Mark J. Solomon

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Mark J. Solomon

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The United States
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December 2013

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Mark J. Solomon (born 1969) is an American non-fiction writer, philosopher and published neuropsychologist.

In Solomon's first work, On Computer Simulated Universes (2013), he entertains just one central idea, that all of us exist within a computer simulated universe. In his second work, The Evolution of Simulated Universes (2014), the author contends that our Universe, not unlike our own human species, is the direct product of natural selection and evolutionary forces. He concludes that if our Universe is simulated, then the selection and evolution of simulated universes becomes inescapable.

Solomon attended Washington University in St. Louis, T.T.U., Tulane University & Brown University. He resides with his wife in North Carolina.
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Average rating: 3.73 · 92 ratings · 20 reviews · 2 distinct works
On Computer Simulated Unive...

3.84 avg rating — 70 ratings — published 2013 — 4 editions
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The Evolution of Simulated ...

3.36 avg rating — 22 ratings — published 2014 — 5 editions
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“...any object functioning within the physical laws of any particular universe does not have free will ... In terms of human beings, all behavior and cognition cannot appear out of thin air. Behavior and cognition must be the result of prior causes. This is because our brains obey the same laws of a cause and effect physical universe just like any other physical object. All events that occur in the universe are caused by antecedent events.

Quantum indeterminacy, which maintains that the state of a system does not determine a unique collection of values for all its measurable properties, is not a valid argument for free will and has been used incorrectly to justify beliefs of independent decision-making. Logically speaking, notions of randomness and indeterminism are actually additional arguments against free will. All events that occur at random in the universe are, by definition, not caused by antecedent events. Or to say it a different way, any random event cannot also be a willed event.

By the process of elimination, events that are “willed freely” are events that are neither determined nor random. In other words, in all likelihood events that are “willed freely” are events that simply do not exist.”
Mark J. Solomon, The Evolution of Simulated Universes

“it could be accurately stated that one purpose of our lives, when taken in total, is to generate possible solutions to obstacles and problems, as defined by the entity or advanced civilization on the next level up running the simulation.”
Mark J. Solomon, On Computer Simulated Universes

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