Tuesday, February 17, 2015

The World Is Not as it Seems. Life is a Computer Simulation.


Ever wonder what causes déjà vu? Or how about magic? And let’s not forget ghosts and monsters and other creatures. Even some types of immensely researched sciences like alchemy seem to make no real sense at times! So what’s the reason, how can this be?! Simple, our world is a computer simulation sometimes referred to as ‘The Lattice’ and most of the time we don’t even realize it at all.  Our world is little more than a game of Sims. Don’t believe me? I can tell you why you’re wrong.

            Let me start small so I can try to keep this understandable. Wouldn’t we notice something ‘off’ about the world? Glitches in the system? They can’t have a perfect system, right? Well, we do see glitches. There are many unexplained phenomena in the world that we have no scientific reasons for their existance, examples are ghosts, monsters, magic, and even déjà vu.

 Déjà vu is french for "I've seen this all before" and it refers to when a situation seems like it's happened before. Déjà vu is when something happens and you then know or think something you’re not supposed too and who/whatever controls the simulation alters and/or deletes thoughts and memories so you don’t remember anything. To fill in the missing framework of your mind they reuse frames of memory, like similar pages in a flipbook to fill in space for the story.

            Monsters, creatures, and ghosts are glitches galore. These odd things aren’t supposed to exist to us. They’re simply rips in the programming that fabricate our universe, false or incorrect programing, and the glitches that no one realized or cared to fix. Whether these ‘glitches’ exist outside of the lattice is something we cannot know, just as we do not know who created and is running the lattice.

            12.21.2012 was supposed to be the end of the world right? There are many theories about the apocalypse. Jeane Dixon believes 2020 is the year Armageddon will take place and Jesus will return to defeat the unholy Trinity of the Antichrist, Satan and the False prophet of between 2020 and 2037. One explanation for apocalypse theories are that they are the result of ‘people’ seeing and retaining erased data from previous and failed lattices and/or simulations.

            Now many people see life in black and white; in this case, 1’s and 0’s, so let’s look at this in a tad more mathematical perspective. If everything in existence can be proven by math and science, why is it so illogical that our own life is really just a series of 1’s and 0’s in a world of 1’s and 0’s creating a false universe? If everything is mathematically proven our existence should be somehow mathematical as well right?


          Screen resolution is the number of pixels used. The image on your computer screen is built up from thousands or millions of pixels. The screen creates the image you see by changing the colours of these pixels. Nothing can be displayed as smaller than a single pixel. Reality is just a simulation or world with a very high screen resolution.
 The planet we live on is the perfect distance from the sun to provide life, has an atmosphere protecting us from harmful radiation and UV rays and allowing us to breathe oxygen that we need to survive, has water and fertile soil used to grow food, and other life forms we can eat. Now our planet was allegedly created because of an explosion in space and debris being pulled into an orbit and cooling to eventually support life. This happened in an allegedly endless amount of space and it just so happened in the perfect way to create humanity. Scientifically speaking there is a less than miniscule chance of that legitimately happening.

        Okay, even if all of that actually did happen in reality and even if I am right and we live in a simulation: What’s the purpose? It’s a fair question and you deserve an answer. There are many reasons for the Lattice to exist. We could be a game for someone who is extremely bored as sad as that thought may be. We could be a test subject, used to test diseases, medicines, war strategies, apocalyptic situations, and even our reactions other life forms and beings. The latter is more logical as it would save resources, money, and even lives to test it on a simulation rather than living beings. Maybe we just exist as a simulation to teach the beings how humanity evolved and got to be as it is outside the Lattice or how they would fare if humanity outside the Lattice does not yet exist.

While this idea seems incomprehensible, a team of physicists at the University of Washington has come up with a potential test to see if the idea makes sense. First of all the idea comes from a 2003 paper published in Philosophical Quarterly by Nick Bostrom, a philosophy professor at the University of Oxford. He believed that at least one of the following is true:
  • The human species is likely to go extinct before reaching a “posthuman” stage.
  • Any posthuman civilization is very unlikely to run a significant number of simulations of its evolutionary history.
  • We are almost certainly living in a computer simulation.
He also held that “the belief that there is a significant chance that we will one day become post-humans who run ancestor simulations is false, unless we are currently living in a simulation.”

With current limits on computerization it will be decades before before researchers will be able to run even primitive simulations of the universe. University of Washington has suggested tests that can be performed now, or in the near future, that are sensitive to constraints imposed on future simulations by limited resources.

Martin Savage, a UW physics professor says “Currently, supercomputers using a technique called lattice quantum chromodynamics and starting from the fundamental physical laws that govern the universe can simulate only a very small portion of the universe, on the scale of one 100-trillionth of a meter, a little larger than the nucleus of an atom”

Eventually computers will be able to create a simulation on the scale of a human being but it will take many generations before we can simulate a large enough part of the universe to understand the prevention of physical processes that would hint at a simulated world.

The supercomputers performing lattice quantum chromodynamics calculations essentially divide space-time into a four-dimensional grid. This allows researchers to examine what is called the strong force, one of the four fundamental forces of nature and the one that binds subatomic particles together into neutrons and protons at the core of atoms.

“If you make the simulations big enough, something like our universe should emerge, Then it would be a matter of looking for a “signature” in our universe that has an analog in the current small-scale simulations.” Savage says.

Savage and colleagues Silas Beane of the University of New Hampshire and Zohreh Davoudi, a UW physics graduate student, suggest that the signature could show up as a limitation in the energy of cosmic rays. They say that the highest-energy cosmic rays would not travel along the edges of the lattice in the model but would travel diagonally, and they would not interact equally in all directions as they otherwise would be expected to.
   There are many things in this world we cannot yet research or prove with mathematics and science, our own existence included. We live in a computer simulation. For what reason and for whom I do not know, and perhaps I never will. Or maybe I already did know and the creator just made me forget about it. Hmmm. . . . Déjà vu.

(Pictures found on Google images and information from http://www.washington.edu/news/2012/12/10/do-we-live-in-a-computer-simulation-uw-researchers-say-idea-can-be-tested/)


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