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Paperback
First published February 18, 2014
One criticism of the Computer Simulated Universes hypothesis is the assertion that the amount of information contained within a newly created universe cannot be more than the universe that contains it. Regardless of the inherent nature and structure of information, this is not a valid criticism. When discussing the basic theory of evolution and natural selection within the context of animal species here on Earth, there is little difficulty accepting the fact that one particular organism could produce an offspring organism slightly more complex and contain slightly more information than its parent. The conspicuous reason for this is that the offspring organism and its parent organism both share a world that contains a much larger resource of information.I do not accept this argument at all. If Universe-1 contains Universe-2, which in turn contains Universe-3, the claim that Universe-3 can be larger than Universe-2 by exploiting resources from Universe-1 surely negates the postulate that 3 is contained in 2. If a universe can reach higher up the chain, whatever does "contain" or "simulation" mean? How can a simulation reach outside itself, indeed reach outside the universe containing the machine running it? The analogy with animal species is misleading.
Just like in animal species, the amount of information contained within any newly created universe can contain more information than its direct parent universe. This is true because any universe and its parent universe are both contained within a larger universe within a series of nested universes, or matryoshkaverse. Thus, any particular universe can contain more information than its direct parent universe.
"[...] it is still maintained that any object functioning within the physical laws of any particular universe does not have free will. This includes computer systems, human beings, planets and wine bottles. 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."
"The more I think about it, the more I realize there's nothing I could have done differently; the primordial atom burst, sending out its radiation, setting everything in motion. One particle collides with another, gases expand, planets contract and before you know it we've got starships and holodecks and chicken soup. In fact, you can't help but have starships, holodecks and chicken soup - because it was all determined 20 billion years ago!"
"People assume that time is a strict progression of cause to effect, but actually, from a non-linear, non-subjective viewpoint, it's more like a big ball of wibbly-wobbly, timey-wimey ... stuff."