up, but unexpectedly it caused a lot of discussion among netizens, and everyone expressed their opinions. , I have always written two horizontal lines, is it really that everyone's memory is wrong? Some netizens went through a lot of their previous books and found that they have always been three horizontal.

There are also test 45678, there are many such examples. Really not a real world bug? Are these jumbled memories really not "brain in a vat" revisions to our world's bugs?

Now what do you think is the real probability of this world now?

Don't think about it, it's also very scary.

And if this world is not real now, then: the movie "The Lost Wave" will begin to talk about it.

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Extended Reading

Serenity quotes

  • Reid Miller: I am the rules.

  • Constance: Mr. Baker Dill, I am increasingly fond of the way you say hello.