YoungMasterGold
Rookie
not necessarily....according to the Copenhagen interpretation, which is not only the theory propagated by Neils Bohr and Heisenberg which were the fathers of quantum mechanics but it is also the most accepted interpretation of quantum mechanics by physicists today.......according to this view, before an observation is made, the question of where the particle is can't be asked.....why?......because the particle/wave does not exist......it is simply a MATHEMATICAL PROBABILITY......
No. That isn't the Copahagen interpretation. It isn't that the particle doesn't exist prior to being measured, it's that a particle - very much in existence - may be in a varying number of positions prior to measurement. It's the state of the particle that is a mathematical probability, not it's existence.
thus this fits in perfectly with the simulation theory because the wave function is simply the code by which the physical world gets rendered by the computer......before an observation is made all that exists is the software code of where the particle could be.....it never exists until an observation is made thus saving power
for those without a physics background it is important to understand that when physicists say a particle behaves like a wave, they don't mean it actually becomes a wave like you see in the water......they only mean that its a mathematical distribution of where the particle could be......the highest point in the wave marks the most likely location of the particle while the bottom of the wave marks the least likely location of the particle
there are other theories like the many worlds interpretation which hold that the particle exists at all points on the wave function and its the universe that splits into different pieces when an observation is made......this interpretation would be consistent with your point about a computer operating this type of world requiring more power than one that operates a world according to the Copenhagen interpretation
To reiterate the earlier point, the particles already exist, they are just in a number of states, thereby ensuring the uncertainty principle isn't violated.
Do they behave like computer codes? In my opinion, probably not. Over the years, the Universe has been declared a well manufactured watch, the poetic verse/book of gods, and an anvanced mathematical equation. It is a testament to human advancement that it is now analogous to a computer.


difference is there is evidence for the simulation theory while there is no evidence for your man in the sky god
actually NO, there is no evidence

this shyt too advanced for coli nyggas to understand 
It's so complex!
This stuff is sooo interesting!


