At least we can blame our bad decisions on coding
Elon Musk clearly has a lot of time on his hands because he has now given ‘proof’ that we are all living in an elaborate simulation.
Citing the 1970s video game Pong and so-called ‘proof’, Musk argues that our technological advancements are proof in itself of the simulation.
Responding to a tweet about the game, Musk wrote: “49 years later, games are photo-realistic 3D worlds.
“What does that trend continuing imply about our reality.”
49 years later, games are photo-realistic 3D worlds. What does that trend continuing imply about our reality?
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) November 30, 2021
Musk has previously stated that he believes in the simulation idea hypothesised by philosopher Nick Bostrom in 2003. Essentially, Bostrom believes that advancements in technology will allow future generations to run computer simulations indistinguishable from real life.
Bostrom claimed, “then it could be the case that the vast majority of minds like ours do not belong to the original race but rather to people simulated by the advanced descendants of an original race.”
Musk has stated that there is a 99.99 per cent chance that the universe we live in is not actually real, which would explain the behaviour of anti-vaxxers, Donald Trump and that recent strange Heinz invention.
These theories have of course been magnified by pop culture, with movies like The Matrix, The Truman Show and Black Mirror adding to the chaos.
Twitter has since responded to Musk’s ‘proof’, with one person simply replying: “it implies yo mama.”
https://twitter.com/Leo88Williams/status/1465685556705181705
On the subject, another said: “We are in a simulation, the chances of us actually existing in base reality are ridiculously low.”
This is a typical involution. There is only one way out for mankind, which is interstellar civilization.😇 https://t.co/rEjnP3n0sj
— yajun (@yajunvision) November 30, 2021
A third added: “This is a typical involution. There is only one way out for mankind, which is interstellar civilisation.”
Another person replied simply, “metaverse”, which is a little too scary to consider right now.
…metaverse… https://t.co/WJ1s31RE96
— Barnab (@torqe2008) November 30, 2021
Related links:
- You can now get paid £150,000 to let a robot use your face and voice
- Supreme Court lets Google off the hook for paying 4m iPhone users £750 over data tracking
- Elon Musk asks Twitter to vote on whether he should sell $21bn of Tesla shares