Kind: captions Language: en give it time it's coming a few decades a century we'll have vr you know virtual reality systems indistinguishable from physical reality at that point we'll actually be able to put people into uh into simulations like descartes scenario indistinguishable from physical reality at that point we can start asking how do we know this isn't happening to us already right now might we have been in a simulation like that all along [Music] david chalmers welcome to the show thanks it's great to be talking with you man i'm really excited about this so for people that aren't familiar with your work which is amazing by the way you are a philosopher an author and somebody who thinks a lot about virtual worlds and your most recent book reality plus virtual worlds and the problems of philosophy is really an exciting read that i don't know if you timed it as you did on purpose but the fact that it's coming out right in the middle of you know facebook changing its name to meta and what's going on in the world of nfts and like everybody just pouring into uh this idea of the metaverse and where this is all going so as somebody who's creating in that world i was reading your book in that context but i want to start before that and i want to start with the hard problem of consciousness and specifically why that led you to dualism if i may put that word on it it'll be interesting to see if that word still feels right to you but if you don't mind just walk people through why it's considered the hard problem of consciousness and how that ends up leading you to the matrix and the metaverse which people that have been following me for a while know i am obsessed with the matrix me too for me consciousness was always the uh the big issue my background was growing up i was at math and science geek totally interested in explaining the world in terms of science and i used to think wow wouldn't it have been great to have been a uh a physicist back around the time of newton when physics was just totally ill understood nobody understood the first thing about space and time and matter and motion the field was just wide open whereas you know these days science is getting to be a lot better understood and there's the other some interesting open problems in physics but i was thinking what is it right now that's like say physics was 400 years ago genuinely wide open i thought the science of the mind and especially the problem of consciousness of subjective experience basically it feels like something to be a conscious human being you know we experienced one thing i want to understand why do people consider like i actually think i'm just not smart enough to understand why people think that's so weird why why is that hard like why to me the idea of oh you just stack enough neurons together and eventually there is a sort of recursive loop where you can look back on yourself and to me it just seemed like again because i don't feel like i may be smart enough to understand the problem it just feels so easy to accept that the human brain is more complicated than you know let's say an ant's brain and therefore humans have consciousness and it's probably some sliding scale of you know there's probably mammals that have it as well maybe not as you know not as deep of an ability to contemplate your own existence but why why is it so hard to believe that if we stacked silicon chips enough enough enough enough enough that it would finally become conscious i mean it sure looks like if you put enough neurons together in a brain connect them up in the right way and get them firing in the right way you somehow get consciousness you get subjective experience but the big mystery is how and why does that happen i mean when it comes to explaining stuff like say human behavior we've kind of got a model on this you can kind of see how how it is connecting up a whole lot of neurons in the right way performing the right computations reacting to inputs getting integrated connecting up different areas of the brain producing an output that's going to produce human behavior you know maybe it'll explain how we walk how we talk how we get around in the world and science has been super successful at doing that but when it comes to consciousness those things are the easy problems explaining what the system does and science is great at explaining what things do but with consciousness we've got this whole different aspect of how it feels we subjectively experience it from the inside and you can imagine taking this whole story about inputs hitting the eye and getting passed up the optic nerve to the brain patterns of neurons firing in the visual cortex affect other areas of the brain eventually frontal cortex leads to action but that still leaves open the question why does all that feel like something why do why is there something it's like to be you undergoing that and you could raise that quite you could program all those neural firings into a into a robot into a computer with all those patterns producing all this behavior but would it actually feel like something from the inside i mean maybe it would i'm not saying it wouldn't in a robot but that is the mystery how does all that all those mural firing somehow turn into how does the uh you know the water of neural firings in the brain turn into the wine of consciousness that's interesting that's a great way to put it okay so let's explore that so i heard you say in an interview that there was a period in your career where you were being a good boy of science and you were looking at this from a materialistic standpoint meaning matter things we can touch understand and that you said like every day you were coming up with a new sort of physical explanation for how we get consciousness but that ultimately you threw all of those away and i don't know if you would still use the word dualism but that you end up at least at one point in your life feeling like we have to separate or at least explore that there may be a separation between the physical realities of the brain and this sort of how do we explain the water into wine moment of consciousness walk me through what were some of the physical explanations that you had and why did you discard them oh yeah i had so many theories of consciousness when i was first starting to think about this stuff i certainly wanted to be like a materialist or a physicalist let's explain everything ultimately in terms of matter in terms of physics i don't know i had my theory of of abstractions that consciousness was just going to be an abstraction from from complicated information processing in the brain i had my theory of information it's just all about the information which is encoded and when the information looks at other information in this self-reflective way maybe that gives you consciousness but basically every for every explanation like this it always looked like it had this little uh huge mystery in the middle like the arrow that says here's where a miracle occurs where all this information processing somehow gives you consciousness where these abstractions somehow give you the basic elements of consciousness and that part always just seemed to be like this fundamental mystery and i came to think that all you were ever going to get from a purely physical explanation was basically you know the structure and dynamics of the physical system how a system is structured what it does and that is perfect for explaining almost everything in science like you know biology you want to explain life you explain reproduction and metabolism adaptation all these things the system does and you've explained life but for consciousness we have this extra thing that needs explaining after handling all those easy problems you know the uh the walking the talking the behavior why is all that accompanied by subjective experience and eventually it just came to seem to me that to explain that you needed to go beyond the resources say of the physics this is not unheard of in science you know um in the 19th century maxwell was trying to explain electromagnetism and it turns out you could just couldn't do it using newton's theories of space and time and mass and laws of motion and laws of gravitation and so it just didn't give you a theory of electromagnetism what maxwell ended up doing was saying okay we have to take electric charge as fundamental and we have to develop some fundamental laws of electric charge and that's basically that's how we came up with maxwell's laws of electromagnetism regarded then at least as fundamental laws of nature so my view is what we have to do for consciousness is something akin to what maxwell did for uh for charge treat consciousness as a fundamental property in nature and search for the fundamental laws that govern it so that that thing which i said was where a miracle occurs going from say physical processing to consciousness let's find a fundamental law that tells you how it is that consciousness arises from physical systems and that's why it sounds a little bit like dualism because i want to say that there's you know there's physics at least as we understand it now and there's consciousness and consciousness is an additional fundamental it's not a dualism of spooky souls no life after death at least comes in comes indirectly on this way of thinking about things but it does say consciousness is a fundamental property of these systems which is not reducible to its physical properties philosophers sometimes call that property dualism for a much weaker i sometimes thought naturalistic dualism a kind of a scientific dualism where we can have a science of consciousness we have to admit consciousness as fundamental this episode is sponsored by future go to try future dot co slash impact to get your first month for only you can also click the link at the top of the episode description now enjoy the episode all right that's really intriguing to me i don't know that it answers all of my naive questions so let me go through some of them here so okay if we um if we take in consciousness as a fundamental law of nature what then are the and i don't i think there's relatively few of them what would the fundamental laws of um nature be then so we have electromagnetism gravity consciousness what's what's the the grab bag here yeah it's a good question so one way that you know consciousness could be added to all this is via some separate laws some separate i've sometimes called them psychophysical laws for you know for mind physical for physical basically physical to mental laws maybe the best example of this right now is a framework that's been developed by the neuroscientist giulio tanoni where he basically connects consciousness to a measure of what he calls integrated information in the brain he says when you have he's got a certain mathematical definition of integrated information that any physical system and says basically when you have low integrated information low consciousness high integrated information high consciousness he actually gives us a label phi so consciousness is hi-fi now the old version of me might have said okay why does all this hi-fi give you consciousness that looks like saying that's just where a miracle occurs but in this framework we say okay that's a fundamental law it's just a fundamental psychophysical law that where you have high integrated information you get consciousness of a certain type but on one way of understanding this that law just gets added to the laws of physics as like an extra law so you've got your brand unified theories in physics or the four fundamental forces or whatever it is walking through the four fundamental forces so that because what i want to wrap my head around is i heard you once list them out and it was really interesting to think of consciousness as part of that bag and i think if if we just list those out now with consciousness added that that gives us something to build on as we explore your ideas yeah well standardly you know we have um we have gravity uh the fundamental force of gravity we have the fundamental force of electromagnetism we have the strong and weak nuclear forces and then we have um you know we have basically quantum mechanics that provides a grand framework for all of these things to take place physicists very much hope there's going to be a brand unified theory that might unify all the forces and somehow unify quantum mechanics and gravity which that's the really hard part they call those theories of quantum gravity so they want a single unified theory underneath all those things but they don't have that right now they've unified some of the forces but no one's been able to unify everything but roughly you can think of it and forget the nuclear forces for now you think okay there's there's gravitation for the uh for the very large there's quantum mechanics for the very small there's electromagnetism for holding things together and then yeah and then there's consciousness for explaining how it is that these systems give you conscious experience and the way i've i've told it there can't it does kind of have the defect that consciousness sits outside those fundamental laws of physics it's not unified with them so a grander hope might be to actually find the grand unified theory that unifies consciousness with all of those things and people of people have been thinking about that maybe quantum mechanical theories of consciousness maybe some element of consciousness right down at the very basis of matter so those laws of physics will themselves govern consciousness directly but right now that's just super speculative that's somewhere we could hope to go maybe in 100 years the interesting thing for me though is understanding it in that way felt like a gateway to understanding how you're conceptualizing this so the first time i had somebody on the show to talk about pan psychism um incredibly bright woman i mean really really uh thoughtful and i couldn't help though like my mind just could not wrap around the idea that a rock has some you know i'll give it a spectrum but like that it falls on the spectrum of conscious because it's so different to how i perceive myself and so walk me through how do you make that leap of intuition into accepting that like the particles that make up the globe behind you or the you know the paper in those books that i see or a rock like how do you make the intuitive leap to saying that it there is some sense of experience to being those things yeah i'm not going to say it somehow it's obviously true that there's some bit of consciousness in everything and for me it's just one among a number of different speculative options but it does have the attraction of somehow potentially unifying consciousness with physics if it turns out to be some consciousness at the very basis of matter then consciousness could be unified the alternative is this more dualistic picture where there's physics and their consciousness and there's consciousness and those are separate so if you don't want you know electrons to be conscious and so on you might think consciousness just kicks in with complex organisms then you might want to go in that uh in that more dualistic way but the pan cyclist picture consciousness is everywhere does have many attractions and you know many cultures have actually found it quite intuitive if you uh you know look at various eastern cultures and indigenous cultures it's very common to think there's some element of consciousness in everything now it won't be consciousness like us it's not like a particle is thinking oh god i'm so bored whirring around that uh that atom just you know get me out of here they're not thinking they're probably not having emotions uh nothing like that but maybe just some tiny little precursor of of consciousness that somehow one when put together in these giant information processing systems can add up to uh to consciousness like ours people also talk about proto-consciousness maybe it's not full-scale full-scale consciousness you find in these primitive systems but just some primitive precursor to consciousness that we can't even imagine so as you think through that problem and you're discarding one after another sort of physical explanation of how this comes to be you push what i will say you're sort of pushing the axiomatic uh miracle down lower and just saying ah it's part of physics but as you do that because i don't think we're going to solve the hard problem of consciousness here today but it leads you to some incredibly fascinating places so as you push that down and and at least run the thought experiment of what if this were one of the fundamental forces how does that end up leading you to a hypothesis well i know that you're saying that you don't necessarily think that we're living in a simulation just that we can't rule it out so how does that idea lead you to this realization that we can't rule it out and then would love to hear more about how much like i have a t-shirt that says the matrix was a documentary and it's like i say it tongue-in-cheek i don't really believe it but um but there is so much truth to the human experience feeling like the matrix is the perfect metaphor for what it's like to actually be a human um so i'm curious as you push it down how does that bring about this sense of we have to think through the simulation theory yeah i mean you don't need to buy what i say about consciousness to buy into what i say about about the matrix or about simulations or vice versa i think you know they're somewhat independent of each other but that said there are also actually a lot of links between the ideas and one of the links you can actually find by going way back to uh to the 17th century french philosopher rene descartes um who asked how could i know anything about the reality around me how do i know i'm not dreaming right now how do i know that i'm not being fooled by an evil demon into thinking there's a reality out there when none of it is real and you know descartes said i know some things about myself i know uh that i'm here i know that i'm thinking i know that i'm conscious and he said yeah i think therefore i am i know that i exist and what they basically said is i can be sure of my consciousness at the very least that's the one thing in the world that's a data point that's a datum but it's much harder to be sure about the external world around me and he raised that problem by saying yeah how do i know i'm not dreaming not being fooled by an evil demon the way we raise that question today is to ask how do i know i'm not in a simulation how do i know i'm not in the matrix if i was i'd still be here conscious but the world around me would be utterly different from what i thought and i think actually what this has done is taken descartes old questions about maybe i'm dreaming maybe it's an evil maybe it's an evil demon it's actually turned into a live concrete possibility because this technology is actually now coming we can already build you know we can already build computer simulations of all sorts even simple cosmic simulations we can't yet build simulations indistinguishable from physical reality but give it time it's coming a few decades a century we'll have vr you know virtual reality systems indistinguishable from physical reality at that point we'll actually be able to put people into uh into simulations that are like descartes scenario indistinguishable from physical reality and at that point we can start asking how do we know this isn't happening to us already right now might we've been in a simulation like that all along all right so let's start getting into it's a really it's a really interesting question and as you begin to peel back the layers you you and you do this very well in your book you talk about the different types of potential simulations so we have a perfect simulation and an imperfect simulation walk us through those uh differences i think that will help people begin to answer that question for themselves yeah there are so many different ways you can be in you could be in a simulation you know in the uh in the matrix for example neo has a brain and a body that are biological but they're connected up to this computer simulation he's not himself part of the simulation but he's connected to it that's what i call a biosim a biological creature connected to a simulation by contrast in the movies the agents like you know agent smith or the oracle they're not biological creatures they are actually machines themselves they are creatures of the simulation is actually you know basically simulated processes themselves that's what i call pure sims so we've got like a pure impure simulation where we're brain's connected to a simulation that's one possibility but another one is we could be pure simulations we could be uh we could ourselves be simulated creatures connected to the uh to the simulation i think both of those are open possibilities you can also distinguish between like a perfect simulation which mirrors say the world it's simulating perfectly an imperfect one which is going to be glitchy and have approximations and shortcuts maybe it's super expensive and difficult to build really precise simulations of physics throughout the whole universe so our simulators are going to take shortcuts and make approximations and every now and then they'll get things wrong i guess in the matrix they had those black cats that those cats that crossed your path twice and that was a sign of glitch in the matrix maybe our simulators are actually approximating physical laws and if we start making measurements which are close enough we'll be able to pick up on glitches that'll be possible if we're in an imperfect simulation we might be able to get evidence of that and i think that's worth looking for on the other hand if we're in a perfect simulation we'll probably never get evidence of that because a perfect simulation is designed by its nature to be indistinguishable from the world it's simulating so one thing that a lot of this hinges on there's really two things so one information theory and i would love to hear more about that and why more and more credible people are saying hey it might be that as we dive deeper into physics we find that this is really just information and so what that means exactly and then the the notion that the odds are if simulations exist and we know they do because we're already building virtual realities now then ultimately there would be more simulated people and environments than there would be real environments so just playing the stats we're probably in a simulation so if you can walk us through those two ideas and and how they connect i think they'll be really helpful sure yeah let me go with the uh the stats first because this is an interesting argument that comes from the philosopher nick bostrom and also the yeah the robotic system futurist hans moravec basically put forward this idea that eventually there are going to be a whole lot of simulations of simulated universes we've already got primitive simulations in video games in vr and so on given enough time we'll be able to actually simulate um whole physical universes we'll be able to simulate human beings probably will get to the point where every intelligent civilization is going to have the capacity to create these simulations of intelligent beings maybe they'll actually create hundreds thousands millions of simulated worlds each then you start to think boy well what are the statistics here there's gonna be like one unsimulated world that could be millions of simulated worlds for every simulated being there could be hundreds thousands who knows how many beings with very similar conscious experiences and it's going to seem just the same to the simulated beings so then you start out to ask what are the odds that i am one of those lucky ones ground zero based reality unsimulated when there are you know hundreds thousands of beings just like me who are simulated and then you start to that's what gets you to the conclusion starts to look like maybe very very good odds that were simulated now things can that does require some assumptions for example it does require the assumption that a simulated being can be conscious now as we've said we don't fully understand consciousness so this is going to be a controversial part of the argument if you think a simulated being can't be conscious then we'll be able to then the very fact that we're conscious will rule up rule out the idea that we're in our simulation at least as a pure simulation we could still be like the biosim like neo because remember neo was just a brain not a simulation so it gets it gets complicated um you know there's a few ways or you could say that uh you know these civilizations aren't actually going to create simulations because they might decide it's a bad idea so there's a few ways this could go wrong but for me thinking through it statistically is enough for me to take this hypothesis really very seriously in the end i think i i'm at least 50 percent that simulations like this are going to be possible and i'm at least 50 that if they're possible a whole lot of them will eventually be created that ends up giving me like 25 probability that uh that there actually will be many more stimulations simulated being beings all of whom are conscious and once i'm there i'm like okay that's at least a 25 chance that i'm simulated that's so fascinating to me now so as we drill down into that and start because when this is all just sort of drunken frat talk it's it's mildly interesting but as we get into the ways in which it seems that it may be real that underlying all of physics is information theory then then it's like okay well wait a second now we really can't rule this out so what is information theory and what could we do now to either prove or disprove that it's true yeah this is really interesting um you know this kind of connects to how people think of the simulation hypothesis and the idea that the world is simulated if you follow renee descartes he thought that these scenarios where he's dreaming where there's an evil demon he thought if we're in that kind of scenario none of this is real and it's the same with the matrix a lot of people say even in the movies they say if we're in the matrix nothing is real the world around us is an illusion i actually want to resist that i want to say that if we're in a simulation the world around us is still perfectly real when we see tables and chairs and trees and mountains they're still perfectly real objects they'll be digital objects underneath it all but that doesn't mean they're not real they're real digital entities can you take a second to define real yeah you know i mean real is uh one of those ambiguous words but i've got a few different criteria for being real one is that to be real you have to have causal powers you make a difference in the world if something can affect things then it's real second it's got to be outside of our minds if something is just a dream generated by our minds and we don't usually count it as real and as strong a sense so it's got to be independent of our minds and third maybe the most important to be real um we care that something is not an illusion that is that things are roughly the way that they seem and what i want to argue is if we're in a simulation then there are still going to be digital entities in the simulation say i see a uh a tree and i'm actually in the matrix i'm going to say well there is actually a digital tree out there somewhere in the computer which is making a difference to me making a difference to other things in the matrix so it has causal powers it's independent of me i could leave the matrix the tree will still be there and i want to argue it's not an illusion there really is a tree there it's made of bits it's a digital tree but i want to say that's still a way of being real and this is where you get the connection to these information theory ideas like the so-called it from bit hypothesis and the physicist john wheeler speculated that underneath everything in physical theory you know we're used to the idea that under you know plants and trees are made of cells cells are made of molecules made of atoms made of quarks wheeler speculated that underneath all that you know maybe quarks are somehow made of bits so we've got a level of bits ones and zeros in effect a physics of ones and zeros underlying the physics that uh that we know and this is a controversial idea about real physics but it's one that some people have taken seriously um stephen wolfram has written these big books like a new kind of science spelling out one version of this kind of it from bit physics and if you take that idea seriously then you realize that being made of bits being digital is not a way of being unreal it's just another hypothesis about what reality is made of so what i want to say is if we're in a simulation then we shouldn't say none of this is real instead we should say well we're in a it's from bit universe we're in a universe where the objects around us are actually digital objects made of bit made of bits but they're still real they have causal powers they're out there independent of us and they needn't be an illusion so i want to say basically the simulation hypothesis is a version of the it from bit hypothesis do you ever drive yourself crazy um with the idea that you're really just pushing the miracle uh lower or deeper or however you want to think about it because here is an idea that that drives me crazy so as you're explaining that i'm like oh my god yeah like this makes so much sense like there's bits and then i'm like but wait where did the bits come from and then it's like okay there there was a creator and you've said many times you know and god said let there be bits but then i'm like where's god like where does this come from and there's always some moment where i have to say yeah i just don't know like there there's some axiomatic sort of ground floor base assumption and we build up from that and so i'm curious what is your like bass bass bass assumption is it simulations all the way down is it like if we get to the ground zero that you're talking about before the one sort of real world where'd that come from it's a great question then yeah i don't have a definitive answer to this there's like all kinds of different hypotheses about what the ground floor is one idea is that you know bits are the basic level of reality that's the pure it from bit hypothesis but even in that moment you get to like uh they've always existed like it does that not just like fry your brain you've got to take something as fundamental though this is this already kind of fries your brain one of the basic questions in philosophy why is there something rather than nothing why is there anything in the universe and it just looks like some things you have to take as fundamental properties and fundamental laws and that's not wholly satisfying it kind of looks like it's the best we can do so at least for now we can speculate about what that fundamental level is maybe it's bits but yeah if the bits are running on a simulation then there's probably something underneath the bits just as in our computers bits are made up out of you know voltages in a transistor or something if we're in a simulation probably these bits are running on some computer in the next universe up that may have you know transistors of its own or some completely different physics i call that the it from bit from it hypothesis because the bits are made of something else of course in that universe maybe it's a simulation too maybe maybe the its are made of bits yes we get it from bit from it from bit from it maybe we're three universes down or five universes down or 42 universes down but yeah that does just push all the questions back to presumably there's a base reality i mean could it be simulations all the way up i don't know if that makes sense maybe but i mean certainly as a thought experiment it makes sense but you run into the same problem which is like you said at some point you have to accept something as as foundational um and it's you know really just a question of where do you accept that and information theory is interesting to me for one reason that i've heard you talk about and i'd love to get your sense of if this really is information theory it feels like then i can keep going keep going keep going until i find like that the data structure and and maybe this is just not a a wise way to think about it but for me and so as a storyteller i'm obsessed with this idea in fact this this character right here is a character that i created that lives in a virtual world and but he is both in the he can basically pop in and out of the matrix if you will um and what becomes interesting to me is when we get to the point where we're we have these simulations that are just indistinguishable from reality and let's say that we're living in one now that you can get to the point where you get to the base code and if you can alter the base code then you can essentially alter physics and you know i mean maybe this is just a superhero fantasy on my part but that to me is really interesting and so when i look at our world and i think of all the things that we've already been able to do and manipulate and change because we've gotten to some layer of the code right so like when i think about satellites and how most people don't realize gps wouldn't work without einstein's theory of relativity and just by understanding that we've been able to create these things that give us like pinpoint accuracy to where we are and they can lead us to our destination i mean it's already like physics has already transformed our worlds in ways that most of us take completely for granted so anyway i get super interested in this idea of hey if we keep digging like we can ultimately get to you know whether it's dark matter or whatever we get to that thing that we don't yet understand that if we can start either leveraging its predictions like we did with relativity or actually manipulating that structure that we can escape the matrix or we can manipulate the matrix even if we can't get out of it because we are of the matrix um that to me is incredibly interesting have you thought through that do you have any um ideas around that yeah you know one way to kind of make this concrete is that well actually whenever we create a virtual world even like a in a video game um you know whoever creates the virtual world is in effect the god of that video game they they're all powerful like in principle can reset anything they can be a they can be all-knowing they can know everything that's going on they created it so it's like they're the god of the video games and you can give yourself if you actually write the video game yourself you can give yourself super powers you know you can teleport anywhere you can see whatever's going on you can build new structures just like that you can change the rules you can change the laws so yeah then you start thinking well if we're in a simulation there's someone up there that has this kind of power over our reality a kind of power not that different in some ways from those of a uh from those of a traditional god and then yeah then you start to think well could we get uh could we get access to that i mean i guess if it's a perfect simulation then it's going to be very hard for us to get access because if it's a perfect simulation it's going to be undetectable maybe there are things we can we can do to try and uh at least to perform some experiments for example maybe we can try and overload the simulation and see what happens see if we get any glitches maybe start running some simulations within the simulations and really put some load on their computers and see if see if something happens or at the very least maybe more effective we could try and communicate with them temp them into uh communicating with us i don't know maybe write some books on the simulation hypothesis and put forward to my policies about their nature and see if they get so infuriated by this that they reveal themselves in order to prove us wrong or sensitive communicating with them then yeah then maybe we can get access to the controls yeah that's where this gets at least as um you know i suppose my your thought experiments run the nature of um philosophy mine very much go into storytelling in a way i guess in some ways i'm talking back to myself to describe this human condition but to feel it in an emotional way but i find myself intrigued by that notion and i i don't know that i would have been intrigued had i you know been in descartes time so um you know certainly don't think i have any real insights but it is uh growing up in the technological age as this is all unfolding and as virtual worlds become a reality it does start to ask interesting questions of our humanity which i find really fascinating and so i'd love to talk about that so you you've gone into great detail about whether we can live a meaningful life inside of a virtual world and the one thing you said that really stopped me my tracks and i took a note on it and so i'm building a yeah i mean i guess it's a virtual world so building the same codename the avatar experience and within that your idea of life and death within a vr environment and at first i thought man that's like the one thing you'd want to stay away from it's like take advantage of what vr has to offer which is the exact opposite of that but then i i don't know something about when you said that i thought the loss is devastating but it also adds something incredibly poignant to life and while i personally want to live forever um it's an interesting mechanic to have death be available in even a virtual world so i don't know if you've thought a lot about as a builder what you would want to see and create or what questions you would want to dance with to be a little poetic um but what do you think about that yeah you know birth and death are obviously incredibly important parts of human life maybe the most important parts in some way and maybe they play some role in giving our lives the kinds of meaning that they have you know in that uh in that film children of men when there's no longer no longer any birth and it does kind of you get the sense of people's lives they're not meaningless but they've been robbed at least of one element of their meaning so when i think about yeah what's missing and what's potentially missing in virtual worlds i mean at least in any virtual world we'll have in the near-term future yeah birth and death happens in the physical world whenever someone's born they're born in the physical world when they die they die in the physical world maybe they can enter and exit virtual worlds in association with this but it's not really where the birth and death occurs maybe in the long run once they're actually simulated beings simulated humans maybe they'll be beings which are actually born inside the matrix maybe you simulate pregnancy simulate the development of the fetus eventually have a simulated birth and you'll have a creatures which are born in the matrix and likewise creatures that uh that die and the uh die in a virtual world too without remembering like the machines we talked about they never had to be biological they were purely purely simulated so maybe eventually that kind of birth and death could be possible but at least until then it looks like yeah certain things tides are tied so deeply to our biology that it's hard to get it's hard to get their analog in the inside of virtual world until you move to the long-term future where all of all the physics and all of biology is exist within a simulation you know this makes me think so going back to the first thing we were talking about with consciousness being a fundamental law does it not seem like consciousness would be an outcropping of evolution because when i think about what my consciousness actually does for me so i think a lot about directives that nature has implanted in our brains i think a lot about how if you damage the emotional centers of the brains people find it impossible to make a decision and so there is a sense of like consciousness is fundamental at least in my interpretation to future planning to desire to thinking about what i want and making sure that i want it and to making sure that like oh man it hurts if i don't get it and all of that requires like this sense of self-awareness now i have a feeling you're going to take us into zombieland here which is probably the right thing to discuss but it seems like self-awareness and i will intentionally use a slightly different word than consciousness but that self-awareness becomes a pretty important part of the journey of accomplishment yes self-consciousness is super important i like to distinguish ordinary consciousness from self-consciousness you know ordinary consciousness involves being just aware of things in the world around us maybe uh in perceptual consciousness i see things i hear things and there's something it's like for me to see things and hear things i've got the subjective experience of seeing and and hearing or feeling pain that i don't think needs to involve consciousness in myself that can just involve consciousness of the things around me but there is a special kind of consciousness we have which is consciousness of ourselves i mean i don't know whether maybe fish for example i don't know maybe a fish has some consciousness of the uh the of the water around it or the fish maybe it's conscious of itself maybe it's not but humans we are paradigmatically the self-conscious species we're conscious of ourselves we can reflect on our own existence we can think about our own consciousness and that is really special i think i mean it's one aspect of consciousness but a particularly complex and crucial aspect of consciousness and it does look like our self-consciousness is tied to many things that we uh that we do but it is an interesting question for anything that you think consciousness does you mentioned zombies so yeah for almost anything for people anything that you want consciousness to do we always say couldn't you do that in principle without consciousness so if it's just seeing and getting visual information couldn't a robot do that without consciousness or maybe um something which i use self-consciousness to do to make plans make decisions reflect on my life couldn't in principle there'd be say a robotic version of me that went through all this with no subjective experience so this gets us to yeah the philosopher's zombie uh which is basically a creature which at least acts a great deal like a human being and behaves very similarly maybe is made up of similar processes but that lacks consciousness entirely so there's nothing it's like to be a zombie on the inside everything is dark no consciousness and most people don't think that zombies actually exist i don't think there are any zombies out there but it's a great way of posing the philosophical problems of consciousness i mean you can pose the hard problem of consciousness by saying why aren't we zombies why couldn't we have been creatures that did all this stuff without consciousness we're not we're conscious but why and it's also a way of raising this question of what does consciousness actually do for us yeah why in principle couldn't a zombie have had all this kind of these reflective processes that led to guiding its action in all these ways without any subjective experience at all have you set a goal to work out more but don't know which exercises to start with future is here to help future is a new fitness app that connects you with an online personal trainer who will send you workouts each week monitor your performance and message you to keep you motivated if you don't already have one future will send you an apple watch to borrow for the duration of your membership which is amazing and your trainer will use that to monitor your progress tracking your heart rate and activity data while you work out your phone your watch and your trainer all work seamlessly together so if you want a workout plan that's built for you not the masses that will keep you focused and motivated then go to try future dot co slash impact to try your first month for just 19 that's cheaper than most gym memberships once again go to try future dot co slash impact to try your first month for just you can also click the link at the top of the episode description all right guys take care and be legendary i think there might be some elements of the the actual natural world that give us clues maybe worth exploring here so there's a parasite called toxo something i'm forgetting the exact name but basically cats get this parasite that can be passed on to humans but it can also be passed on to mice so the the toxo parasite prefers to um it can do asexual replication or it can do sexual uh replication and it prefers to do sexual replication but it can only do that in the digestive tract of a cat so what it does is it goes and infects mice or rats and makes them drawn to the scent of cat urine and completely unafraid of cats so if you were to take a newborn rat pup and expose it to the scent of cat urine it gets terrified so it's not it's instinctual so you can inject them or infect them with this um this parasite and it will suddenly be drawn to the scent of cat urine and then the cat eats the the rat or the mouse it then is able to uh replicate sexually within its intestines now there's also so to me that's like a zombie-like behavior right you have taken control of a very specific part of the rat brain to get it to do and change its own behavior then there's a fungus if i remember right that like will uh bore into the head of like a wasp i can't remember how it happens but anyway the either the wasp does it to a an ant or something and you get these totally zombified creatures that like just you know begin to locomote and i forget the exact behavior that they manifest but they are totally gone right like all the instinctual drives they have are taken over by this fungus or whatever and what that tells me is that there are regions in the brain and just like you can knock somebody you can remove their consciousness with i won't even say sleep because you know dreams and you still have a sense of passage of time but if you put somebody under general anesthetic they're they're gone like there is no sense of them you can damage someone's brain in the sense of them goes away so what do you take away from those things the fact that i can go into the brain do things and completely change your experience yeah well the brain is vulnerable to all kinds of manipulation i mean you know what you're describing is not so different in some ways from let's say the the facebook algorithm get it gets in there and gets control of some bits of our brain and it knows what we're going to like and what we're going to react to and yeah we're just going to click on those things and uh it's as if um yep they've got into our brain does some things very predictably if you get a hold of it in the right way and that's what social media for example is trying to game all the time maybe when people maybe if there's there are simulators out there maybe they're performing these experiments on us all the time as well but yeah brain the brain is a deeply complex machine and some things it does are conscious um some of our activities are conscious highly voluntary things but a whole lot of what the brain does that isn't conscious at all it just happens unconsciously reflexively whether it's uh whether it's just you know breathing or somehow where we choose to uh to navigate decisions are often unconscious so yeah it's totally possible in principle to get control of those bits of the brain and manipulate them once we've got you know brain computer interfaces it's going to be uh our brains are going to be potentially vulnerable to uh to all kinds of manipulation there so i think i mean this is kind of to be expected if consciousness is just the tip of the iceberg and so much of what we do is unconscious i mean our consciousness can be manipulated too there are neuro there are areas of the brain people call them the neural correlates of consciousness that go along with consciousness if people found ways to directly manipulate those i mean what do drugs do all kinds of drugs manipulate those areas of the brain and they produce amazing transformations in conscious experience so yeah i think the more we understand the connection between brain and consciousness the more capacities we're going to find for both manipulation and transformation of consciousness so knowing all of that and having thought through all of that does that adjust your model in any way about how you think about um pan psychism or the fundamental nature of consciousness and do you like i've said a couple times that it's a scale but is is that the right way to think about it um yeah i think yeah there's a huge it's not even like a monodimensional scale there's a huge space of states of consciousness which are orderable in so many different ways from the simple to the complex from the less intense to the more intense from most couple of sensory modalities to many sensory modalities so yeah i think it's a massive space of states of consciousness and one of the big projects in this area is to map those states of consciousness onto states of the brain this is like neural correlates of consciousness in the brain and find those dimensions of processing in the brain that map onto dimensions of consciousness and this is kind of the meat and potatoes of the science of consciousness right now which has been you know super active now for the last 30 years or so ever since i started getting into this field the science of consciousness has gone ahead by leaps and bounds and what it's been trying to do is to it doesn't really try and solve the hard problem instead what it tries to do is to find mappings correlations between aspects of processing in the brain and aspects of consciousness and yeah it's still it's still primitive and developing in some ways but at least in some cases we find things we can understand so for example we know there are certain areas of the brain that seem to go along with spatial processing as other areas go along with action people have used this to actually communicate with patients who they thought were in some kind of postcoma state where they couldn't communicate maybe you thought someone was in a vegetative state but then you asked them imagine playing tennis and then they imagine an action imagine walking through your house they imagine something spatial and you'll see different areas of their brain light up and people take that as pretty strong evidence that hey these people are conscious in different ways and then they're going to use that for communication thrilling and heartbreaking so the thought that they're have you seen or read the book the diving bell and the butterfly yeah oh my god like the the whole idea of being locked in he could blink one eye and that he had was completely there mentally for anybody that doesn't know it completely their mental he has a stroke or something completely there mentally but cannot move any part of his body except for one of his eyes and that idea i had heard about that the playing tennis the move through your house thing and if i'm not mistaken they would they could ask them effectively like yes or no questions by saying okay imagine someone playing tennis for yes imagine walking through your house for no and and now we ask you all these ques and i was like oh my god like the number of people that there's no external sign that they're there but they're still there like when you talked about the electron being bored out of its mind i can't fathom like that is so terrifying the thought that you're still there but you can't communicate anything just imagine that guy in the diving bell on the butterfly but without the control over the one eye i've asked people a few times actually like do we have reason to believe there are people out there with this locked in syndrome totally undamaged brain functioning but just no sign of it because how would we know people say oh no it doesn't happen because the eyes are independent but you do get these things which are close like i mean these patients with like the one diagnosed with vegetative state where they did the brain imaging for the tennis and the house i mean it wasn't quite the same as normal locked in syndrome because there was some brain damage in those cases but still it's on a continuum with this and this was a patient it just didn't show up at all in their behavior and i think it's at least possible there are some patients out there for whom nothing no visible signs in their behavior not even the eyelid but who are actually richly conscious the way that uh you know the way that we are or the way that the guy in the diving bell on the butterfly is and yeah that is absolutely tragic and i think maybe the science of consciousness can develop ways to help us find those people who man i know it's to the side of our conversation but uh that is very very scary to me i woke up once in the middle of a dental i was having my wisdom teeth removed and i woke up in the middle of it and i was just like yo i'm awake i'm awake awake and then they you know and you just drift away again but you hear about those stories of people that don't lose consciousness during surgery yo like that that is uh that's not ideal david that is not ideal yeah it's not great especially once you once you realize that for a long time i think at least anesthetics consisted of of uh three components uh paralytic to paralyze your body and analgesic to remove the pain and then also an amnestic to remove your memory afterwards and so you just say one of these things doesn't work so well so you're you're still somehow awake um well okay there's going to be amnestics you don't remember it afterwards but was that was that reassuring maybe you're awake for the whole uh the whole operation oh my god i found that yeah very people now say they have better anesthetics and they have got they've developed people actually but the scales of consciousness they use for anesthesia are still quite primitive and they're trying to develop better scales but this is a place where the science of consciousness has to get better to help us actually properly remove states of consciousness and anesthesia because yeah anesthetists they remove and restore consciousness for a living they're like consciousness engineers what's fascinating to me is that a redhead i guess is harder to anesthetize than any other hair color that seems so such a bizarre correlation have they figured out the explanation of that not that i've heard but um the fact that that there would be any sort of physical um correlation to something like that i find extremely strange but yeah that's uh that's very interesting to me now one idea that you talk about in the book that i wanted to um go to is zhuangzi and the idea of whether or not i'm dreaming or whether i'm i'm the butterfly dreaming that i'm juansa like that to me is this like first of all juan's uh was god knows how long ago um and 100 bc right so just a few days ago what what is it do you think that makes people like this is the question that everybody asks over and over what is it about that question of whether or not i'm dreaming is this all real why why is it why are we obsessed with it and why is it important enough to answer because yeah we want to understand reality and we want to be in touch with reality boy the fact that we dream every night that really kind of makes this real for us it's like every night we go to these massive hallucinations where we're in a different world and suddenly you realize why could this be a dream too and if it is then we kind of feel like none of this is real my life is maybe meaningless and so on i'm just i thought that everything was one way and actually it's a it's another way boy it was the first line of lines of bohemian rhapsody by queen is this the real life or is it just fantasy desperately want all this to be real i think it's the human every ancient philosophical tradition has versions of this question we had in chinese philosophy we had drungja and the butterfly and ancient greek philosophy we had plato with his allegory of the cave could we just be chained up inside a cave seeing shadows on the cave wall while the genuine reality is outside everybody wants to be in touch with reality i'm gonna give you a hypothesis on why i think this matters so much and it quite frankly is i say it's my life work i might say this is my like the very thing that i'm trying to convey to the world so first of all i'm always saying you're having a biological experience the reason i want people to understand that is because you get trapped by your biology and you mistake it for objective truth so you have an emotion which is really just neurochemistry and that neurochemistry is triggered by your beliefs about the situation um versus the sort of i mean to quote shakespeare nothing is either good or bad but thinking makes it so so it's like whatever happened is neutral but you assign good or bad to it and so what i want people to understand is that you have a frame of reference and that frame of reference is you live in a house full of fun house mirrors now if you've ever been in a room where it is nothing but mirrors it is wildly disorienting like you cannot tell what's real like am i about to like you can literally bash into something because you're looking deeply into the mirror and you think it's far away but it actually isn't and so you smack into it and now if these mirrors have distortions in them which make you see things not in the way that they actually are it can be really disorienting now as an analogy or a metaphor for the way that your brain works i would say that's pretty accurate like over time based on your hard wiring based on the experiences that you have in life whether you've suffered trauma whatever you begin to form this view of yourself and the world that is distorted for good or bad or neutral but it's distorted and when because i know juanzo was a taoist and the whole taoist philosophy is like unwinding that frame of reference and being able to get outside of it and recognize you know the dao that can be named is not the eternal dao it's like the mere act of trying to enunciate something it will fall through your fingers and when you step outside of it a little bit and you realize oh my god i'm creating my own problems the way i think about this is the issue versus the actual thing i imagine at that point that leads you to this like bigger and bigger like how far does this frame of reference go down to where you get into physics and you know what i was saying earlier about if you really understand fundamental physics you can alter things in ways that you otherwise would not be able to do it becomes this really compelling idea of if i fully grasp how all of this works if i fully understand how much of what i perceive as objective truth is actually a dream then i can better navigate the world because i better understand how things actually work does that ring true to you as the thing that sort of drives this like i really need to know that's interesting yeah i mean i think much of what we what we experience as external reality is i think actually it's a complicated dance between say an external physical world and our own consciousness and consciousness does so much to construct our experience of the external world and some of it is imposed by top-down constraints consciousness has its own model of the world that it fits everything into it colors things in even though there are maybe no colors out there and external reality it puts everything into this night nice neat euclidean space even though that might be not how it is in external reality basically you know consciousness is what gives all of this you've got atoms in the void and consciousness somehow gives it meaning and so much about i think our pre-theoretical model of the world is just this mix of the two and that's what leads some people to say could this all be my consciousness could this just be a dream could it just come from me and i think there's actually good reason to think there's something outside our consciousness maybe it's physics maybe it's a simulation and so on but then we want to kind of tease those factors apart there's what we bring to reality and there's what the world brings to reality and you can think of say physics as an attempt to uh to do that pull consciousness out of the world when you know galileo or whoever founded you know modern science it's like okay well let's take the mind out of reality turn reality into this complicated system of equations and then have consciousness at the middle of it but still there's this always this sense how much of the world is us and how much of it is out there independent of us and the other simulation idea i don't know i think for some people it's a way of saying ah actually it's just this conscious reality that i that i constructed that i created and the rest is just a simulation myself i think it's the wrong attitude towards simulations if there's a simulation out there well that is our reality and that's outside our mind so let's treat that as reality too but either way there's a conscious being here in the middle at the core of it and we're always trying at least to get outside of ourselves [Music] talk to me about the experience machine and the idea that life i think that we all have or most of us that an intuitive sense that if the life that i led is not based on truth that it makes it worse and an example i've heard you talk about before and i think may be the perfect example is let's say that i live so i've been married for almost 20 years let's say that we're married for 80 years and then my wife dies only for me to then discover that she's been cheating on me the whole time at least until the later years would i be better off knowing or not knowing would you be better off knowing or not knowing here's one thing one contrast is would just say you have the same experiences either way but in one situation your wife has been cheating on you and in the other situation she hasn't she's been faithful the whole time and let's say this is a monogamous relationship you know you want her to be faithful and she said that she will be then i'd say that it's better for you than if she's been faithful that if she'd been unfaithful even if you never knew that she was unfaithful because we value the world being a certain way in this case by assumption you value your wife's being faithful and if she's not then the world is not the way that you want it to be even though you never get any evidence of this and i think i would use this to argue that part of what matters is how things feel for us but we also value how things are outside of us in this case you know you value you care what your wife does even when it makes no direct difference to you and some people have used this to argue that uh virtual reality is somehow going to be uh less good than ordinary reality robert nozick had this example of the experience machine which is this uh this machine that you get put in that gives you all these wonderful experiences of winning the world championship and having amazing family and friends even though none of it is really happening and then he said would you choose to step in the experience machine and nazi said well i wouldn't do that no way and he you even though you have all these amazing experiences and he used that to argue that shows again that we care about more than our experiences we care about what's outside us and some people use that to say that's what's wrong with vr vr will give you all these experiences of an ordinary life but none of it will be real that's where i want to get off the boat though i want to say in vr it's not really like these cases in vr you actually are interacting with a real digital world you get to make free choices you get to build your life you get to build relationships and so on i think those things actually are are real so i want to argue that you can have a maybe you can't have a meaningful life in the experience machine i do want to think you can have an experience a meaningful life in vr because what happens in vr is real it's not scripted it's not pre-programmed this is this is a you can actually build your own life in vr all right let's say the experience machine was real and it's not a binary choice living it forever or not it's like uh for an hour on a friday night pop into the experience machine and you can you know win the championship would you do it is it kind of a guarantee that i'm going to win the championship or do i have to actually it it is 100 that you will feel the full neurochemical experience of winning the championship you know i might do it for fun as escapism it might be an enjoyable experience like yeah i'll watch the karate kid or some movie where the kid does well so maybe it's even better when you get to experience in the first person point of view but for me that would be escapism but contrast it with a different case where i get to go into vr with 100 other people and we actually have a genuine competition and one of us actually wins and the other ones lose depending on on how it actually goes and maybe on one occasion i actually win then i'd say that was real and that was in principle just as meaningful as a corresponding thing happening in the physical world because yeah there was no guaranteed outcome i had to struggle this wasn't it just doesn't need to be escapism and i think vr is more like that than it is like the experience machine that's a really interesting distinction and what i find really fascinating so to me the experience machine is exactly like doing drugs where i could go in and i can feel the neurochemistry that i want to feel this is amazing oh my god and some people will for sure get addicted to it and they will live in it to the detriment of everything else in their life and it will be a total calamity as they wither away into nothingness chasing that next dopamine high but i would definitely do it just not very often i would be very careful about how much time i spent doing that but to your point about going in and actually competing um that would be a lot of fun and so and i i feel very confident in my answer because that's already how i structure my life i rarely do drugs and when i do they are not extreme and i definitely enjoy competing in games um video games specifically like that's a lot of fun but those are two very different things to me and they trigger a different sense of like craving because when i think about doing drugs i'm like ah like there's something about it that's like one there's a physical risk to it which is a big part of why i don't do it but even setting that aside if there were no physical problems to it it still feels like a cheat if you will and so um for instance i have never once ever had a drink alone to me it's got to work double duty it's got to be like also bonding with somebody that i care about i'm the same yeah drinking is great socially exactly so but i could see where that would simultaneously be this amazing thing that i would be very glad exists like i always tell people when it comes to drinking i feel like i'm suppressing the urge to dance on a table like it is just a wonderful feeling but i rarely do it um that would be the experience machine for me but then going out and doing hard things to get better and to compete and to know that i might lose that is far more interesting yeah i mean experiences are great and so i think it's okay to have just value experiences for their own sake and drugs can give you amazing experiences we've got this special kind of value for what goes on outside our experience and if yeah all we valued was our experience then you get into this very narcissistic world where you potentially lose contact with reality but you know you could live your life in potentially in a virtual world how about a we've so far we've had drugs and we've had games but how about i don't know you go into vr and you have a great conversation maybe with a maybe you you move your work into vr and you have a great conversation with a guest for your uh for your podcast and then i think you know this can be just as meaningful as having a conversation in the physical world is or intermediate cases like this one where we're doing it doing it over zoom i don't think it makes a big difference to the meaningfulness of the conversation if it happens in physical reality or in virtual reality i mean there are some differences but an interaction between two people is just as real either way and yet social interaction interacting with these two people this is one of the primary ways that we get outside our own consciousness because we really value making contact with another person's consciousness as we're doing right now that's a really good point i like that we do value that and when i think about the most valuable thing in my life which is unquestionably my wife i said to her the other day this is probably only a week ago i was like do you ever have like this just really weird moment of realizing that you and i are two totally separate people but we have decided to live our lives like completely in sync like every now because i've been with her for so long now i'm oh i'm 45 i've been with her for 22 years so we're like coming up on that point where i've been with her for longer than i've been without her which is surreal to think and certainly when you factor that the amount of my life that i've sort of been consciously aware of which is you know maybe seven or eight or you know six i guess is probably my earliest memory um we're really getting close so it's in in many ways like we're completely connected and yet there is this part of what makes her so important to me is like you said it's outside of me and getting that like connection and feedback from someone else which as a you know you're having a biological experience so understanding myself in sort of evolutionary context of nature had to make sure that i was drawn to a mate that i was drawn to being a part of a group to make sure that i survive it's no wonder but it's still experientially it's really pretty um amazing but then to put a little twist on that gpt where do you think one tell people what that is and where does this go and does it break any of these mechanisms or does it make it better boy yeah so gpt-3 is this amazing new artificial intelligence model that's basically trained on a whole lot of language from all over the uh the internet and then it can basically given any string of text that can continue that text and to turn it into plausible text often into plausible conversations so yeah at one point when gpt3 was first released somebody trained gbt3 on a bunch of stuff that i'd written uh some interviews with me or something and then they said okay now we're going to produce an interview with david charmers and they asked it questions it gave answers things i'd never said before but a lot of people read this and they said yeah that kind of sounded like you some people thought it uh some people thought it was me whereas it wasn't it was just a deep fake version of me yeah we've all seen already these deep fake photos and videos you get a politician obama or trump or whatever and saying something they never said by manipulating a video well now we're finding people can do this with conversation and pretty soon we're going to have like deep fake vr where all of this is produced that way yeah i guess it raises the question could it be that you know your wife who you spent all this time with was a was actually a deep fake deep fake vr from the beginning put into the simulators to manipulate you or you remember the truman show where but truman you know it turns out it was just an actress and and so on all these years i don't know if you found out your wife had just been a actress or a deep fake all these years how'd you feel about it devastating that that would be devastating devastating david i can't like it makes me that would i would become a philosopher at that point because i would need to understand like why that would be so upsetting but that would be upsetting like i know it intuitively how devastating that would be uh but i don't fully understand like i wouldn't be able to articulate why but oh my god that would be devastating i think again you wonder you want to be in contact with something real outside of you again it was not pre-programmed like oh god you had all those great conversations because you had this this actress or fake wife who was programmed just to say all the things that would make you feel great no you want to actually have a real experience with someone out there who has free will and you have free will and you actually make a real connection if it was all guaranteed in advance that she was being paid to say what would make you happy then okay that's just a different thing it really is it's fascinating how you know like i've said to my wife it's really strange to me that if my wife is traveling my discipline drops and i have to really focus to stay focused but when she's here even though we might be we might not have hardly any contact during the day i'm working on my thing all of that some part of me is doing this to impress her and it's very interesting that even her just traveling breaks some part of that spell enough that i have to like dig deeper to a different place in order to stay focused and keep going it's uh yeah it's very fascinating as you were saying that i was thinking would i feel better though if my wife made me miserable if you told me don't worry she's just an actor she's been paid to be horrible to you then like i don't know i still think some part of me would be traumatized that even though part of me would be relieved okay so this isn't about me this is you know some actress but even just having gone through all of that in in something fake would really be problematic yeah someone you spent 20 years with maybe if you just had like a bad experience yesterday with someone you met for the first time and you find out ah they were just a bot it's like oh okay now i feel better about it right more it was about just programmed to act like a jerk with everyone it's like okay it wasn't just me thank god maybe you'd be okay with that but yeah a 20-year relationship was something totally different yeah that that would be rough rough so where do you go from here like what is your you know as somebody who really thinks about this stuff are you staying focused on virtual worlds as that feels like it's really just beginning or are you exploring something new right now i am thinking a lot about uh about virtual worlds i mean this book just came out and already it's getting pushed in so many different directions people are picking up on it psychiatrists are thinking about it architects are thinking about it it's pushing me to think about a bunch of new topics not least you know you mentioned the metaverse and now this technology is actually going to become a bigger and bigger part of our lives and i talk about that a bit in the book the coming technology but it's mostly kind of the idealized lens of what could this be in the uh in the long run could it eventually be meaningful could it be as good as physical reality but there are also questions in the short run and i think a lot of people who are thinking about the metaverse are worried about that you know if it's the tech companies for example who build these uh these virtual worlds is that going to be a good thing or a bad thing is this going to lead to loss of privacy total manipulation monetization and so on what does it mean for the uh for the physical environment how might this actually be integrated with things like uh blockchain technology cryptocurrencies and so on i'm actually starting to think more actually about these uh some of these shorter term issues in philosophy we talk about ideal theory you know like the long term what could it be and non-ideal theory actually how will it actually be and i think some of these issues in non-ideal theory how it's actually going to be philosophically very interesting too like if you're in a virtual world created by a tech company and that world is constantly manipulating you the way that say the facebook algorithm might then you know manipulating you to do to go in a certain direction to do certain things do you still have free will do you still have autonomy or might virtual worlds actually undercut our free will there are also questions about identity you know people are using virtual worlds to experiment with trying on many different identities whether it's you know gender identities or cultural identities and so on quite often people are expressing different identities in virtual worlds from the physical world and that raises really deep philosophical questions about the nature of identity and the nature of the self so i'm thinking about you know some of these more practical issues in the in about virtual worlds quite intensively at the same time i never stopped thinking about consciousness i've always got projects on the go on on consciousness i'm working with neuroscientists on developing some experiments to like test some of the leading theories of consciousness right now to see if we can actually perform experiments where the leading theorists will make predictions and then we'll see who comes out right so i mean that's super exciting and yeah that experimentation idea of people so that the the project code name avatar that's what that's about for me so that whole idea of frame of reference right so people build this frame of reference it is often by law of accident things have just happened to them over their lives and they have become someone that was not their intent and so creating the avatar experience is about giving people agency over who you're becoming what does that look like where do you live how do you decorate the space how do you signal to yourself how do you signal to other people like that's the whole idea behind this project so in i think i'm way more interested in the non-ideal version in the non-ideal version where do you think that experimentation leads are there potholes or pitfalls to watch out for um how do you how do you think about how people should explore and experiment within that the confines of a virtual environment yeah you know avatars give you so much to to experiment with i mean with the physical body you can already you know you can experiment pretty well you can do things with your your hair or your your clothes or your your presentation but yeah avatars you can well you can be a different species if you want you can be a you can be a plant um you can change change everything and for a while maybe that sometimes it can be a form of escapism just trying things on but i think for increasingly this is going to be a part of people's it's going to be continuous with the physical world and with and with physical identity as people as i think people's avatars you know when you just have an avatar in a video game it's okay it's temporary it's not important to you you can discard it but people who actually hang out in virtual worlds long term like even virtual world like second life where people spend a whole lot of time their avatars become really important to them and they spend a lot of time and a lot of money on developing these avatars to express themselves i think at a certain point you know the avatar can begin to play the role many of the roles of the physical body it's as if you have two bodies a physical body in the physical world and a digital body in the uh in the digital world and i think you know for example there are these cases of of assault you know virtual assaults in virtual worlds sexual assaults where uh yeah people's virtual bodies are grouped or whatever in a in a virtual environment and this is quite traumatic for the people who go through it in a way which is continuous with say physical assault i think this kind of brings out that yeah avatars can be very very real and basically you can be embodied in a digital avatar much as you can be in a in a physical avatar and i think we have people are just still trying to figure out what this means for identity right now but i just think it's just going to kind of enrich the space of the already complex social space of identities that we that we already have no doubt david this whole space is just incredibly fascinating your book was such a cool exploration where this goes how it interfaces with us how to think about these huge questions where can people engage more with you read the book all that good stuff yeah well the book is called reality plus with the plus sign the subtitle is virtual worlds and the problems of philosophy published in uh in the us with wwe norton and in the uk with uh with penguin i also got a website uh easiest way to find is probably just put in my name david chalmers has a lot of my a lot of my work there and a lot of also an excerpt from the book if people want to uh to try out the uh the the the first bits of the book and hey anyone's got any read any of this and uh has any uh cool philosophical ideas or questions feel free to drop me an email you can find find my email address on the web too love it man thank you so much for coming on this conversation was a lot of fun i would actually love to stay in contact as we build out our avatar project i'd love to hear more about somebody really offer some cool insights guys you will love the book definitely check it out uh he is such a fascinating thinker hopefully that came through loud and clear in this episode and speaking of things that will come in loud and clear if you haven't already be sure to subscribe and until next time my friends be legendary take care peace