Entry 1843, on 2017-03-21 at 22:11:11 (Rating 1, Philosophy)
You are probably reading this post on a computer, tablet, or phone with a graphical user interface. You click or tap an icon and something happens. You probably think of that icon as having some meaning, some functionality, some deeper purpose. But, of course, the icon is just a representation for the code that the device is running. Under the surface the nature of reality is vastly more complex and doesn't bear the slightest relationship to the graphical elements you interact with.
There's nothing too controversial in that statement, but what if the whole universe could be looked at in a similar way? In a recent podcast I heard an interview with Donald Hoffman, the professor of cognitive science at the University of California. He claims that our models of reality are just that: models. He also claims that mathematical modelling indicates tha the chance that our models are accurate is precisely zero.
There are all sorts of problems with this perspective, of course.
First, there is solipsism which tells us that the only thing we can know for sure is that we, as an individual, exist. If we didn't then we couldn't have the thought about existence, but the reality of anything else could be seen as a delusion. Ultimately I think this is totally undebatable. There is no way to prove that what I sense is real and not a delusion.
While I must accept this idea as being ultimately true I also have to reject on the basis that it is ultimately pointless. If solipsism is true then pursuing ideas or understanding of anything is futile. So our whole basis of reality relies on something which can't be shown to be true, but has to be accepted anyway, just to make any sense of the world at all. That's kind of awkward!
Then there is the fact that the same claims of zero accuracy of models of the world surely apply to his models of models of the world. So, if our models of reality are inaccurate does that not mean that the models we devise to study those models are also inaccurate?
And if the models of models are inaccurate does that mean there is a chance that the models themselves, aren't? We really can't know for sure.
I would also ask what does "zero accuracy" mean. If we get past solipsism and assume that there is a reality that we can access in some way, even if it isn't perfect, how close to reality do we have to be to maintain some claim of accuracy?
And the idea of zero accuracy is surely absurd because our models of reality allow us to function predictably. I can tap keys on my computer and have words appear on the screen. That involves so much understanding of reality that it is deceptive to suggest that there is zero accuracy involved. There must be a degree of accuracy sufficient to allow a predictable outcome, at the level of my fingers making contact with the keys all the way down to the quantum effects working within the transistors in the computer's processor.
So if my perception of reality does resemble the icon metaphor on a computer then it must be a really good metaphor that represents the underlying truth quite well.
There are areas where we have good reason to believe our models are quite inaccurate, though. Quantum physics seems to provide an example of where incredibly precise results can be gained but the underlying theory requires apparently weird and unlikely rationalisations, like the many worlds hypothesis.
So, maybe there are situations where the icons are no longer sufficient and maybe we never will see the underlying code.
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