Daniel Kish had his eyes removed at just 13 months old, due to retinal cancer, and from a young age he trained himself to echolocate, using clicks with his tongue and listening for the echo. But at the end of the day, all of these senses end up as electrical impulses in your brain.
Everything you experience comes in through your various senses, such as your sense of smell, sense of touch, etc. So as much as we believe we know how the universe works behind the scenes, we’re still really just clueless puppets. He said it was like looking at a clock face all you can see is the time it shows, you don’t have any idea what cogs and wires are behind it, making it work.
Are we living in a computer simulation code#
Master Chief exists but he’s just a bunch of code I can control… John Locke, pointed out that we could never actually know the real essence of anything, we could only deal with its nominal essence, meaning what we actually experience of it, rather than the whole picture. “cogito ergo sum” – I think therefore I am – but that doesn’t help us prove WHAT you are. The real problem comes with this definition of “I”. It’s similar to the modern world where we look mainly at people’s virtual lives, though social media, and we think of their actual lives as far more exciting than our own, when in fact they are having the same terrible time that we all are having. This is the only life the prisoners had ever known and so they would understandably believe that the shadows were actual people. He pictured a cave with prisoners chained to the wall and all they ever saw were the shadows of others passing in front of a fire, projected up onto the wall in front of them. The Greek philosopher Plato, who lived around 2500 years ago, wrote about the concept in his work the Republic. It might seem obvious to us that they are completely virtual but who’s to say that we aren’t part of a giant simulation? Maybe we’re all NPCs in a computer game So, let’s take the red pill and the blue pill at the same time, because screw you Morpheus, as we ask ourselves is anything real? Thanks to science fiction, we often associate simulated realities with computers, but doubting reality is far from a new thing. If you’ve just watched The Matrix or you’re a Californian who has gone a little overboard on the weed legalization celebrations, you might be wondering how do I know that I’m not just part of a computer simulation? Does Super Mario think it’s pretty standard to be attacked by suicidal turtles all day? Maybe Kimmy from Candy Crush, never wonders why she isn’t riddled with diabetes.