ozb a day ago

Almost every statement in this paper is wrong.

The central claim in particular is not proven because a physical theory P need not be able to express statements like "there exists a number G, which, when interpreted as the text of a theory T, essentially states that the theory T itself is unprovable in the broader physical theory P" as an empirical physical fact.

  • NoahZuniga a day ago

    It's also very hard to verify the sources for some claims: I would expect the snag to be that many model theory results we have (Such as Gödel theorems) require quantifying over an infinite set, but that seems plausibly not possible to model in the physical universe. I quickly found this quote from the paper:

    > Arithmetic expressiveness; LQG can internally model the natural numbers with their basic operations. This is important as quantum gravity should reproduce calculations used for amplitudes, curvature scalars, entropy, etc in appropriate limits. Both string theory [34, 37] and LQG [35, 38] satisfy this by reproducing GR and QM in appropriate limits

    Here the citations are four entire books. How am I supposed to very that LQG can model N with that?

ticulatedspline 20 hours ago

The universe is a simulation, question is whether we're running on original hardware or not.

Seems at best they may have proved you can't simulate the universe on hardware that exists within this universe, which is a bit of a no-duh kinda thing.

Imagine running a simulation in our universe and using a hardware random generator. And AI mathematicians inside your simulation proclaiming confidently that it would be impossible for them to be in a simulation because all randomness must be algorithmic and thus impossible to generate such randomness.

karmakaze a day ago

> "Therefore, no physically complete and consistent theory of everything can be derived from computation alone. [...]"

It wasn't stated why all truths need to be provable though. Perhaps the paper goes into this detail that I'd like explained.

  • galaxyLogic 18 hours ago

    I think you nailed it. There are true statements which cannot be proven, yes. But those could be true statements also in the simulated universe. The simulation does not need to calculate the correct ANSWER to every question.

    • karmakaze 8 hours ago

      The incompleteness theorem doesn't even say that correct answers can't be computed, only that they can't be proven to be correct using the axioms of a consistent system.

      • galaxyLogic 6 hours ago

        Good point. But you can say there is always the question "Can this be proven with our rules of logic?"

        It's a curious thing, I wonder how to precisely define "proving without logic". Proof by "meta-thinking"?

ralph84 a day ago

Even if they prove our universe can’t be simulated in a computer built the way we build them, how can they prove there aren’t other ways to build computers?

  • abemiller a day ago

    Yea I mean a more generic version of the simulation theory is just that there is an "outside world" within which our universe exists in containment. Seems probably impossible to disprove (or prove) that for the same reason that proofs about the existence of God are hard.

    But, making proofs about the capabilities of the exact types of computation we currently use can still be interesting.

nojvek 21 hours ago

The way we build computers can’t simulate quantum fields. Just means our computers are limited.

Doesn’t mean the universe isn’t a simulation.

Everything you perceive is through the brain. Brain could be in a jar receiving the same neuron signals, it wouldn’t be able to know if it is in a simulation or not.

There is no way for a program to know if it’s inside a virtual machine or not.