this post was submitted on 02 Nov 2025
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And here I was waiting to get unplugged, or maybe finding a Nokia phone that received a call.

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[–] srasmus@slrpnk.net 81 points 1 week ago (14 children)

I can't explain how much I hate simulation theory. As a thought experiment? Fine. It's interesting to think of the universe in the context of code and logic. But as a driving philosophy of reality? Pointless.

Most proponents of simulation theory will say it's impossible to prove the universe is a simulation, because we exist inside it. Then who cares? There obviously must exist a non-simulated universe for the mega computer we're all running on to inhabit, so it's a pointless step along finding the true nature if reality. It's stoner solipsism for guys that buy nfts. It's the "it was all a dream" ending of philosophy.

[–] inb4_FoundTheVegan@lemmy.world 32 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Simulation theory is the long way around to creationism for atheists.

Creationism usually implies the creator put a lot of thought, care, and love into the creation. Knowing what I do of software development, fucking lol.

Yes, kind of, but I don't think that's necessarily a point against it. "Why are we here? / Why is the universe here?" is one of the big interesting questions that still doesn't have a good answer, and I think thinking about possible answers to the big questions is one of the ways we push the envelope of what we do know. This particular paper seems like a not-that-interesting result using our current known-to-be-incomplete understanding of quantum gravity, and the claim that it somehow "disproves" the simulation hypothesis is some rank unscientific nonsense that IMO really shouldn't have been accepted by a scientific journal, but I think the question it poorly attempts to answer is an interesting one.

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