Random thoughts.

I wonder if the laws of physics appear to switch / break down at the very small scale -- not being coherent with things at the larger scale -- because that's the point at which the math on the simulation was deemed accurate enough and it's all just random noise down there. If you look at AI now, it's not perfectly accurate by design, very high accuracy is eschewed in favour of maximising speed on specialised hardware blocks and we simply say "that's good enough".

We may not be in a rendered simulation, but an inferred one based on the same AI principals used in what we're building now.

We may be looking below the noise floor and it's all nonsense down there, in turn we may never be able to reconcile the big with the small and this is it.

At the quantum level things can appear to go backwards or even as if they're in two places, perhaps explained by aliasing (think the wheel going the opposite way on camera) or a misalignment of sampling.

Surely if a simulation has a limit in either it's sample rate or precision, then our inherent ability to sample that retains that same limit; and any attempts to push numbers further would result in noise.

*disclaimer: I know nothing of physics, lol
I like your aliasing analogy. I too fear we may be reaching our limit.
 
It's a day and night occurence in the city. The noise pollution starts early in the morning with the transport industry. Let's say around four in the morning.

Then people wake up and the chaos ensues. You open a window and it's a full on assault on the human senses.

I encourage everyone to move out of the city.
Sound Polutions Kills. Literaly leads to multiple heart attacks each year in major cities.
 
Top Bottom