True lol
That's a good point. "God made us in his image" as it were.
The problem with these laws is we're limited by our (?) tools. We see fractals in nature, but how far down do they actually go?
Max Plank said there is a unit of measurement that's so small, that anything after that is insignificant and doesn't have any effect on the physical world.
So a lot of what we know isfalseincomplete.
In the center of a black hole for example, all of our theories fail.
The paper I mentioned earlier. (Forgot to link it: Quantized gravitational responses, the sign problem, and quantum complexity)
Says just that. If these quantum properties are infinitely complex, then a simulation is hard to justify.
Then there are people who believe we can explain the entirety of existence in a 1 inch equation. (The string theory folks).
Then all you have to do is run a simple algorithm, and you could play out a local solar system on your phone.
I was reading some woo-woo pseudoscience a while back, that I've never been able to let go.
That we're all interconnected somehow through a higher dimension. Which we can access, and some people do it accidentally. Though there's no known reproducible experiment we can conduct.
This "clairvoyant" comes to mind: Edgar Cayce - Wikipedia
Apparently, absorbing knowledge from ancestors and predicting the future.
Now this is where it gets weird, and ties in with the whole simulation thing.
Real science hypothesizes 11 dimensions.
"Time" is also something that we experience because we're stuck within 4 dimensions, with no access to the others.
Meaning, all of time has already played out. So a "glitch" in the simulation could allow someone to gain info from a snapshot in the future.
Kind of far-fetched. Until...
Imagine you knew the exact position of every atom in the solar system. Could you speed up "time" and predict every event and movement to the smallest of detail.
We already do it with weather patterns. We pick a few data points gathered from instruments, and can get a good idea of what's going to happen within the next 10 days.
Then of course, this begs the question of free will, which is a whole different rabbit hole.
Our knowledge is incomplete because at the present we are focused on the physical tangible gross material nature of reality. We call it science. It's not our tools that we are limited on but with our thoughts.
I don't agree with Max Plank about the igsinificance of a unit of measurement so small that it has no effect on the physical.
In fact I think the opposite is true.
There's is a subtle mind realm. Than there's the gross physical material realm and even that is just energy in the form of atoms.
But to create in the physical we have to start in the mind realm which is intangible.
Society has mastered one level of the subtle mind realm called mathematics. Without it we wouldn't have all the technological advances we have today. Mathematics is like the nexus between the mind realm and the physical realm.
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