The Cosmic Computer

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  • The Cosmic Computer, Simulated Realities, the Zero-Point

    Field, and Touching What is Real John Smith17 Feb 2013

    Is the universe a giant cosmic computer? Are we living in a computer simulation? Can consciousness be simulated? If reality is an illusion, how do we wake up to what is real? This is an open-minded exploration of some of these issues.

    QUANTUM PHYSICIST KEN WHARTON, in New Scientist magazine (9 Feb 2013), questions the assumption that physicists have made since the time of

    Newton: that the universe works like a massive computer. Given the state of the

    world in one instant, and the laws that determine the behaviour of that world, we just

    have to crunch the equations (either through solving them or using computer

    simulation) to predict the future in the next instant. There will be a growing deviation

    of the mathematical model from reality due to non-linear effects which makes

    prediction impractical, but philosophically this is how scientists regard the future

    as basically the solution to complex equations. Science is all about prediction. And

    this is why finding the theory of everything is the holy grail for physicists: in theory it

    will allow us to map the whole future of the universe.

    The question is this: is the universe actually doing what scientists are doing to create

    the future? Is the universe crunching equations like a computer?

    Of course the computer that the universe is working out its future on is itself.

    Differential equations model how forces influence things, for example, because of

    the nature of those forces. Nature is not an expert at calculus; it does not need to be:

    all nature needs to do is be what it is, and by being what it is its future states will turn

    out as if they had been calculated using calculus. But of course, no calculations were

    actually involved. The system stumbles to the correct answer by its very nature. The

    mathematics highlights salient features of the system, but there are other aspects of

    the system that are not mathematically modelled either because they are too

    complex or they are not rational, consciousness being the primary example.

    Wharton describes another way of evaluating the future not by calculation but by

    considering non-dynamic principles the 'Lagrangian approach'. Instead of seeing how forces directly move things around, the Lagrangian approach focuses on more

    abstract aspects of the system such as energy conservation, and use this to

    determine intermediary states between two moments of the system on a timeline. In

    this way, the system's dynamics is not directly calculated forces are ignored in

    favour of energy. As forces are directional and energy is not, this greatly simplifies

    the modelling of physical systems: the Lagrangian modelling is independent of

    coordinate systems.

    An example of the Lagrangian approach given my Wharton is Fermat's principle of

    least time which states that a light ray travelling between two points takes the

    quickest route. Two points are needed to define a route, but once those two points

    are defined, the path of the light can be calculated. Now this is not a calculation of

    the future, but a calculation of how light travels between two points separated in time

  • and space. Given this understanding, we can then make predictions on how light will

    travel in the future, always taking the quickest path. The Lagrangian approach takes

    a higher, more abstract perspective one that is more intuitive. And it is more

    intuitive for a reason: it is actually the way that most non-scientists view reality.

    Scientists tend to see the world as a computer because much of science is about

    prediction and number crunching. Such a perspective is more logical and keeps the

    door firmly shut to teleological perspectives where actions and processes are are seen as a means to a specific end. Science hates teleology as end causes open the

    possibility of things like destiny, God, intelligent design etc. So it is p rimarily this

    avoidance of teleological perspectives that keeps the computer paradigm of reality

    sovereign in the scientific world, and which makes Lagrangian approaches more a

    case of 'useful mathematics' than a perspective on the actual nature of reality.

    However, teleology comes back in with quantum mechanics, because the final cause

    of measurement collapses the wave function. In this case, a Lagrangian approach

    might actually make more sense as it fits the quantum world the paradoxes of quantum mechanics are only paradoxes if we view them from a Newtonian

    computational perspective. Open the door to teleology and suddenly you have a

    New Age movement using quantum mechanics as justification of mind-over-matter

    perspectives. No wonder the scientific community is unwilling to let go of the

    computer paradigm of reality: it is all that keeps the lid on a veritable Pandora's box

    of 'impossible' possibilities. (Wharton has proposed a Lagrangian type formulation of

    quantum theory arxiv.org/abs/1301.7012.)

    Non-scientists are quite happy with teleological perspectives and so most have not

    adopted the universe-as-a-computer paradigm. Indeed, most ordinary people

    formulate reality from a Lagrangian perspective because it is more intuitive and

    natural to do so. Human minds do not number crunch the future, but use general

    inductive and heuristic rules of thumb on specific aspects of systems that are then

    used to reformulate the past, giving our lives a bedrock of logical consistency and

    continuity. (In the same way, the brain processes the image we see with our eyes to

    make blind spots invisible and to turn the image the right way around.) These rules

    of thumb are then projected into the future as expectations, but not in a

    computational manner.

    Despite the fact that we generally use non-computer models of reality, most of us will

    intellectually pay lipservice to the computer paradigm because: it seems more

    rational and therefore intelligent; we live in a computer age and so the computer

    perspective is a well worn groove; and we are bombarded with popular science

    documentaries in the media that promote the universe-is-a-computer paradigm. So

    even though the average person uses Lagrangian perspectives, the mind will label

    those perspectives as computational because that is the pevailing scientific dogma.

    Society has become addicted to seeing the world like a giant computer; indeed,

    some philosophers and scientists actually think that we are living in a massive

    computer simulation.

    The simulation idea was put forward by Swedish philosopher Nick Bostrom, who

    realized that if computer processing power keeps growing, then at some point future

  • generations will be able to simulate reality. Bostrom wondered if the reality that we

    are experiencing could actually be such a simulation, and whether it would be

    possible to tell. Considering the likelihood that many simulations would be run by

    those distant descendants, Bostrom concludes that it is probable that we are living in

    a simulation.

    John Barrow, a british cosmologist working at the University of Cambridge, believes

    that we would know whether we were in a computer simulation because simulations

    require computational shortcuts, tricks and adjustments to make them feasible:

    reality would be pixelated or grid-like in order to make computer processing possible;

    the physical constants and laws would need to be gradually adjusted in time and

    perhaps space in order to keep the fine balance of forces needed to maintain a

    system from which complex lifeforms can develop; and every now and then there

    might be tell-tale sudden glitches events which appear not to follow the laws of

    physics as we know them.

    Do such clues to simulation exist? Sudden glitches would be difficult to determine

    because science, as it is carried out today, systematically dismisses and eliminates

    glitches in the belief that they are just noise in the system: every research scientist

    knows that experimental results are not the smooth curves that appear in the

    textbooks. Therefore, becoming aware of whether we are living in a simulation would

    require a whole re-framing of science which would encourage scientists not to

    dismiss the noise in the system, but to make a detailed examination of it. As Barrow

    eloquently states: "...the flaws of Nature are as important as the laws of Nature"

    Gradual changes in the physical constants is certainly an idea that has been around

    for a while as far back as the 1930s and it is one that the latest research examining the light from quasars indicates may well be a reality. Of course, just

    because the physical constants change over time (and over space) does necessarily

    mean that we are living in a simulation. However, if the physical constants were

    shown to be constant within experimental accuracy, in both time and space, then

    that would make it less likely that we are living in a simulation.

    And as for the pixelated or grid-like nature of reality: scientific confirmation of this is

    believed to require careful examination of cosmic ray interactions which, if reality is

    grid-like, the resulting explosion will favour certain axes. As cosmic ray interactions

    are uncommon, it will take time to confirm or deny the pixelated nature of reality.

    Silas Beane, a theoretical physicist at the University of Bonn recently wrote in a

    recent interview in Focus magazine: "If we knew we were in a simulation it'd become

    interesting to communicate with the simulators." (Perhaps we already have labelling our simulators as gods?) The question is: would a simulator want to start

    talking to his or her cyber creations? How would we all behave if we knew we were

    just simulations in a computer program? The situation would be similar to that

    depicted by the fi lm The Matrix, where we would be living in a dream world, except

    we would personally have no existence i n the 'real' reality, so there would be no

    waking up from the dream. Switch a simulation off and it just ceases to exist in one

    instant. Unless the simulation is able to influence some aspect of the real reality.

  • How could a simulation have any roots in reality? Only if information processing

    systems were able to access non-local aspects of reality, such as the zero-point

    energy field. Zero-point energy is the intrinsic energy of space caused by quantum

    fluctuations which are believed to originate from higher dimensions. Quantum

    systems tend to be non-local systems because they involve dimensional-

    interactions. An analogy is the hologram: each part contains the image of the whole,

    so the image is non-local in the actual hologram, and this process is the result of a

    dimensional shift of information from 2-dimensional space to 3-dimensional space.

    With the zero-point field, however, information is being stored in higher dimensions

    outside normal space-time.

    So if information processing systems such as computer simulators can entangle with

    the higher dimensional zero-point field, then such a system can continue to exist

    when the simulator is switched off. And if such a quantum entanglement does does

    take place even with simulated systems, this would imply that the medium of

    entanglement is information rather than forces or energy.

    Outside of simulated realities, having the mind entangle with non-local quantum

    fields is an established (albeit alternative) model of consciousness. With these

    systems, energy and forces could be involved in the entanglement process, but it is

    more likely to be information as well. Already, there is a truly scientific model of

    consciousness that sees it as a non-local phenomena check out the Penrose-Hameroff Orch OR model. This model does not contravene any known scientific laws,

    but gives a mechanism for the survival of death: when we die, the deteriorating

    nervous system uncouples from the zero-point field which holds what is essential

    to us as a person in its safe keeping.

    Working scientists may use quantum theory as a means of reality-modeling where

    the Newtonian perspective breaks down, but this does not extend to how they see

    the world philosophically. Most quantum physicists are stuck philosophically in the

    Newtonian paradigm; the philosophy of quantum theory is seen as a fascinating

    oddity, something that has no bearing or relevance to everyday living. And yet, the

    irony of that is that the very awareness or consciousness of these scientists of all sentient beings is likely to be a quantum process because the alternative is for consciousness to merely be an illusion or an epiphenomena of local complex

    information processing. And as illusions cannot affect matter, this would reject the

    results of research at Princeton which conclusively shows that the mind can interact

    with matter (see http://noosphere.princeton.edu/). Minds bleed into matter because

    mind and matter are both information systems that can entangle quantum

    mechanically, and bearing in mind that only things that are fundamentally identical

    can quantum entangle, this means that the two are aspects of the same information

    system.

    So mind is matter, and matter is mind; both are manifestations of the high-

    dimensional zero-point field. And as computer simulations and neural networks that

    entangle with the zero-point field are themselves manifestations of the zero-point

    field, in a sense the illusion of separate consciousness and things is merely a

    thought emanating from a unified zero-point field. We are a quantum collective,

    playing the game of individuality. Separation is a mass dream or hypnosis. But how

  • can the illusion of separation manifest from a unified system like the zero -point field?

    This is where we come back to the paradox of quantum system: entanglement is not

    annihilation; separation dances on a foundation of unity.

    The ramifications of this type of quantum entanglement mean that consciousness or

    awareness probably can be simulated. But not quite as most scientists think

    because, in the case of a computer simulation that develops self-awareness, what is

    actually going on is that the computer simulation has created a non-linear processing

    system that is able to entangle with the zero-point field. In this way, the

    awareness intrinsic to the zero-point field is co-opted by the simulation so that it

    becomes self-aware. In the same way, our brains are also non-linear processing

    systems that can entangle with the zero-point field, bringing to the locality of our

    bodies the non-local awareness of the higher dimensional quantum field.

    So consciousness is not an i llusion. What is an illusion is the assumption that

    consciousness is local to neural nets or complex information processing systems.

    The illusion is that our minds are stuck in our heads, when in fact consciousness is

    non-local everywhere and nowhere. We fall for this illusion because we are stuck in Newtonian thinking where that consciousness is projected into a space-time

    fantasy. Most of us cannot even begin to understand what non-local awareness is all

    about. And as concepts are usually themselves space-time simulations, we cannot

    directly understand non-local awareness using concepts. The best we can do is use

    labels or pointers like 'non-dual awareness', 'non-local awareness' or the 'zero-point

    field'. But if we really want to understand non-local consciousness, we have to

    experience it directly. We cannot think ourselves there because thought is space-

    time conditioned.

    At the beginning of this essay, we questioned the idea that the universe works like a

    giant computer using the laws of physics to fast forward from the present to some

    point in the future. This is the prevailing scientific paradigm. Now we might begin to

    see that the reason nature appears mathematical is because mind and matter are

    part of the same entangled system, so logical perception of reality is going to

    naturally uncover logical patterns. And as mathematics is the language of logic,

    those patterns can be modeled mathematically. In other words, the universe always

    speaks to us in our own language as we are energetically entwined. Mathematics,

    therefore, is not the universal language of creation that scientists assume it to be: it

    is merely the perspective of scientific investigation reflected back to researchers.

    Speak a different language and the universe will comply accordingly.

    So the the question whether we are living in a computer simulation is actually not as

    profound as we might believe because both 'reality' and simulations are equivalent

    illusions. Both are distortions of a high-dimensional reality of quantum unity. This

    may sound like New Age BS, but it is a view that has more scientific backing than the

    idea that consciousness is an illusory byproduct of neural networks. That idea is just

    insane and is increasingly looking like a religious belief system rather than a

    scientific one.

    When theoretical physicist, Silas Beane, wonders what it would be like

    communicating with the simulators, all he actually has to do is to explore his own

  • consciousness. That is the key to experiencing both the reality behind the illusion of

    space-time, and the reality behind the i llusion of simulation. We do not need to be

    theoretical physicists working at CERN to find the answers to the ultimate questions

    of existence; they are right in the centre of our minds, in the primary awareness that

    underlies all experience. This is the great mystery that so many are driven to find,

    usually looking everywhere but right here and right now. We have been mesmerized

    by the fantasy of ourselves within the illusion of space-time existence, and that

    illusion has served only to spin more stories to explain the story of that existence.

    But there comes a time when many of us give up stories because we realize that the

    truth, however terrible, is preferable to being psychologically comfortable. Mom's

    apple pie may be inviting, but eventually the story starts to taste a little sickly.

    Realizing the illusory nature of space-time brings us to acknowledge that awareness

    is the prime reality from which all the illusions of space-time systems, including our

    own identity, spontaneously springs. And it also means that we can use this

    realization, if we want to, to alter those illusions. Just because basic awareness,

    which accepts everything as it is, and reality manifestation, which alters it, are

    contradictory from a Newtonian perspective, does not mean that they cannot coexist

    from a quantum perspective, just as the contradictory particle and wave nature of

    light can also coexist, despite also being contradictory from a Newtonian

    perspective. The acceptance of reality and the creative manipulation of reality both

    have validity in the quantum wholeness of the zero-point field.

    However, the challenge of trying to modify the illusion is that it is all too easy to end

    up reinforcing the illusion because we are programmed to believe we have to 'do'

    something in space-time. Such 'doing', even in the imagination, only perpetuates the

    space-time story, one that is underpinned by psychological polarity. For example, if

    we are unwell and so try to focus on being well, the subconscious is aware of the

    context of this focus on wellness which is that we are unwell in the first place and so every time we visualize wellness we are also unconsciously reinforcing the

    fact that we are unwell. And as subconscious tends to be more tenacious in its focus

    than the conscious mind, it is usually more than enough to minimize mind-over-

    matter effects.

    This is actually confirmed by experiments with random number generators which

    report a tiny but statistically significant effect of consciousness on matter. Therefore,

    it is always essential to first focus on letting go of the story of who and what we are,

    and what we deserve. For until we we really understand the contrived nature of our

    waking space-time oriented consciousness, we will continue to ask the type of

    questions that only bury us deeper into the illusion. In fact, the whole system is

    gamed for the illusion, because so much of society has a vested interest in

    maintaining the illusion.

    So asking why universe is the way it is is not actually a particularly deep question, for

    it will only lead us into explanations that support our illusory space-time perspectives.

    Instead, it is far more insightful to ask who or what we are, and see where that

    seemingly innocuous question takes us. That question is so profound that it is easy

    to ask it insincerely, which will only lead the questioner back into stories: "Well I am

    Jane Smith, a journalist living on 44 Carnaby Street, married to John Smith" But

  • when asked sincerely, looking past the labels that only serve to cover our ignorance,

    we find ourselves stepping back from the movie and start to become aware of our

    basic nature, a nature that is outside space-time, a nature that is founded on basic

    awareness. For it is in the simple awareness of awareness that we can directly

    experience the zero-point field, allowing us to let go of the movie characters we

    mistake ourselves to be and to touch what is actually real.