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Jacob Miller, PhD's avatar

I’m new to philosophy, especially the analytical side of things. I also really enjoy the content you put out both here and YT, but I have a question about your second premise. If I understand it correctly: if you believe you’re in a simulation then you can’t trust your knowledge forming process.

I don’t see why it follows that sims in a simulated reality can’t trust their knowledge forming process with respect to the reality that they’re in. If the simulation is programmed executed with a set of rules, like any physics simulation is, and the sims make observations that eventually reveal the rules of their reality, then it seems to me they have plenty of reason to trust that process.

I don’t see why the sims need to understand the base reality over their own to trust their knowledge forming process. It just means their knowledge forming process is bounded to claims about the rules of the simulated reality.

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Nur Nadar's avatar

Okay, to be fair, what doesn't get philosophy departments defunded at this point? If it isn't theory of mind, philosophy of science, logic or game theory, it doesn't seem to stand a chance anymore.

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