hawkjo a day ago

The cantor set exists in a real phenomenon? Any real phenomenon? That makes me feel like we live in a simulation perhaps more than anything else I’ve heard. This story is a nice description of the people, but I want more on implications. What is going on here?

  • gchamonlive a day ago

    > That makes me feel like we live in a simulation perhaps more than anything else I’ve heard

    I'm never quite sure what this is meant to mean. Is it comparing to other simulations like computer games or physical simulations where you could change a seed or a data structure and have it manifest in reality? What is expected from a simulation to differ from reality? What does it even mean to make this distinction when we are observing inside the process we are trying to distinguish between real and simulated?

    • AIorNot a day ago

      Guys, everyone has a Metaphysics (starting assumptions about the Universe) and the better explanation for me (after starting out as a dyed in the wool Materialist) is Idealism, Note this is NOT solipsism (only your mind exists) but that consciousness is Fundamental (ie below SpaceTime)

      Metaphysically, I'm strongly opinionated on this now after many years of research on this topic. -see this video from a group of philosophers and idealism-minded thinkers - (also it is way more plausible to me than simulation theory)

      https://youtu.be/m4DwQDaUANU?si=sL92PP-MSzjd0PiV

    • NoMoreNicksLeft a day ago

      Most people generally think that it means that there is a higher-level reality, and that there are beings within that higher-level reality engaged in creating our simulation. "Gods" for lack of a better word.

      I prefer Greg Egan's interpretation in Permutation City, where simulations can become self-bootstrapping and that simulations need no "simulator" at all. No one's loaded universe.exe in some higher-lever reality, it runs itself.

      That still won't stop me from attempting rowhammer attacks.

      • IIAOPSW a day ago

        Adding to this, I think people naturally confuse / extrapolate a universe that appears to have discritized / computational laws with the discritized simulations and computations we use to approximate our (previously assumed continuous) reality.

        As I put it, the older understanding of the universe working in mechanical ways does not imply the universe is actually a machine nor that it was built by someone or for some purpose similar to the way we build machines. Likewise, the newer understanding of the universe working in computational ways does not imply the universe is actually running on some computer nor that its code was written by someone or for some purpose similar to the way we run simulations.

      • gchamonlive a day ago

        Until we can download some else's consciousness from a different universe into this one, similar to what happens to Durham, this is just an interesting thought experiment. And even then, how could we distinguish an alien human consciousness from someone having a severe dissociation episode?

  • rnhmjoj a day ago

    Well, if you consider that the setting of the problem is non-interacting, two-dimensional electrons in an infinite lattice, there's not much real about it. These patterns will likely disappear in a more realistic situation.

    • anentropic a day ago

      Didn't this same article state that: "They placed two thin layers of graphene in a magnetic field, then measured the energy levels of the graphene’s electrons. The quantum fractal emerged in all its glory."

      So they actually realised it.

      • rnhmjoj a day ago

        Sure, but it will only be some finite approximation to the mathematical fractal.

        • nobody083648 a day ago

          I hear ya man. They got architects out here building with 3.14159 and calling it π, just utter trash

  • taneq a day ago

    An approximation, I’d imagine. I wouldn’t expect it to manifest in any real physical sense, any more than I’d expect an actual physical “unit circle” object to have a circumference of exactly two Pi.

    • gsf_emergency_2 a day ago

      It's as much an approx as any physical measurement is. As for "real world" implications, Hinton probably deserves the physics Nobel more than (the) Hofstadter who predicted this phenom (as a grad student)

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hofstadter%27s_butterfly#:~:te...

      • madcaptenor a day ago

        Fun fact: Douglas Hofstadter's father, Robert, actually did win the physics Nobel.

      • taneq a day ago

        > It's as much an approx as any physical measurement is.

        This is exactly the point I was making, so I agree. :)

    • anthk a day ago

      Real world has a measured 'pi' everywhere; from electromagnetics to probability.

purplezooey a day ago

Appreciated the unexpected Hofstadter sighting!