(2018-12-03, 08:57 AM)nbtruthman Wrote: I agree that Hoffman is confusing. I think that it is because he really is confused. He says:
My feeling is that Hoffman is extremely intelligent, and knows exactly what he is saying, but he wants to stay in academia, so he somewhat blurs his description. I understand this site does interviews with interesting people, and I certainly think he would be worth interviewing.
Quote:It's obvious (at least to me) that there is an objective world that continues to exist without being actually observed by human beings.
What Hoffman does seem to be saying, is that reality may be unbelievably different from what we think it is - that all our science is warped by the fact that our perceptions are optimised for reproduction and 'fitness'.
I think there is plenty of evidence to doubt the concept of evolution by natural selection, and maybe he does too, but again, saying that would end his academic career.
On way of reading Hoffman, is that
assuming evolution is true, all these weird things must follow.
Quote:Of course there could be a giant computer and hugely powerful entity in the sky that maintains a record of everything whatsoever so that whatever becomes humanly observed is
I don't believe in the giant computer theory, and in any case, unless we believe in a computer of unbounded complexity, it would surely be defeated by entanglement processes.
I like the idea that a lot of the physical world that we encounter, may be symbolic. If we shake hands with someone, or hug them, or even have sex with them (at least with a condom on), there is a real sense in which those acts are symbolic - nothing of any significance is physically changed - the value of these acts is in what they represent to us.