Danny Jones Podcast - #317 - Ancient Texts Confirm Simulation Hypothesis | Rizwan Virk

Episode Date: July 22, 2025

Watch every episode ad-free & uncensored on Patreon: https://patreon.com/dannyjones Rizwan Virk is a video game pioneer, MIT computer scientist, and author of several books such as "The Simulation Hy...pothesis" and "The Simulated Multiverse." SPONSORS https://ground.news/dannyj - Subscribe for 40% off unlimited access to worldwide coverage. https://huel.com/danny - Use code DANNY for 15% off. https://whiterabbitenergy.com/?ref=DJP - Use code DJP for 20% off EPISODE LINKS https://a.co/d/9XXGwjL https://www.zenentrepreneur.com FOLLOW DANNY JONES https://www.instagram.com/dannyjones https://twitter.com/jonesdanny OUTLINE 00:00 - layers of the simulation hypothesis 07:11 - are we living in a "Matrix" video game? 18:10 - why do paranormal phenomena mostly affect kids? 22:45 - the analogy of the dream 27:44 - precognition are glitches in the matrix? 34:07 - free will vs. simulation theory 45:12 - the problem with multi-verse theory 53:13 - information entropy 01:00:12 - statistical evidence we're living in a simulation 01:11:07 - life review 01:23:23 - evolution of information science 01:32:05 - why UAP technology is lagging 01:47:51 - Rizwan's analysis of Bob Lazar 01:59:45 - does simulation theory agree with alien life? 02:13:26 - cosmic delayed choice experiment 02:19:53 - Mandela Effect is proof of a simulation 02:34:28 - AI is hallucinating our reality 02:41:56 - religious allegories in the Matrix 02:50:24 - experiment to prove the simulation theory Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:55 Now through May 6th. Exclusion supplies to home depot.com slash price match for details. Rizwan. Is it Rizwan? Is that how you pronounce it? Rizwan or Riz for short. So this is your latest and greatest book.
Starting point is 00:01:14 MIT computer scientists shows why AI, quantum physics, and Eastern mystics all agree we are in a video game. Yeah. So this is sort of the brand new edition of this general topic that I've been working on for many years now. And it's basically updated to include all the latest developments in artificial intelligence and then virtual reality, augmented reality. So I just watched this movie last night called The 13th Floor. Yeah, great movie. Wild movie.
Starting point is 00:01:46 Like, it's a basically the hypothesis. I mean, the summary of it is they find out they're a simulation that's created a simulation, but they're already in a simulation. Right. So it's like this nesting doll of simulations they're in. Yeah. And it's like when people die, they get shuttled to the higher simulation. So it's kind of like going to heaven.
Starting point is 00:02:05 Well, yeah, you can think of it more like stacked series of realities, if you will. And so that movie I use as the second film that I have my students watch. Okay. Because I taught class on the simulation hypothesis at Arizona State University recently. And the first movie is The Matrix. And turns out they both came out in the same year. Oh, did they really? They both came out in 1999.
Starting point is 00:02:28 And in fact, I think the 13th floor came out a month or two after the Matrix. and it was vastly overshadowed by the Matrix. Oh, yeah, for sure. So it's really an underappreciated film, but I think it's one of the better representations of a lot of the issues of being inside a simulation because of what you just mentioned, which is the stacked simulation aspect that's going on.
Starting point is 00:02:51 But also because it brings up one of the core issues, I think when you think about the Matrix or the 13th floor or any of these other sites, science fiction works that are related to this idea. It's what I call the NPC versus RPG versions or flavors of the simulation hypothesis. And in the NPC version, everyone is AI. So you're really just running inside a simulation and you're living your life. But you don't exist outside of that reality.
Starting point is 00:03:23 And then in the RPG version, which is closer to the matrix version, just as Morpheus and Neo and Trinity, you know, they existed sort of as players of the game outside the simulation and they had the brain computer interface that was plugged into the back of their head and then they got immersed into their character inside the simulation. And what's interesting about the 13th floor
Starting point is 00:03:46 is that the simulation they created starts off as kind of an NPC simulation. Yeah, because they have their own bodies are already existing inside of this lower simulation. Right. So they're like jacking in. Like as if there's an NPC version of me that exists inside the simulation that's just walking around doing its thing. And then all of a sudden, I emerge into its consciousness.
Starting point is 00:04:09 Right. So what you see there is something in between what I think of as an NPC and a PC or a player character, which is typically called an avatar in a video game, which is your character. And so they're living their lives. And there's this one line where, you know, the main character, Douglas Hall goes in and he comes out and he says, you know, these people are as real as you or me. But when he goes in, it's like he's taking over the body of that NPC. So it's like he's turning it into more of an avatar that he's controlling from outside.
Starting point is 00:04:42 So for me, this is kind of an in between these two versions. Because you get to control the avatar and play the avatar, but then it sort of runs on AI. Kind of like the Sims. You know, if you've ever played the Sims, you know, the Sims kind of do their own little things. but you're there still able to direct them to a certain extent. And I think that is an interesting model for the idea that we live inside a massively multiplayer online role-playing game, which is, you know, my general contention with this book and with other works that I've had, is that we could be avatars of our players.
Starting point is 00:05:20 And we have a character, just like if you play Dungeons and Dragons, for example. Never played that. Never played? I used to play as a kid. And what you do is you'd have a character sheet and you would choose your race. You know, you'd say elf or dwarf or human. And you choose your profession. Like what are you going to do? Are you a thief? Are you a warrior? Are you a wizard or, you know, whatever options they have. And then you have different attributes of that character, which you'd roll the dice for is how we would do it back at the day. But you'd have like different intelligence, charisma, strength, you know, physical strength, all of these types of things. And then you would take that character on an adventure. You would have like a storyline that you're about to embark on. And I think that's a good way to describe, at least the RPG version of the simulation hypothesis, which is now in both the Matrix and the 13th floor,
Starting point is 00:06:16 their avatars looked exactly like them. Of course, that made it easy to make the movie because you can use the same actors. But that doesn't necessarily have to be the case. I mean, when our player, if you and I are the characters, like our players don't have to physically look like us. They could be aliens. They could be future humans. They could be just more consciousness type beings that are non-physical beings.
Starting point is 00:06:40 So there's a lot of options, I think, that we open up when we look at this perspective on the world itself. How did you initially get so wrapped up in this stuff and researching this stuff? And like, what was the spark of all of this for you? Well, there were several. But I started off as an entrepreneur and a computer scientist. And during the time I was running my first company, I would, during the day, I do all the things that an entrepreneur would do. And I was dealing with investors and employees. And we had Fortune 1,000 customers and all those things.
Starting point is 00:07:16 But in the evenings and the weekends, I would be exploring different aspects of consciousness. So I might fly off to a place like the Monroe Institute, for example, where they use hemisink things to try to get you into an auto body state or shamanic drumming, shamanic journeying using drumming, not so much psychedelics, but using different rhythm of breathing,
Starting point is 00:07:37 different yogic techniques, different energy healing techniques. And so I was living this double life for a long time. And then I moved to Silicon Valley, and there I ended up starting a game company, video game company, and I got into the video game industry. and we ended up selling our company to a big Japanese company,
Starting point is 00:07:55 and then I became an investor and advisor to a whole bunch of different video game companies. And so that's kind of what I was doing when the spark for this was lit. I was running a program at MIT called Playlapse, which is where I had gone to undergraduate and studied computer science. And we were basically getting startups
Starting point is 00:08:13 that were doing the latest virtual reality or augmented reality or video game technologies, and we were guiding them through a process. But around that time, I had visited a startup in Marin County where I had put on a virtual reality headset and I had played a VR ping pong game. And what happened was when I was playing this game that the responsiveness of the game was so good. And if you looked at the actual picture of this game, it's not, it wasn't even photorealistic.
Starting point is 00:08:40 It wasn't as good as RAI can generate today. But the physics engine was so good that I felt like I was really hitting a ball with a real paddle. And if I, you know, moved around a little bit that the ball would go a different place. and it fooled my body for a moment into thinking that I was playing a real game of table tennis. And so much so that I tried to put the paddle down on the table and I tried to lean against the table, but of course there was no table.
Starting point is 00:09:03 The controller fell to the floor. I had to do a double take and stop myself from falling. And then I began to wonder, how long would it take us to build something like the Matrix, where it was so immersive that we would forget that we were in a virtual reality. Not like I did for a second, but we would forget for much of that.
Starting point is 00:09:22 longer periods of time. And so I laid out the stages of technology. That's how I started to explore this idea. But then I went back to my studies and consciousness and looked at what different religions were saying. And I realized, you know what? They're all saying the same kinds of things. They just used different language from 1,000, 2,000, 3,000, 5,000 years ago. They're all saying that reality is some kind of a hoax, which is put forward and we forget that we're playing the game. And then I looked at quantum physics and I realized so many things. within quantum mechanics are just so strange, they don't make sense if this is a purely
Starting point is 00:09:56 physical universe. Like, why would you ever do things in that way? And for me, being a video game developer, designer at that point, I looked at how we build video games and how we optimize to build these games, and I realized that a lot of what quantum mechanics was saying,
Starting point is 00:10:12 and what physics was leading towards was this idea that the world is actually information. It's not physical, right? And if you're able to take that to its conclusion, you say that information has to get presented to us in such a way that this table looks like it's a real table. It feels like it's a real table. That's kind of what we do with video games. We take the information and then we render different objects based upon where you
Starting point is 00:10:36 are. So I realized that even quantum mechanics was telling us that the world isn't really real and that's how I kind of wrapped it together and I realized that simulation theory in general is a good way to bridge the gap between these different ways of looking at the world. Yeah, so that's kind of how I got into it. Yeah, I think one of the interesting things is that, you know, how you can't really quantify
Starting point is 00:11:01 or measure stuff, this kind of like squishy physics type stuff, like stuff like parapsychology or telepathy or ESP or remote viewing. These things reconcile very well with the simulation hypothesis, more so than they do with, like, the physical universe. and these, you know, these dead matter, like, you know, particles and neurons and all these things. Yeah, absolutely. And I think, you know, I delve into that in the book in terms of different unexplained phenomena, unexplained by our scientific process, mostly because they don't believe them, first of all.
Starting point is 00:11:38 But, you know, remote viewing, for example, is, you know, where you're given either a set of coordinates or some other information in envelope and Hal Pudoff and those guys. pioneered it back at Stanford Research Institute, and I think it was Jacques Valet that had suggested to him using coordinates as the way to get people to focus in on a specific area. And so that, from a normal, materialistic point of view, it seems like something that's impossible.
Starting point is 00:12:06 Right. How could you see that? But in a video game, we have what's called a virtual camera. And so you can place that virtual... Usually the virtual camera is fixed either first person in your avatar or, you know, set kind of up here, where you're looking down on the avatar, that's pretty much very common for a lot of games.
Starting point is 00:12:24 Or, you know, top down, kind of a third person point of view. But you can place that virtual camera anywhere in the virtual world. You give it an XYZ set of coordinates and T for time. And you can see what's happening there without your physical avatar having to be there. And so at least we have a framework or a way to think about how these things might actually work. And you also have the rendered world,
Starting point is 00:12:53 which in this case would be like, you know, the table, my chair, this microphone, our bodies. But within a video game, you have that, but you also have all these other things around, which they kind of refer to as a HUD or heads up display, which are all the other things, stats about your character, your health, your health, your level, what quest you're undertaking,
Starting point is 00:13:13 but you also have a friends list. and you can send messages to friends that are not there with you in the scene, right? And so when you think of telepathy and how does that work, well, oftentimes, you know, telepathy ends up coming from people that were close to, like our parents or, you know,
Starting point is 00:13:31 if something happens to your mom, your mom always seems to know what's going on with you often, right? Or if you look at the telepathy tapes recently, which was pretty popular. So Dr. Diane Hennessy Powell, who was the researcher, who did the original work on autistic savants.
Starting point is 00:13:49 She contacted me a few years ago before the telepathy tapes, and she said, oh, I'd like you to speak at a conference that we're putting on about autistic savants and the simulation theory. And she said, because she was with all her work and finding, for those people who don't know, this is cases where you have these autistic nonverbal kids who generally don't speak.
Starting point is 00:14:12 And they don't have fine motor. skills, but they have kind of gross motor skills. And so they can point to on an iPad letters, and that becomes a way for them to communicate. But oftentimes there's somebody like their mom or their dad who, according to the telepity tapes and according to what Diane has found, they're able to communicate and see, for example, what their mom is seeing and whether it's a number or a color or a word that they're pointing at when they aren't able to see it necessarily. And so that becomes a kind of ability to either send messages
Starting point is 00:14:51 or better yet to receive messages and to look at the other person's character. Now, I think Diane came to the conclusion that a simulated universe where everything is information would make more sense for something like that to work. So if we say, if we take the assumption that that actually happens, there's a lot of people in academia who are like, nah, none of that stuff is real. but if we assume some of that, and most of many of us have experienced this kind of thing, what's the mechanism that would allow these kinds of things to happen? And an information-based reality where you can look at the information somewhere else,
Starting point is 00:15:28 you can render it, is one way. And, you know, I came up with this idea that it's kind of like being in a full body suit, VR suit. Have you ever read two different headlines from the same story, and it seems like they came from two separate planets? In today's media landscape, it's harder to know what's real, what's biased, or what is straight up propaganda. I started using ground news because I needed more transparency in my news information. They don't eliminate bias.
Starting point is 00:15:55 They help you see it. Let me show you. So this story about the Democrats trolling Trump and the GOP over the Jeffrey Epstein case shows at the top shows a breakdown of left, right, and center bullet points summarizing the whole story. So scrolling down, it shows 41 total articles, and 15 on the left, two on the right, and 11 on the center. So on the left, some of these titles say disgusting Dems display poster of Trump chumming with Epstein on the house floor. Trump blames the Dems for Epstein's backlash, new scam. Jeffrey Epstein was recorded talking about Trump before his arrest. Now let's go up and see what the right has to say about this. Two articles. Explain the Epstein files.
Starting point is 00:16:36 Conspiracy theories and what's next. Democrats seize on Maga Rift over the Epstein case. So there's a clear bias. There's only two reporting on the right, calling the left conspiracy theorists. And on the left, we have 15 articles covering the whole thing. And you can see right here the weight distribution of bias, depending on left, right, or center, and where they come from. And right here, if you click on this button, it will give you a brief summary and breakdown all about the news source reporting on the story. Their historical bias ratings, how factual they are. And the ownership, who actually owns this media outlet, which is really useful when you want to digest this information. and really determine what the probability of truth is and what type of narrative they're trying to paint.
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Starting point is 00:17:49 1 I don't know if you saw that movie I don't think I have Steven Spielberg movie based on a book by Ernest Klein but it's a virtual or there's a virtual reality and he puts on like this full body suit and so he can control the character you know very well he has a little treadmill he can run on so in that case
Starting point is 00:18:06 you're fully in the suit and every one of your actions is going to be mirrored in your So he feels like he's immersed inside the virtual reality. And I think of it that most of us are like that, even though it's not necessarily a physical suit or a physical VR headset, but it's like that because we're fully immersed and we have control fully over our bodies. But if you're half in and half out of the suit, but you can still see the screen as to what's happening.
Starting point is 00:18:34 You can see things that are going on around you without having to be in that first person perspective. But you don't, you can't necessarily control the fingers because you're not fully inside the suit. And that's what happens with a lot of these autistic kids is, you know, they don't have the skills to like, right and control. But it's like they're frustrated because they can't control their bodies. But they can see what that person is thinking, again, if you believe that this stuff is real, they can see other things that are going on in other parts of the simulation, if you will. So I think the simulation theory gives us a way and a framework to you think about these things. Why do you think they're specifically with kids? There's more of these
Starting point is 00:19:14 cases because, I mean, there's definitely, it seems to be with children more of this sixth sense, if you will, or ability to experience paranormal phenomena. There's more correlations with children experiencing UFO phenomena. There's even cases of children with, uh, experiencing or remembering past lives, like lots of those cases. I think there was a study done on this. Jeffrey Kreppel talked about it when he came in here. And I think University of Virginia study maybe. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:19:50 And one of the weird things about the kids who are remembering their past lives is they were predominantly male past lives. And the reason he thinks that is because he believes that trauma is directly tied to this connection. And he thinks, I mean, in the past, males died more. horrific deaths in general than females did there was more trauma involved so he thinks there's some sort of connection there with being able to children you know if they do have this higher connection to whatever it is if their antennas are stronger for some reason because they haven't been conditioned by society that they can through trauma in a past life they somehow can see through a window for a brief period of time into that into that world what do you what do you think that is well i think it's very
Starting point is 00:20:39 interesting phenomena and I know in in least that Virginia study they also had cases where some of the children remembered you know specific things they could track down but they also had a couple instances where the kids remembered being outside before they were born and they said they were like floating over their parents like before they were born so it's almost like they were watching you know them inside a video game if you will that that's my way of a thinking about it. Like they're able to tune in to any part, but because they're going to be their parents.
Starting point is 00:21:15 Now, I think you're right in that it is, first, because they're not conditioned to think of the world fully materially as only a material world. Like most of the religions of the world tell us that we go through a phase of forgetfulness. Really? To get into when we come into the body.
Starting point is 00:21:35 We forget who we were, what our soul was, and what plans we might have had while we're here. So, and in Islam, for example, they talk about the veils of forgetfulness. So, yeah, there's like 70,000 veils between ultimate reality. And as you incarnate, you're actually putting on these veils. And in Buddhism and Hinduism, they talk about Maya
Starting point is 00:21:56 and that the world is an illusion. But Maya also means sort of a, there's a subtlety to the meaning. So it means it's like a carefully crafted illusion. Like if you go to a... magic show, you know the guy's not really sawing that woman in half, but part of the fun is to go there and say, oh my God, that's crazy. And you can think of it in that way. It seems to be that forgetting is a key part of incarnating. And in the Greek legends and Greek mythology, you have
Starting point is 00:22:30 Lethe, which is the river of forgetfulness. And the soul, as it incarnates, it goes across lette and so it forgets about stuff and then it crosses back and in the chinese traditions you have meng po who is the goddess of forgetfulness and what does she do she she brews the tea of forgetfulness so i like to say these are all metaphors that are trying to describe some insight about reality that somebody has had that's how most religions get started it's by a mystic who saw something an angel or they did yoga or they did fasting in the desert you know jesus went on the desert and they realized that this is not the real world and that there's more behind it and so most of these mystical processes are about trying to burn off the veils of forgetfulness trying to remember who
Starting point is 00:23:20 you are and i like to think of that as if you were to think of it as you put on the VR headset and then you forget what happened before, but if there's really strong imprints of memories, say a traumatic experience or something that you just had, you're less likely to forget that. Like if you have a nightmare for a dream, you're less likely to forget that the next day. And the dream metaphor is used all the time.
Starting point is 00:23:48 I mean, Buddha literally means awake. And so a woman asked him, what are you? He said, I am awake. And said, well, what does that mean? It means he was asleep before. and they used the analogy of the dream. And Swami Yogananda, who wrote autobiography of a yogi, which was Steve Jobs' favorite book,
Starting point is 00:24:06 and it was kind of one of these books, the hippie generation wouldn't pass out. Like I actually met a guy recently. He's like, yeah, I was at Hatchbury, and somebody just gave me a copy of this book, and he gave a copy to somebody else when he was done. Charles Manson loved that book. Oh, did he?
Starting point is 00:24:20 Oh, I didn't know that one. I'm just kidding. I made that up. I know Elvis Presley did. I doubt Charles Manson with him. You never know, though. No, you never know. I don't know. It depends on when it was published.
Starting point is 00:24:31 Yeah, it was published in like the 40s or so. Oh, okay. It's possible. Before the whole thing. But that's how a lot, that was the introduction to Eastern mysticism for a lot of people. And so Yogananda said it's like a dream coming into this incarnation. It's like going into a dream. And then when you die, it's like coming out of the dream.
Starting point is 00:24:48 And so we have so many references and stories. And there's the whole near death experience we can talk about as well. But you have so many stories that were entering into this kind of dreamlike state. And what happens if you've ever studied dreaming, I don't know if you ever tried lucid dreaming. I've never tried it, but it's actually, it's happened to me like two times in the past year. And it was crazy. I took this drug that somebody gave me that helps you lucid dream. Okay. In real life, in physical life, you took a drug. Yes. And then you, okay. Yeah, yeah. So I took this powder before I went to sleep. And this thing is supposed to help you have crazy REM sleep.
Starting point is 00:25:25 and I guess people have more, you could have more lucid dreams when you take this stuff and I did it and I had a couple lucid dreams on different nights. It was crazy. Interesting. What was that? Do you remember what the powder was? I don't remember the top of my head. It was like a complicated name. But I got it off Amazon. It was like a very, you know, basic type of powder that you can use to enhance your REM sleep.
Starting point is 00:25:50 Yeah, yeah. If you just Google like, like go to go to Amazon. and type in like REM sleep powder and probably be one of like the top three results. Yeah, it makes sense. Well, so with lucid dreaming, you realize in the middle of a dream, somehow you realize that,
Starting point is 00:26:06 oh my God, this isn't actually real. It's a dream, which means there's a part of you that's outside the reality and it's sleeping. And there's a whole branch of Tibetan yoga called dream yoga. And it's kind of like lucid dreaming.
Starting point is 00:26:22 They teach you to basically remember while you're dreaming that the world is, you know, that world, the dream world is a fake world, but there's another world outside of that world. And the point is, if you can do it while you're asleep, you should be able to also realize when you're awake that maybe this world isn't the real world. And one of the tests, one of the ways that people, you know,
Starting point is 00:26:49 there are many techniques for lucid dreaming. You mentioned the powder. I know there were some South American plants and tea, I came across once that was supposed to help you. But the basic technique is to remind yourself during the day and look around and say, is this a dream? And if you remind yourself to ask that during the day, you will remember to ask yourself sometime during the night, during the dream state.
Starting point is 00:27:15 And then you can have what's called a lucidity test. And the lucidity test is something you can do in a dream that you can't do in waking life. So, or you have some, if you, did you ever watch Inception? Yes. Remember he had the little totem. Yes. Which was the little top, I think he had. So for me, I used to do more of this.
Starting point is 00:27:34 I haven't done a lot of it lately. But it was a flying, a floating thing where I would say, is this real? I don't know. Let me see if I can float up out of my chair because I happen to remember that I can fly in my dreams. But I can't really do it in this physical life. And there were so many times. I'll tell you, where I looked around, I said, I'm not even going to do the test
Starting point is 00:27:55 because this is obviously real. I mean, this is like a real restaurant. This is a real waiter. And then suddenly I started floating up on my chair. Really? And so there's almost like this wall of area, haze of forgetfulness between waking and dreaming that if you can train yourself to remember,
Starting point is 00:28:14 that's why we forget dreams. And we say you should write down the dreams. Yeah. Like right when you wake up or at least give a title to it. Yeah. Because then you're more likely to remember. later and i think part of being incarnated is similar to that um where we will forget things but again if there's something you know tragic or that happened maybe it's more likely to have an impact yeah
Starting point is 00:28:37 you know on where you're going next and remember you'd remember something even if you don't remember the specifics you might remember i have a feeling there's also this weird phenomena where people can predict the future in dreams and where there's been cases multiple cases of where of people simultaneously having dreams on one night about one big event that's going to happen and then the event happening like shortly after one of those examples is 9-11 another one was the titanic sinking yeah in fact there was a whole entire book written about the titanic sinking it was called titan yes i heard about that before it sunk yeah that's pretty amazing based on dreams and and so that you know brings up this interesting question of what i call glitches in the
Starting point is 00:29:22 the matrix. Like, you know, we are perceiving things that might happen in the future. I mean, it's happened to me, actually. I mentioned that I was doing my startup. This is my first startup back in the 90s during the day. And there was a precognitive dream that really kind of woke me up that something weird is going on. And it wasn't profound, but it was, it was strange enough that it made me realize that there's something wrong here, that the matureless view of the universe isn't Right, so one day I woke up and I had a dream that morning about this competitor of ours. Hey guys, if you're not already subscribed, please hammer the subscribe button below and hit the like button on the video. Back to the show.
Starting point is 00:30:02 Who I literally had not seen or heard from in a year and I had never had a dream with this competitor. Let's say his name was Mark and his company was called like Edge Research or something back in the day. And, you know, they were competing with us and they disappeared. So a year later, maybe a year and a half, I don't remember exactly how long, but it was far enough that I had completely. forgotten about him. And I woke up and I said, that's odd. Why am I having a dream with this guy and talking to each other? It was just the oddest thing. And so then I went into the office, and the first thing that happened when I got the office that morning was I got a call from somebody at IBM, which was our business partner. So we were making, this is before my video game days.
Starting point is 00:30:37 We were making enterprise software. And they said, oh, I wanted to tell you about this new product. We're going to announce it today. It kind of competes with your product. And so, you know, we might crush your product, but you've been a good partner for us. So we want to let you know beforehand. And I was like, okay, well, that sucks, one. But two, how could I never have not have heard of this product? I mean, IBM's a huge company. These things leak all the time and people know each other. And they said, oh, well, because we bought that competitor of yours last year, do you remember this guy, Mark from Edge Research? And they've been working on this product in secret in New Hampshire, so nobody else knew about it. And so it was like, oh, it's the, you know, my dream happened before the
Starting point is 00:31:16 phone call, but the phone call was reflecting the dream. It's clearly showing us that there is some way of sending information that we don't know about. And for me, it's almost like a technological synchronicity. Have you heard this term? Oh, yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. No, it's happened to me. I've described this before on the podcast, but there was a recent, a couple, maybe it was like a year ago, there was a moment where I was driving in my car. You know how when you're driving sometimes, you'll sometimes you'll like simulate interactions with people in your head before they happen. Like you'll know you're going to see this person in the next month or two week or week or whatever it is.
Starting point is 00:31:53 You'll kind of like simulate what what is that interaction going to be like, right? I was doing that while I was driving. Just mind, just daydreaming, right? I was just driving and thinking about an interaction I knew I was going to have with this guy in a few weeks. This guy was a friend of my dad's, went to, it was like a golf buddy of my dad's or whatever. and a guy that I literally, I've talked to on the phone twice in my life.
Starting point is 00:32:15 I've known the guy for 25 years. And as I'm replaying this in my head driving, the guy calls me. The third time in my life in 25 years he's ever called me. For some random question about something completely unrelated to anything. And it was just like, how? How did this fucking happen? I told everybody about this.
Starting point is 00:32:34 Like, how did this fucking happen? You know? And it's just like, yeah, it's one of those synchronicities. Yeah. that you can't really explain. And, you know, if all of the air around us is some computational cloud that's all connected through morphic resonance and all this stuff, then that's the best explanation for me to comprehend.
Starting point is 00:32:54 I think so. I think so. And so there's a term called technological synchronicity. And the best example is, here, I'll tell you a quick story. I was shopping for a backpack because the synchronicity is what is. what it is is usually it's some correlation between an inner event, in this case you were daydreaming, and an outer event where the guy calls you.
Starting point is 00:33:18 Or similarly, if you had a dream about someone and they call you. So I was shopping for a backpack online on my laptop, and there was a specific company who's a backpack I was looking at. And so I forgot about it. And then a few days later, I was on my phone, and I was in like Facebook or some social media app. And suddenly I see an ad. and what is the ad for?
Starting point is 00:33:39 It's for the exact same backpack. Now, if I didn't know anything about computers. It's the simulation. Right? I would have said... Facebook spying on you. Yeah, that's what it actually is. But if you didn't know about cookies and databases,
Starting point is 00:33:52 I mean, what happened was I had registered my intent by visiting that website in some database. Yep. And there was a cookie associated with that that got linked to my profile, and then my profile on my phone was linked back to that specific cookie, and they said, what is his intent? Yeah. Now let's create.
Starting point is 00:34:08 an ad from the possible ads that we have. And I think that's also how synchronicity could be working. But if you didn't know that, you'd think it's magic. Yes. Because Jung defined it as a meaningful coincidence, but also as an a causal connection. Synchronicity is like, there's two things that are connected, but you can't figure out what caused what. You know, or like, did the daydream cause that guy to call you? Or was the, you know, the guy going to call you anyway?
Starting point is 00:34:36 And you got the information about it beforehand. Right. What caused what? But you just know there's a connection. And so similarly, I think we're registering intent in databases that we can't see. That is part of the simulation. And that also includes things like our quests and our challenges and achievements and storylines. But then sometimes the simulation will create situations that relate to that for us.
Starting point is 00:35:04 And they seem like, how did this happen? And are our stories already written? Like, do we have free will or is, like, if there is some sort of God, right? And he's all omnipotent and all knowing. Well, that would mean that he knows the future, right? That means he can see a million years in the future. And he knows everything that's going to happen. So even in the simulation, like, like is, and to explain these synchronities and these
Starting point is 00:35:28 precognitive dreams, is the future already written for us? Do we, is where we end up at the end of our lives already predetermined? And is that somehow echoing back and then, like, for example, making you more motivated to write these books? Right. Well, I think that it's actually a combination where we have a storyline, like a general storyline, that has some major points that are almost predetermined. But we have some free will along the way in terms of what decisions we make at any given time. and whether we go down this path or that path or not. And so I think that there are multiple possible futures
Starting point is 00:36:12 and that if you think of it from a simulation point of view, you can actually run these scenarios. Like maybe there's a part of us that's outside the simulation, the player. And my latest metaphor for this now is the writer's room. So you know, like in a TV show, they'll have a writer's room and they'll say, okay, we know what this character is going to do throughout the season.
Starting point is 00:36:35 You know, this is their arc. This is kind of where they're going to end up. But let's figure out what we're going to do in each episode. And as they're writing, they'll make up new challenges or new jokes if it's a comedy or something along the way. And I feel like each of us has our own little writer's room, which is watching what we do. But they have an overall story. Now, I've mentioned this before.
Starting point is 00:36:56 But when I was in high school, if you had asked me, what are you going to do with your life? I would have said, well, I'm going to become a softer entrepreneur. and then I'm going to become a writer. And I just kind of knew that. Like it was this weird, intuitive sense. Now, my siblings, we had four siblings to all total. None of them wanted to be a writer. We had similar genetics.
Starting point is 00:37:16 We grew up in similar environment. But it was just something that I felt I would always do. And I did become an entrepreneur in the software industry and sold my company. I thought I was going to become a writer at the old age of 28. That was when I was in high school. school or in college. But what happened was after I sold, you know, one or two companies, I kept doing the Silicon Valley thing. And I wrote a little bit on the side, but it wasn't like, it was more like
Starting point is 00:37:42 a hobby that I did every now and then. And I was trying to do basically what you do. I think we get a little brainwashed in whatever social environment we're in. And we take on the desires and goals and wants of those around us. Like it happens on Wall Street, you know, happens in entertainment industry in L.A. and it definitely happens in Silicon Valley where you're like, okay, the next thing is I got to, you know, start a bigger company. You got to start a company that goes to a billion dollars in valuation or I got to start a venture capital fund.
Starting point is 00:38:11 And that's kind of what was laid out. But at the same time, I knew intuitively that I wanted to write, but I was just delaying it, and it wasn't until I was much older than I thought. It was 48 at the time when I had a big health crisis, and I ended up having to have heart surgery. And during that time, I had a number of visions. while I was recovering that basically told me
Starting point is 00:38:35 that you had this plan, you were supposed to do this and this, but you're still doing this. Like, okay, you achieve that part of your plan. You need to move on to this other part of your plan. And that this health crisis was because we know it's going to happen if you keep doing what you're doing, but we want to find a way to get you to go over here
Starting point is 00:38:58 to do this other thing. And then what happened was, every time in the next nine months, because it took me about nine months to recover, I could barely go for a walk during that time. But what I could do was I could get in an Uber and go to the Starbucks and write for a few hours. And I finished two books in those nine months,
Starting point is 00:39:14 including the first edition of the simulation hypothesis. But during that time, whenever I would try to jump back into the business world, oh, I'm going to start another video game company or I'm going to start another venture capital fund to fund video game companies, I would end up back in the hospital. and it was almost as if there was an unseen force guiding me.
Starting point is 00:39:35 And so going back to your original question of free will versus predetermined, I think some paths are predetermined, but we have free will to choose. Just like in a video game. You can improvise. You can improvise along the way. You can choose not to accept a certain quest. Even though you had agreed beforehand, you're like, okay, I'm going to do that quest. And that quest is going to unlock these more difficult quests, for example.
Starting point is 00:39:59 So Quest, there's usually a Quest tree, for example, within video games. But I think there's a dynamic element, and I think there's a storyline element. And I think that's one of the aspects of simulation theory that actually can help us to deal with challenging situations. Yeah, yeah, I think you're right about that. The idea that we are able to have one to do, one, to do that, one, decision split off into another universe and that decision and the next decision split off into another universe. And before you know it, you have this chaotic mess of tree branches that lead off into different directions that are different universes.
Starting point is 00:40:44 How do you reconcile this idea with simulation there? Are these all these all turn into new simulations? Yeah. Is that? Well, sort of. Yeah. That's one way to think of it. Because you're almost hitting on the idea of the multiverse.
Starting point is 00:40:59 Right. In quantum mechanics, with the observer effect, is sort of one way of explaining this weird phenomenon of quantum indeterminacy, where you have, say, a cat with two states. It's alive or it's dead. And then when you observe it, what happens is the probability wave collapses
Starting point is 00:41:18 to just one of those possibilities. And that's called the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics, where you have a probability wave of all the things that are possible, and one of those, when it gets observed. So the cat, we would say after an hour,
Starting point is 00:41:33 I mean, are you familiar with Schrodinger's cat? So after an hour, you know, there's some poison that might be released and there's a 50% chance it might be released and a 50% chance it isn't. So we think the cat is just alive or it's dead. We just don't know because we haven't looked in the box. And what quantum physics is telling us is no,
Starting point is 00:41:49 the cat is both alive and dead until somebody observes it. So both of those possibilities exist. Now, another interpretation of the fact of the reality. But the reality is the cat's either alive or dead, we just don't know yet because we haven't lifted the lid on it. Right. But that's what common sense tells us. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:42:06 But this is why quantum mechanics is so weird. And this is why Niels Bohr, you know, one of the founders of the field, said that if you are not shocked by the quantum theory, then you haven't understood it. Because it's telling us that until the observation happens, the decision about whether it's alive or dead hasn't really been made. it gets made at the time that the measurement or the observation happens. This is why it's weird. Otherwise, it would be not that weird if it was just one of those days. That's kind of normal how we would think about it. Now, some people don't like that.
Starting point is 00:42:43 Some scientists didn't like that because they said, well, that requires an observer. Now, I think the observer is the player, if you will, that is watching the game and there are different possible branches. And if this is some sort of a video game that we are in, then hypothetically, if we don't see the reality of what, if we don't see the alive cat or the dead cat, the reason for that is because that this simulation is trying to conserve processing power because you don't need to know that until you actually look at it.
Starting point is 00:43:14 Just like when you're playing Fortnite, you can be at, what's the place called, twisted towers or tilted towers, and you don't need to see snobby shores, which is on the other side of the map at the same time. And it's not rendered because it's only seeing your view, your wide angle POV of that character and whatever players are in your proximity. If it rendered the whole thing at once, the servers would melt probably.
Starting point is 00:43:40 It probably wouldn't be able to handle it. Yeah, exactly. And so what you find in an MMORPG like Fortnite or, say, World of Warcraft. Yeah. Like, we couldn't have built that back in the 80s when I was playing like the Atari games, you know, Pac-Man and Space Invaders. And the reason was there was no way, us to render all those pixels. And so what happened was we came up with optimization techniques,
Starting point is 00:44:02 which include 3D modeling, but also if you've ever seen the game Doom, which was like one of the first popular first-person shooter games. And you're just seeing what the guy's gun is looking at, and that's it. Right? That's all of the world that you need to read. Quake was similar to that. Yeah. Exactly. And so that is sort of optimizing to render only that which your character observes. Now, what's happening with these video games is you're right in that there is no shared rendering of the entire world. But what's happening is your computer is rendering what your avatar sees. And my computer is rendering what my avatar sees. But they're both pulling from the same server. They are. Yeah, they're pulling information from the same server. But it leaves open the
Starting point is 00:44:45 possibility that we're seeing slightly different things. Because we do this in video games all the time. I mean, let's say you play Fortnite a lot. I don't play Fortnite. I have a lower level, I don't have the ability to see the dragon or whatever the case is. And you do. And sometimes you'll see this where some people will see a weird phenomena like a ghost or a UFO and other people don't. And I think this idea of conditional rendering based upon where you are, you think you're seeing the same thing but you're not.
Starting point is 00:45:14 Each of us is rendering it on our own device. But that optimization is a key part of why I came to write this book because as I looked in it, I said, well, if it was a simulated world, then that makes sense because that's how we do video games. Yes. You render only that which you can observe. Right. Now, getting back to your earlier question about branching off and stuff.
Starting point is 00:45:36 I need one of these. We're talking about sitting. We're going deep. I need to get one of my secret weapon drinks. Absolutely. If you need to get turned up a little bit higher, you can have one. Oh, yeah. What's in it?
Starting point is 00:45:51 It's got all kinds of good stuff in it. It's like a neotropic drink. just makes your mind sharper and makes it's like calm energy oh cool it's great it's got like all kinds of like herbs and uh neutropic stuff mushrooms focus mushrooms oh interesting okay looks interesting um magic mind magic mind shout out to magic mind great well so so let's jump into this multiverse idea then uh so the other interpretation that people came up with like scientists from the physics world was well maybe the the universe is branching into two different universe the cat is alive in one universe
Starting point is 00:46:27 and the cat is dead in another universe and so that became that came to be called the many world's interpretation of quantum mechanics which was put forth by Hugh Everett who is a student of John Wheeler at Princeton who's one of my favorite
Starting point is 00:46:42 physicists of the 20th century we'll talk about him probably at some point some more but now that would imply that you're basically spinning off a universe like all the time Right. Every time there's a quantum decision.
Starting point is 00:46:55 So not even like a big decision. Like it's easy to think I go to Boston, I go to New York, I go to Atlanta. You know, those are different futures, possible futures. But this is saying every time there's a quantum event, which happens, you know, at the fractions of a second type thing. And so that is actually a very popular interpretation. And of course, it's made its way into the superhero movies, you know, where you've got like the Spider-Man, you know, movie where you have the three different. versions of Spider-Man. Yeah, I mean, this is like,
Starting point is 00:47:25 it's like an exponential thing, right? Yeah. This would mean there's like a hundred trillion billion of you doing the same thing right now, but maybe you decided to say something different on this podcast, and they're all branching off
Starting point is 00:47:38 simultaneously every second. Yeah. It'd be an incalculable amount of universes. Yeah, now physicists love infinity. They're like, oh, that's infinite, no big deal. Computer scientists hate infinity because we always have limited resources. So we're always thinking about how do you optimize things?
Starting point is 00:47:56 And it turns out the problem with the multiverse theory for some scientists don't like it because it's not parsimonious. It requires infinite number of physical universes. And there's nothing in nature that big that can clone itself. Like a whole universe can clone itself. Like there are, you know, you can clone a cell, you can clone information. Information is easy to clone it. So if it was a simulated multiverse, that would make more sense than a physical multiverse.
Starting point is 00:48:28 Because in a simulated universe, what does it mean to have another universe? It just means you're running the same program with slightly different parameters and you're seeing where it goes. And then you're running it with these parameters. In fact, that's why we run simulations is to see what might happen. Now, I interviewed Philip K. Dix, the sci-fi author who wrote Blade Runner and Minority Report, his wife, when I was writing this book originally. And she pointed out his speech that he gave in Metz, France, in 1977. And there's a famous quote from that. And he said, we are living in a computer programmed reality, and the only clue we have to it is when some variable is changed.
Starting point is 00:49:12 some alteration occurs in our reality. Now that's the quote, the famous quote. And you can see the videos online. It's available on YouTube. And they pan to the audience and everybody's like, what the hell is this guy talking about? This was back in 1977. But she told me, well, you might want to read the rest of that speech.
Starting point is 00:49:30 And I did. And it turns out what he was talking about was that you would change a variable and rerun the simulation. Like you would run it to see what would happen under different things. scenarios. And he wrote a book called The Man in the High Castle, which became an Amazon series. I don't know if you've seen it. I've seen it. Yeah. I've favorite series of all time. Oh, it's great, isn't it? Very well then. Incredible. Yeah. And for people who don't know, it's about a timeline where Germany and Japan won World War II. And then they broke up America.
Starting point is 00:50:04 Yeah. You know, between them. And then there's this Japanese guy in the series anyway, who is able to jump to the other timeline. Yes. Now what... Jump back into New York City like in like the 70s or something like this. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:50:19 In our timeline. Right. Where the allies... There's like big Coke billboards everywhere and you know American flags and you know people running around smoking cigarettes. What the fuck?
Starting point is 00:50:28 Yeah. And they're able to go back and forth in between it. Exactly. It's wild. It's wild. But what Tessa, you know, his wife told me was that he came to believe
Starting point is 00:50:36 that that was a real timeline that actually happened. but that the simulators decided to unwind it, and now they're running this timeline, because that timeline led to someplace they didn't want to. Now, the only reason I bring that up is, and I wrote about this in my book, the simulated multiverse,
Starting point is 00:50:56 this idea that we can perhaps run forward the simulation to see what might happen, and then come back and then take the path that we think is the most likely or the most interesting path for us. So it's possible that you can run multiple branches but that you can trim the branches so it's not infinite.
Starting point is 00:51:17 So this gets a little weird, I know. But I think if you think of reality as a computer simulation, then it's not so weird to be able to spawn off new processes. It's relatively easy to do on a server. Yeah. No, it makes sense. Like copying data on a hard drive, right? You can just copy and paste it.
Starting point is 00:51:36 Yeah. You can make little alterations. It doesn't make sense. like how would you do that with an entire universe or a planet even right exactly there's no there's no conventional way to wrap your mind around how you would do that right now and um you know another interesting thing is like so the idea of a hard drive right so if you have a hard drive and you put data on it it becomes more chaotic you're adding entropy to the hard drive right so before you put data on the hard drive, a brand new hard drive out of the box, it's going to be all ones or all zeros on
Starting point is 00:52:13 it, right? Very low entropy. Yeah. And one of the laws of thermodynamics is that in a closed system, entropy cannot decrease. It stays the same or it increases. So when you're adding data to a hard drive, it's adding entropy. So it's going from all ones or all zeros to one zero zero one zero zero zero zero, making a chaotic mess of ones and zeros and data on the hard drive, right?
Starting point is 00:52:34 Yep. So what happens when you erase that hard drive? You're putting it back to ones and zeros. So that means you have to take energy, that energy has to, if that's mass, I think it's been proven that when you store data on a hard drive, if we had sophisticated enough measuring devices to weigh them, they would weigh more when you put the data on them. In fact, I heard that if you weighed all the data, if you weighed all the data that's on every single server farm and data center and hard drive in the world, it would be like, I don't know, a kilogram.
Starting point is 00:53:09 So that's how minute it is. But there is a measurable amount of mass that's added to a hard drive once you store data on it. Right. So like theoretically, if you could weigh it before and after, it would weigh a little bit more after you put the data on it. So if it's mass when the data is on the hard drive and you erase the hard drive, that mass has to go to energy, right? That's E equals MC squared. But it's data. And if you crack open that hard drive, you're not going to see.
Starting point is 00:53:36 see anything. Right. It's going to be, you know, it's going to be, you know, what is the only other form of mass that we can't detect electromagnetically? Dark matter. Right. So it's theoretically. So if energy equals mass and you store this mass on a hard drive as data, that would
Starting point is 00:53:58 mean energy equals mass equals data, which would theoretically, you could say that dark matter is a computational cloud that's projecting our simphing. simulation. Potentially. That would be one way to look at it. That said, I know many people have proposed this idea that if you put information into something, it should increase the mass. Like there's a guy named Melvin Vopsin in the UK computer scientist.
Starting point is 00:54:25 And he came up with, you know, this idea of information mass equivalence and also his second law of infodynamics, which was meant to sort of counter the second law of thermodynamics. And what he said was that entropy generally increases, but in certain systems, like they studied like evolution of the viruses and a few other things, they said it actually decreases in some cases because you're adding some order. I mean, yes, it definitely increases from if everything is blank or everything is one. So what you're talking about is information entropy, which is quite interesting. Because there's a guy named Claude Shannon who was considered the father of him.
Starting point is 00:55:06 information theory. He's the guy who came up with the whole concept of transmitting data, right? Right. Of how to measure the amount of information in a piece of data. So getting back to your earlier point, if there was like 64,000 ones in a row, is that really 64K bits of data? Not really, you can just say it's one and 64,000, repeat it this many times. So you don't need actually 64,000 bits to transmit that information because there's low information entropy. And or if you know that half of it is ones and half of it is zero, okay, again, you don't need a whole 64,000 bits to do that. And so that became the basis of how we transmit information digitally and why we can watch, why people can watch this podcast on YouTube is because of that.
Starting point is 00:55:56 Right. And so I think this idea that the universe consists of information is quite interesting. and there's a whole area of digital physics where they're trying to measure they're trying to come up with a new way to think about the world not in terms of energy or mass but in terms of the amount of information that is contained within it
Starting point is 00:56:19 and so they'll say that it has to be conservation of that information just like you say there has to be conservation of energy like you were talking about with the equivalence of you know in this case the master of the energy but in this case they're trying to measure, you know, what happens to this information, does it get lost, how much information
Starting point is 00:56:39 can be stored inside a black hole, for example? And it's defined by the surface area of the black hole, which is what has led some people to think that the universe must be some kind of a hologram that looks three-dimensional, but it's not actually three-dimensional, because the amount of information that can be stored is defined more by the surface area and, you know, of the whole thing. So that's like the holographic principle. There's a whole thing around holography, which is quite interesting. There was a book called A Holographic Universe that came out back in the 90s, I think it was, or late 80s or so.
Starting point is 00:57:15 And I kind of view, you know, my book is taking another look at this idea that the world is some kind of projection, but using video games and computer technology because now we've come much further on that side. You know, our video games are getting very good. Our AI is getting very good. Yeah. Have you seen this recent prompt theory videos that have no time to cook no problem because my friends at huel today's sponsor have you covered it's spelled h uel and their black edition ready to drink is a total game changer it's a complete meal in one bottle with 35 grams of protein 27 vitamins and minerals high fiber and low sugar so you feel full focused and ready for your day no prep no cleanup just grab and go because eating is fun but making food is not Huell has already sold over 500 million meals around the world, so now it's your turn to try it. New customers can get 15% off when they go to Huell.com and use my promo code, Danny.
Starting point is 00:58:12 I love Huel not only because of the great taste and it's packed with protein, but it's super convenient and way more affordable than fast food. You don't have to waste time waiting in line. You can just throw it in your bag or in your car when you're on the go and slam the thing, and I really do feel full after drinking just one of them. It's not a burst of carbs or a protein break. It's just the perfect balance for me because it was designed by experts to provide all the ingredients your body needs from a meal. And I already mentioned it's incredibly affordable. It's cheaper than a combo meal. So for me, that makes it the perfect balanced choice for a meal on the go.
Starting point is 00:58:44 New customers can get 15% off by using my exclusive code, Danny, spell D-A-N-N-Y, at hule.com. Please see our description for full terms and conditions. Skip the stress, not the nutrition. Try Huell today for complete nutrition. So Google came out with their V-O-3 video engine, which can... I saw this yesterday. Yeah, you probably saw it because they're amazing videos that people were putting out. Now, before that, you could create videos, but there was no audio.
Starting point is 00:59:11 You'd have to go to a separate. And so what some people did was they used prompts, right? That's how we create. We generative AI. We give it a prompt and we thought what to do. And so they created a whole series of videos that are basically people saying, look, we're not prompts. You know, I'm not a prompt.
Starting point is 00:59:29 clearly look around at this beautiful mountain landscape. You're saying that's all zeros and ones? Obviously, it's not. Right. Okay, here. This is prompt theory? Yeah, we could probably bring up some videos around prompt theory. Yeah, we'll get copywritten probably by this channel.
Starting point is 00:59:46 Oh, okay. Yeah, well, they're sharing up, they're being pretty shared widely on social media. Are they really? Yeah. I showed some at a conference recently I was at in Palm Springs. and I showed the videos and I told people, okay, these are AI characters.
Starting point is 01:00:02 They've been generated completely by AI. And, you know, you have like a guy politician saying, we will ban teaching the prompt theory, you know, from our schools, for example. And at the end, people came up to me and said, wait, are you saying those weren't real? Like actors?
Starting point is 01:00:19 Yeah. No, no, those were completely generated by AI. And so it's a variation of simulation theory, which is going back to how I originally got into this idea, which was when will we get to the point that we could create a perfect simulation that reaches what I call the simulation point? And the simulation point is a virtual reality
Starting point is 01:00:42 that is indistinguishable from physical reality because it's so realistic. And two, it has AI characters in there that are indistinguishable from characters that might be controlled by a real person. And we're getting closer and closer to that point. And if we've gotten to that point,
Starting point is 01:01:00 then, you know, how would we know if we're in a simulation or not? The chances suddenly go up to at least 50-50 because if you can't tell the difference if you're in a simulated world or not. And this is the logic that led Nick Bostrom, who is a philosopher at Oxford. He wrote a paper all the way back in 2003
Starting point is 01:01:19 called Are You Living in a Simulation? Yeah, what were the... There was like four basic principles of this, right? Yeah. There were three possibilities he said. He said, if you take a technological civilization, now he was concerned primarily with AI and how much information would it take to simulate the brain and how much information would it take to basically simulate the history of a person and all the processing power of a brain. And he said, well, it's not that much in the scheme of things. So therefore, it's possible a technological civilization could get to the point where he called
Starting point is 01:01:51 it post-human, which is very similar to what I'm calling the, the simulation point without so much the virtual reality part. But he said, if it could get to that point, there's three, well, first of all, there's three possibilities, which we kind of call Bostrum's Trilemma now. The first possibility is it's not possible or nobody gets there anywhere, no civilization ever gets there.
Starting point is 01:02:13 So then the chances we're in a simulation are zero because it's either not possible or every civilization blows themselves up before they get to that point. The second possibility, which I think is unlikely is he says they get to that point, but they don't create any simulations. Because of moral reasons or moral reasons or they have some laws.
Starting point is 01:02:33 Maybe they don't want to cause suffering or there's just other reasons why. And they're banned. So it's a possibility, but personally, if that were true, then the chances we're in a simulation are low, according to Bostrum's simulation argument is what it's called, because there's not going to be many simulations. And then he said, the third possibility is we are most likely in a simulation.
Starting point is 01:02:58 Okay, now how do you get to that from that? Because the third possibility is that civilization creates a bunch of simulated beings and then it runs another server and it creates a whole other trillion simulated beings and then it runs another server and it creates a whole other trillion. So he came up with a statistical argument.
Starting point is 01:03:16 He said if there are this many simulated beings and there's only this many smaller numbers, of biological beings that are in base reality and actually probably simpler to use Elon Musk's version. So what Elon Musk said in 2016 was assume there's a billion
Starting point is 01:03:34 simulated worlds and there's only one physical world. So what are the odds that you're in the physical world? One in a billion. One in a billion, right? That's exactly what he said. The chances that we're in base reality
Starting point is 01:03:45 is one in billions in that scenario. So crazy to think about. Yeah. Now that is, remember, that was only one of three. possibilities. Yeah. So, you know, Bostrom himself didn't know where to put the, the probabilities for each of these three possibilities. But if we can get there to that point where we can create these AI simulated worlds, then you suddenly find yourself in either possibility two
Starting point is 01:04:10 or possibility three. And that was... That's one of the big questions. One of the things is that I can't wrap my mind around that I always think about is like the way it was eloquently stated in the 13th floor movie. where he's like, what happens when one of these guys crawls up the extension court and finds a way to kill its God? Right. So this is an interesting question, too, because can you escape the simulation? Right. And that's kind of what it's asking.
Starting point is 01:04:37 And in fact, you know, it's something that there have been rumors that, you know, a couple of billionaires have funded research to try to figure out, you know, is there a way to hack the simulation? There's a few guys out there that have written papers on, can we hack? the simulation in some way. I had this dude Danny Goler on here. He's the one who, yeah, you know Danny. Yeah, I know Danny.
Starting point is 01:04:57 Connected us. That's right. Of course, duh. So he's doing this experiment with the laser and the DMT code. Right. He told me about that.
Starting point is 01:05:04 Fascinating stuff. And, you know, originally, he was saying it kind of looks like Katakana, but. It looks like, Sanskrit to me. Oh, Sanskrit. It looks like, if you look at it.
Starting point is 01:05:12 Have you tried it then? Pull up, yeah, I've done it twice. Pull up the Lord of the Rings, the ring from Lord of the Rings. And you can see the text on the ring. Right.
Starting point is 01:05:22 That's what it looks closest to, to me. So the first time I did it, I didn't see it. I didn't see the code. I saw just like crazy patterns rotating in the laser. And I could see like a pocket of space. So that's what the code looked like to me. Similar to that. That's really interesting.
Starting point is 01:05:42 And I've heard from him and I've heard from others. I know they're trying to work on, are there ways to see this without taking DMT, for example? Right. Yeah. And the second time I did it, when I saw it, it was crazy because I, I mean, I saw it through the laser. But it was like, I tried going back into it. So I like, I did the DMT three or four times. And like the fourth time I did it. All I saw was Dix covered in this code everywhere surrounding me. And I was like, and I was like, the fourth time I did it. All I saw was, um, dicks covered in this code. covered in this code everywhere surrounding me and I was like
Starting point is 01:06:21 I think something is telling me that I'm pushing my limits here they're telling me to fuck off that's great yeah it was hilarious Danny filmed the whole thing oh that's hilarious well I think it's an interesting question
Starting point is 01:06:32 I mean many people have told me that the first time they took DMT or sometime they took it maybe not the first time but they started to see the grid lines of the simulation and I know Danny himself talks about these characters,
Starting point is 01:06:47 is it the insectoid characters? I forget which ones they are, but these beings that he said are like, they're more like admins or managers. They're like bureaucratic people who are just kind of supporting the simulation or whatever you call, whatever you would call that world, right?
Starting point is 01:07:02 Like if you're jumping, like either you're jumping over to another simulation or you're breaking down, there's this brain filter hypothesis, I'm sure you're aware of where it's like all of our senses are basically like vision and smell and touch and taste that's all just filters it's filtering out all the stuff that's potentially all around us right now right so that we can basically survive
Starting point is 01:07:24 we get to the day eat sleep reproduce drive to work um and you know if there are and this is like you know i don't know if you ever heard of joe rogan's fart hypothesis no i haven't heard of that the fart hypothesis is great it's one of my favorites it's basically like if somebody farts around you and you don't have the sense of smell or a nose, you're just going to be sitting there in their fart, and you have no clue. So how many, so I mean, obviously we've evolved to, we evolved to gain the sense of smell
Starting point is 01:07:56 and our noses to detect enemies or prey, or, you know, if there's a gas leak or something like this, it's a very relevant sense to us so we can survive. But if we didn't have a nose, we would have no clue that there's these smells and there's these fart odors that are like surrounding us or whatever. So how much, many senses or how many things that are similar to that are all around us all the time that we
Starting point is 01:08:17 just haven't evolved the sensory organs to detect, you know? Yeah. So that's like that kind of like that brain filter hypothesis that the DMT is breaking down these filters in your brain and somehow you're able to see more of what this really is. Right. And I think there's validity to that because I've heard it from now enough people. And, you know, I get into the same discussions about this that I might about things like near-death experiences or people who do yogic techniques or shamanic journey, like are they seeing
Starting point is 01:08:46 something real? Are they seeing just an interpretation of what's real? And for me, the interesting thing about the simulation hypothesis is it's really a collection of two or three different assertions. The first of those assertions is that the physical universe is based on information.
Starting point is 01:09:03 It's not really physical. And going back to John Wheeler, he had a phrase called it from bit. Yep. And he basically said that when you get right down to it, if everything is 99% empty space, you go down to the atom, it's this weird electron cloud,
Starting point is 01:09:17 and you keep going down, at the bottom level, what is a particle? If the world consists of particles, what is a particle? Exactly. And nobody really knows exactly what it is. And he said it comes down to a series of properties that define that particle.
Starting point is 01:09:32 It's a series of yes, no questions. And those are bits. A bit is a one or a zero. or yes, no question. And so he said, anything that's physical actually consists of bits of information, you know, down at the bottom level.
Starting point is 01:09:44 Now, the second assertion is that that information gets rendered for us as a kind of reality that we perceive through our senses somehow. And the first part is not really controversial, even with physicists. Like I met a Nobel Prize-winning fitness physicist at the University of Cambridge
Starting point is 01:10:06 and we were talking about this and he goes, okay, that's not controversial anymore. The universe basically consists of information. Oh, really? That's what he said to me. It used to be controversial. If you go back like 30, 40 years in the 70s, they'll be like, no, it's not information,
Starting point is 01:10:20 it's energy, it's this, it's that. They'll say, you know, that's a valid view of the universe. But, you know, whether it's rendered as a video game or not or how that happens, that's a big mystery. Nobody knows why it goes from that. to what we're actually perceiving. And you get into neuropsychology, but also I think the video game metaphor
Starting point is 01:10:44 works pretty well. And then the last part of that is that the whole thing is a kind of hoax, that this whole thing isn't real, that it's set up for us in some way and we're limited to perceiving what's outside of it. And that's where these experiences, whether it's DMT,
Starting point is 01:11:01 whether it's certain yogic techniques, mystical techniques that allow you to perceive other beings, that are here with us. Right. And in all the world's, you know, mystical traditions and religious traditions, there's all kinds of stories about other beings that are here with us. Right. Like the Jin, for example, in the Middle East.
Starting point is 01:11:20 You know, that's a very common thing where they say that there are gin here. We can't see them all the time, but they can make themselves visible to us at different times. And same with near-death experiences. The first thing they report is floating out of their body. and then they're looking down at their body and they're saying they have, you know, 360 degree vision and sometimes they'll see people in the room and sometimes other relatives will perceive those people in the room
Starting point is 01:11:46 before the person dies and they'll be like a brother and sister sitting with their parent who's dying and just did you just see dad? They said, yeah, if it's their mom dying, you know, and their dad has already passed on the other side. So they'll have shared death experiences at that point in time, which are pretty fascinating. And then, you know, they report going through,
Starting point is 01:12:05 through a light, seeing a being there, and then many of them report a life review. Are you familiar with the concept of the life review? I'm vaguely familiar with the concept of the life review. So I learned about it from a guy named Danny and Brinkley. He wrote a book called Saved by the Light back in the 90s, and he was struck by lightning. Like, I think it was back in 1975.
Starting point is 01:12:25 Jeffrey Krakpo wrote a book about a lady who was struck by lightning. Yes. I don't remember her name, but I remember the story though. It's a fucking wild story. It's wild, right? But so what the life review is about 20% of people who have had near-death experiences report the life room. And what they say is it's like going back and reviewing every part of your life, like everything you've done. But not just watching it. It's like you're re-experiencing it from the point of view of other people.
Starting point is 01:12:56 So like in Danion's case, he literally shot people because he was in the military in Vietnam. And he said he had to feel what it was like to have the bullet come. and, you know, what happened to that guy. And earlier he was a bully and he used to beat up kids when he was in. And he had to feel what it was like to be beat up by himself. But more than that, there's something called the ripple effect. And the ripple effect is where you see what happened to, let's say you killed somebody, you see what happened to their family because that guy's not around anymore.
Starting point is 01:13:25 So you see the ripple effects of your actions. And so Danion called it a holographic, panoramic 360-degree re-year. review of your life. And I remember thinking about that and thinking, okay, well, if we say, if we take that at face value, and this is where I get into a lot of arguments with scientists, because I say, look, if a thousand people, if one person says they've been to China, it's okay to say China probably doesn't, you wouldn't know if China exists or not. But if a thousand people have been to China, and even if some of them have slight differences, there's probably something like China out there if these people are reporting it to you. Now, they may describe it's.
Starting point is 01:14:04 slightly differently. They may have gone to different parts of China. One might say it's mountainous. One might say it's a beach by the ocean. But there's something there. And that's with near-death experiences and life reviews, there must be something there. And so I said, well, how would you implement that? Like what's the mechanism? Technoscientifically. Well, a few years ago, around the same time that I was doing the VR story with the ping pong, I was involved in a startup that was taking a game like, let's say, Fortnite. At the time, we were using League of Legends. And so if you've played League of Legends, you know, you're playing it on a 2D screen. And you're seeing, you know, the different characters fight with each other.
Starting point is 01:14:41 And you're kind of looking down on it. And he said, you could put on a virtual reality headset and you could basically put yourself into the game at any XYZ coordinate. Wow. And so there was a game called CSGO, Counter Strike Global Offensive, which was a first-person shooter and took place in like, I don't know, the desert in Iraq or something. It was probably during those years when it came out. And we would replay that game session, but you could see your character shooting the other character, but you would be at the point of view of the other person.
Starting point is 01:15:15 So you'd see kind of your character shooting them. Now, we didn't record any feelings because it's just VR. But to me, that brings up an interesting possibility. The reason you can have a life review is because we're in a virtual reality and the entire 3D world is being recorded in a way. and you can replay it from any XYZ coordinate within the game. And you can experience it from any person's point of view from the game, just like we could go to any time within the recording of a game
Starting point is 01:15:49 and we could figure out how to redraw or replay what happened at the time. Right. And just like there's a lot of content on YouTube that's just video game sessions, right? People just recorded themselves. And Twitch, obviously, live streaming. But on YouTube, the most popular, popular content for a while was in fact just these video game.
Starting point is 01:16:07 Oh yeah, I remember. And it's interesting because I remember my nephew was like three or four years old and he would say to his father, my brother, he would say, oh, I want to watch Star Wars. And my brother would say, oh, you want to watch the Star Wars movie? Because no, I want to watch the man and the woman play the Star Wars game. That's so wild. Isn't that wild? But a life review is sort of like that.
Starting point is 01:16:26 We can use that as an analogy to say we are looking back at our gameplay session and what these near-depth experiences say is they themselves are doing the judging. Like the being of light is there, but they're like, oh man, I shouldn't have done that. Why? Because when I said that to my mom, I met a woman recently who had a life review and I think she like pulled out all the flowers that her mom had taken so much time to put in the garden. And now she saw she was able to experience how sad her mom was because she had put all that effort into the flowers.
Starting point is 01:16:58 Now, what is the difference between one of these life? So these life reviews happen when somebody is unconscious, right? Like when you get struck by lightning, I remember the woman who Jeffrey Krippel wrote about, she was unconscious for a couple minutes, maybe 10 minutes or something like this. Yes. And she described being, she described like two or three weeks worth of time going by and like sitting in this garden. Right. And talking to these universal godlike beings or something like this and having conversations and meeting her grandfather, I think, all kinds of crazy stuff. But like, I'm always curious, like, what's the difference between that?
Starting point is 01:17:32 and getting very close to like dying, like where you see like you can very easily die right here because this happened to me before where I almost drowned a couple, one time in particular. And I had my life flashing more, you know, people say my life flashed before my eyes.
Starting point is 01:17:49 Right. And that it wasn't like a, a very in depth three dimensional projection of everything in my life from other people's perspectives like you talked about. Yeah. But it's more just like all your, your most fond,
Starting point is 01:18:02 loving memories of your life kind of just like all of a sudden pop into your head and you're like, oh my God, I have to make peace with this before I'm dead, before I'm gone. Right. Which is a, you know, it's a bizarre phenomenon that I've experienced. Yeah. Yeah, I think that's very interesting. And like I said, only about 20% of people who've had near death experiences report life reviews.
Starting point is 01:18:22 But that doesn't mean it could also mean they didn't go far enough. Yes. They weren't close enough to, you know, a death experience, if you will. Right. Right. And some people report gardens in particular. Some people report crystal cities that they visited. Yeah, I wonder, does it line up with their religious ideologies, their pre-existing religious views? In some cases it does. But in other cases, it doesn't. It's interesting that, you know, some people will see Jesus, for example, as the being of light would be presented as Jesus. Some people see just their relatives who are taking them along. being of light is just a being a light. Some people see an angel. Some people say it's God.
Starting point is 01:19:05 So I personally think that even what we see after we die is another kind of simulation that's kind of created for us, like in the sense of like the garden. Okay, this garden is created for us because it's a peaceful scene. It's kind of what we would need to recover a little bit from everything that's come along. But there are actual beings there. They just just present themselves differently depending on your predisposition, whether it's particular religious disposition, et cetera. But they're remarkably similar. I mean, there have been studies of near-death experiences in the Islamic world, for example, and there's less of people reporting it. It's interesting. But the ones that do report them report very similar things. Now, I went into,
Starting point is 01:19:56 so in my book, there's a whole section dedicated to religion. So I went back to the different religions to see, okay, is there something related to this life review, which relates to me to the idea of being in a virtual reality because it can be replayed, or at least recorded if it can be replayed? And it turns out there is, but they use different metaphors because they had to explain it to people, you know, 2,000 years ago. So like in the Bible and Judaism and Christianity, they're the recording angels who, and you can find, you know, pictures of statues in Washington, D.C. with recording angels where, you know, it's an angel with a book and the book of life. And they're writing down who gets into heaven and who doesn't get into heaven.
Starting point is 01:20:39 Oh, wow. Or St. Peter. Like Santa's elves. Like Santa's elves. Right. They're actually looking at the... Who's naughty or nice. Who's naughty or nice.
Starting point is 01:20:48 And so some people say, like St. Peter, is actually looking at your actual deeds. But yet, here's like an image that's very popular. Huh. of a recording angel. Now, they don't get into a lot of detail in it, but in the Quran, they actually do get into much more detail. They have something called the scroll of deeds. Okay, scroll is long, Santa's list, right?
Starting point is 01:21:09 And they say there's two angels. They're called the recording angels. And what they do is they write down all your good deeds and they write down all your bad deeds. And then when you die, there's actually a verse in the Quran that says that what judgment day really is, right? Because we think of judgment day as God saying,
Starting point is 01:21:27 you get to go to heaven or you get to, you know, you get to go to hell in at least the Western Abrahamic, you know, religions or purgatory, say. But there's actually a verse that says, on the day of reckoning, your book will be open. Read your book and you yourself are sufficient to be the reckoner. Meaning, now again, they were using a book metaphor, which is a technology.
Starting point is 01:21:52 It's a technological metaphor. And they were using angels. But if you think about it, what they're really saying is that you're going to have a life review, that it's a virtual reality of some kind. You're going to replay everything that you did because they don't mean literally there's angels sitting there with feather pens writing down, you know, he got up today and he went to work and he got into a car crash, right? They're just saying it's being recorded somehow.
Starting point is 01:22:18 And so today we can use an updated technological metaphor. for that, which is that we're recording the whole scene and we're going to replay it for you and you are going to look at it and say, oh, damn, I shouldn't have done that. Or I had agreed in this life I was going to work on my aggression or my greed or whatever. I was going to earn my compassion.
Starting point is 01:22:36 And look what happened. I forgot to do it that time. So let me do better next time. And then it turns out, you know, so we've talked about kind of the Western religions, but even within, like say Hinduism, they actually have a god, a minor god, called Chitra Gupta
Starting point is 01:22:52 and who is he? He's the record keeper and he sits next to Yama, the god of death and what is he doing? He's like recording all the things that you do to try to determine where your karma will take you to like a heavenly realm or not. Now again the angels and these minor gods
Starting point is 01:23:09 they're not really meant to be in my opinion actual entities per se they're just functions like a recording angels. It doesn't mean you and I really have these two little angels on our shoulder. It's a function, and the function is to record
Starting point is 01:23:24 what happens, and how are you going to explain that to somebody a couple thousand years ago? You're going to say, well, maybe there's a book and there's an angel, and there's an infinite number of angels, so they're all doing this kind of stuff. And so I believe that most religions have come about by using technological
Starting point is 01:23:40 metaphors or other metaphors to try to explain this process that may be ineffable, right? Which is a term that's used a lot with like near death experiencers, which means it can't be put into words. Right. That there's something profound, but they need to put it in words that we can understand.
Starting point is 01:23:59 And I think the simulation hypothesis is an evolution of those metaphors. So you can think of it on a continuum. You can think of it as literally a computer simulation. Or you can think of it as a metaphor for something like a simulation that's very advanced and complex. It's a good way for us to be able to understand it because we are now getting the point where we understand information science is, I like to say
Starting point is 01:24:24 information science is eating all the other sciences, right? Right. Because most of what you do and work in these other sciences now is just run this computer simulations on things and you try to simulate what might happen. Right.
Starting point is 01:24:37 And like even genetics and biology, you know, it comes down to the DNA and what is DNA. It's a series of bits of information that are packed, you know, tightly. It's a very, it's been described as a very, efficient mechanism to record a whole bunch of information basically. Right.
Starting point is 01:24:55 And then there's a process running that reads that and then transcribes and does things on it. And so, you know, you can kind of describe that from an informational point of view. In fact, I think the guy who came up with the term gene was actually von Neumann. I don't know if you know. Yeah, John von Neumann. Yeah, John von Neumann. Because he was looking at it in terms of information and how do you, he said, can I duplicate life, which means I would need to
Starting point is 01:25:20 reproduce this bit of information. And so he's trying to come up with algorithms and he came up with this idea of cellular automata and von Neumann machines that could basically, you know, they function and they recreate themselves. He created the first computers, right?
Starting point is 01:25:34 Like the Iliac and the maniac. I don't know if he created the actual the Inniac computer, but he was heavily involved. In fact, the architecture all computers use now is the von Neumann architecture. Yes.
Starting point is 01:25:48 Which is, you know, you have memory and you've got a CPU. Now, of course, we have multiple CPUs and we have GPUs and all these other things as well. But it's basically the same architecture that he defined way back when. And the guy was a genius, right? Oh, yeah. He was one of the, like, one of the smartest dudes in history. He was, yeah. And he came up with this idea of the von Neumann machine, which are probes that you send out to the universe with a whole bunch of instructions.
Starting point is 01:26:13 Remember, they didn't really have full computers back then. So he said you would have a long tape of a. instructions and that these probes would be robots that would read this instructions and they would grab some raw material and then they would recreate themselves right and he said this is a way to colonize the galaxies you send out these AI or robot probes if you will and those are called von Neumann machines which is interesting so this ties to the UFO subject and this was all conceptual stuff this is all conceptual stuff back then and NASA eventually I think put together some studies If you've ever read Arthur C. Clark's rendezvous with Rama.
Starting point is 01:26:48 No. So they find this alien space probe in the solar system and it looks like a big cylinder. Incidentally, I pointed out to Avi Loeb because I'm involved with the Galileo Project that that was almost the exact size they think of Muamu was. Oh, really? It was very similar in size.
Starting point is 01:27:04 But in the novel, when they went to the cylinder, it was like there was nobody there, but there was a bunch of raw material in a kind of an ocean. and then turns out there were these little robots that were basically using that raw material to recreate themselves. It was basically a Von Neumann machine.
Starting point is 01:27:21 Oh, that's crazy. It's pretty wild. Von Neumann, I think he was the guy who calculated the exact, he calculated the exact height in the atmosphere that they needed to detonate fat man and little boy to create, to kill the most people.
Starting point is 01:27:42 Oh, it's interesting. So he had to basically reverse engineer the math with those bombs and to basically figure out at what altitude to detonate those things so they could kill the most people. Oh, interesting. Yeah, I know he was involved in the Manhattan Project. And they were a crazy way to harness somebody's intellect. It was pretty, pretty nuts. Actually, you know, my favorite movie on that subject on the Manhattan Project is actually not the Oppenheimer movie, which I thought was good. but it's a movie called Day One, which came out back in the 80s, I think. Oh, really?
Starting point is 01:28:16 Brian Denehy plays General Groves. Oh, really? Yeah, and he looks like General Groves. Groves, you know, they called him in the Pentagon, they called him the biggest son of a bitch I ever met. Like this big guy would go in there and just bulldoze things. And then I forget the actor who played Oppenheimer, but the guy who actually thought of the idea of the atomic bomb
Starting point is 01:28:35 was a guy named Leo Silard, who was another Hungarian, along with Von Neumann, There was this group of Hungarian scientists that came over from Europe. Good thing they did. But he thought of this idea of a chain reaction that could be kicked off where you would shoot a neutron out at like an atom and it would basically have nuclear fission. It would break off into two pieces.
Starting point is 01:29:00 And then they would release more neutrons. And they would break off more atoms into pieces. And the energy released by that was the chain reaction. It got to the point where it became. sort of an uncontrolled chain reaction and it used up all the energy and that got converted into the bomb. So that was like the basic idea of the bomb. They didn't know which material to use. But he came up with that whole thing.
Starting point is 01:29:21 And there's a great scene in day one where he like tries to explain it to Lord Rutherford. Rutherford was, I don't know, Cambridge or Oxford, but he was the guy who discovered the nucleus of the atom. And Rutherford says, that's ridiculous. That's moonshine. You can never harness the energy of the atom. So he writes it up in a patent and he tries to get the British War office to you know he's like here I want to give
Starting point is 01:29:44 this to you because what's happening in Germany because you know he had studied in Germany with Einstein and they were like oh you know in their polite British way oh yes thank you very much thank you very much and aside because they had no idea what to do with it and then you know him along with Enrico Fermi
Starting point is 01:30:00 and another guy Wigner basically convinced Einstein to write a letter to Roosevelt that this could be turned into some kind of weapon and the Germans were working on it. So we better work on it and that got them going. I've studied a bit of the innovation history around that
Starting point is 01:30:17 because part of what I do in my doctoral research is how does science and technology evolve over time. It's interesting how that evolution happened. We went from what year was a civil war again? 1860. 1860, right, 1860. So between the civil war, using muskets and cannons to dropping atomic bombs out of airplanes was less than a hundred years.
Starting point is 01:30:48 Yeah. Yeah, you're right. And how long has it been since we did that? It's been almost another hundred years. So it's been like, what, 70, 80 years or something like that? Yeah, since the end of the World War II. Like what do we have now? Right?
Starting point is 01:31:03 Has it evolved? You would think the way technology evolves, it's exponential. right or the way everything technological is typically exponential growth so if we went from muskets to atomic bombs in less than 100 years what like how far have we gotten since then yeah and you'll notice that a lot of like the aerospace innovation you know has slowed down at least in terms of look at the moon we we went to the moon over the course of like 69 to what 72 something like that yeah and then we just we just just washed our hands of that technology, threw it away. Now, you know, we're pushing back every moon mission ever since.
Starting point is 01:31:45 Yeah. It's weird. Yeah. And now, you know, people think China may get to the moon before we do or India may before we do because we're like, we've already done it, right? But that whole process is interesting. And we've seen a lot of investment in Silicon Valley, for example, in AI and in computer technology. And only now are they starting to invest more in deep tech, which are. like more hardware type things. You know, there's a company called Boom Supersonic, for example, that's trying to have a supersonic commercial plane because the Concord too, right?
Starting point is 01:32:17 That was another one. Oh, yeah, the Concord, yes. I mean, that was Britain and France, right? British Airways and Air France. And, you know, you think we'd have something better than the Concord by now. Yeah, we're still flying the same exact airplanes, basically. More or less, right?
Starting point is 01:32:31 They're just trying to make it more efficient. Yeah. And, you know, this is interesting because this is what happens with startups when they grow big is they start off completely innovating, new products and then over time, they just end up like trying to optimize. Yeah, version two, version three, version 600. You look at Apple and they haven't had a great breakthrough in a long time since Steve Jobs
Starting point is 01:32:49 because you haven't had. Since 2006, since they created the iPhone. There's been nothing like that. Yeah, not at that level, right? No. And so, you know, I wrote a paper for the Soul Foundation, you know, with Gary Dolan out of Stanford and Peter Scafish, you know, co-founded that. And I wrote a paper called How to How Would We Build?
Starting point is 01:33:08 a UFO or UAP innovation ecosystem where we figure out how this technology might actually work and get the private sector involved in building this. Because right now, the whole thing is locked up. And there aren't enough bright minds trying to figure out how to do this. And for me, for some people- Well, you gotta keep a secret.
Starting point is 01:33:31 Well, the question is, do you gotta keep it all secret? And that's an interesting question. Because that's what they say, we gotta keep it all secret. But if you look at the amount of innovation that could be unlocked by getting the brightest minds and entrepreneurs to try to use this stuff, because for me, disclosure wouldn't be about just
Starting point is 01:33:49 the US government saying we are not alone. For me, it would be, OK, can I now step into a craft that uses anti-gravity technology and go up to the other side of the Earth quickly or go up to the moon and come back without having to use rockets, which or again, another outdated technology and dangerous technology, right? I mean, even with Elon Musk Starship,
Starting point is 01:34:13 it keeps burning up. I mean, they've done amazing things on the engineering side, but they're still working in that paradigm. Yes. And it's because of geopolitical concerns. It's amazing how much of this stuff, like the reason we went to the moon was as much because of geopolitical concerns.
Starting point is 01:34:31 It's why everybody was pushing to get there because we were competing with Russia. And now I was talking to some folks in the UAP task force. And they were basically saying, every other word out of their mouth was China, China, China, right? And so they said, we can't send this stuff to MIT. We can't send this stuff to Harvard. We can't send this stuff anywhere because then the Chinese will have it.
Starting point is 01:34:59 And so they're keeping like this lock on it because they're thinking of it in terms of tribes of humans, which is what we do, and they're not thinking of it as we, the human race. It's kind of like reminds me of not necessarily saying that the UFO phenomenon is necessarily evil or trying to take over the earth, but it reminds me a little bit of what happened with the colonization of North America by the Europeans, where the tribes were competing against each other to get a hold of the guns and the technology, and they didn't cooperate with each other. and what happened to them.
Starting point is 01:35:37 You know, eventually there was a guy named Ticumse who tried to unite from the Shawnee trying to unite all of these different tribes together. But, you know, the older people didn't really listen. You had these old rivalries and stuff. And I think that's by trying to... That's interesting. Personally, and again, I'm not saying necessarily
Starting point is 01:35:54 that I don't necessarily buy the threat narrative, but by trying to use the technology against each other and dominance, we're missing out on where we could go as a species. And that's unfortunate, I think. Well, of course, they want to use this stuff for war. I mean, as weapons. That's the first thing they would go to if there's some sort of crazy technology that defies physics and gravity.
Starting point is 01:36:16 And so like this is how do we weaponize it to make ourselves the most powerful super power in the world? I mean, if you look at just look at the, look at the budget of the look at where all the money is in the United States, right? There's a $21 trillion hole in the Department of Defense vanished, unaccounted for money. It's most likely that $21 trillion went to some of this. dark black stuff that they cannot talk about or disclose to anybody it's in the private sector completely disconnected from the military completely disconnected from the u.s government and probably completely autonomous very likely i think you had someone on recent yeah katherine fits yeah she was in a film called thrive uh which was put out by foster gamble back in 2011 and that's how i first
Starting point is 01:36:58 you know oh really because i was involved in helping them thrive i look at them it's good thrive what i know it was kind of a conspiracy movie. I got involved because there was an element of UFO technology and black projects in there that I thought was kind of fun. And at the time, I remember thinking, okay, this UFO stuff is interesting, but man, these guys are out there with their conspiracies. And one time we went to a meeting, I think it was 2011.
Starting point is 01:37:22 I don't know if Catherine Fitz was there, but like Danny Sheehan was there. He was there and a few others were there. And they're like, okay, we're going to talk about, you know, this film and this technology. turn your phones off. And I thought, okay, no big deal. I'll turn my phones off. They said, we want you to turn your phone off
Starting point is 01:37:38 and leave it outside the door in a basket. And I thought, okay, these guys are crazy. They're paranoid. And then, of course, Snowden came out later with the leaks. And it turns out they can listen to your microphone, even if the phone is off. And so that's why I started to think, okay, well, maybe some of this other conspiracy stuff
Starting point is 01:37:54 is actually potentially true. Like, there's stuff that I was conditioned to think was not true. So that's interesting. But if you think the aviation industry, like it took a while for it to get to where we ended up, say, with World War II. And there were prizes, innovation prizes, like Charles Lindbergh actually was competing to win a prize. Like, I forget how much it was, like $20,000 or something for going across.
Starting point is 01:38:23 And there were a whole number of people. It wasn't, I mean, the Wright brothers discovered the flying machine, but then there was a whole group of people trying to figure out how to take that basic innovation and turn it into real companies. And the aviation industry almost died. And the Postal Service kept it alive in the 1920s. Yeah, because there wasn't commercial aviation was not a thing in the 1920s. It wasn't until like the 30s and later that it became a real thing.
Starting point is 01:38:49 People still went on boats for the most part back then. And so the Postal Service was utilizing it? Was utilized. And Ford themselves, Ford Motor Company had an, aerospace division because they thought airplanes were going to be the next big thing, but it failed. And they said, oh, it's too much money. Nobody wants these things. Nobody's using it.
Starting point is 01:39:07 We got to shut it down. We got to focus on our core business. And that's the problem with having big companies, like these big aerospace companies working with the government only, is they've got their existing budgets and technologies, and they have one customer of the government. But there's no way we're going to get the kind of progress that you made an aviation over time without having different entrepreneurial, you know, activities and companies. Totally.
Starting point is 01:39:30 Trying to figure out how to put this stuff to. That's why, like this dude Robert Bigelow, this aerospace guy, he's putting on all these competitions for people to like write essays on near death experiences or these, you know, these different realms of parapsychology. You know, we had one of the guys on here. We had two people actually. One person was Jeffrey Mishlove, I think, who worked with him. Right.
Starting point is 01:39:53 He wrote the essay, I think. He wrote the S. Well, there was another guy who wrote, Jeffrey Long. Yeah, Jeffrey Long wrote a book about near-death experiences, right? Yeah. And both of those things were funded by John Bigelah, who's an aerospace guy. You know, it's fascinating that that guy would be dedicating, putting so much time and energy and money into researching this kind of sci-fi stuff. Yeah, and that's kind of how it's happening right now.
Starting point is 01:40:17 You've got like these really wealthy guys who maybe will put in a little bit of money, and then they'll move on to put a little bit of money in something else. or you've got these secret government black programs. But what you don't have, so for example, I was in Silicon Valley for over a decade. Kayak gets my flight, hotel, and rental car right. So I can tune out travel advice that's just plain wrong. Bro, Skycoin, way better than points. Never fly during a Scorpio full moon.
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Starting point is 01:41:20 and save up to 20% to get the stay you expected. When you want saving, Not surprises. It matters where you stay. Hilton, for the stay. And I was involved in the venture capital industry, and people came to me all the time, and they said, hey, I've got this free energy device. In fact, with Thry, Foster Gamble, he was one of the direct descendants of the founders of Procter & Gamble. Oh, really? Yeah. So it's really interesting. I mean, film, and they used to show the film at Occupy Wall Street back in the day. You know, they would like project it up on the wall. But we,
Starting point is 01:41:55 went around and looked at some of these devices. And part of the problem is, you know, if you go and you say, look, I've got, you know, UFO technology or I've got this, as an investor, you're going to look at it and say, okay, how do I know if this is works or not? How do I know if this is like legit science as opposed to just a bunch of bunk? Well, you're going to bring in some legit scientists, right, to look at it for you. And what are they going to say? They're going to say, eh, that doesn't really agree with what we know about physics or, you know,
Starting point is 01:42:24 that's just probably a bunch of bunk. Because there's a stigma around this topic. And there aren't enough actual scientists in universities looking into the UFO technology topic. And that's what I think partly will need to change in order to unlock investment in some of these garage inventors who think they have figured out pieces of this. But because we keep it so locked up and we keep it so stigmatized,
Starting point is 01:42:52 like even within academia, you know, I was told, And Gary Nolan was told us, don't talk about UFOs, you know, what's going to happen with your career, you know, if you do that? This is when, you know, a while ago. Well, the, the convenient thing for the people that want to keep the UFO stuff secret is that the internet exists. And people can go on the internet and make a great living, talking and writing about their theories on UFOs, which makes this more of just a messy, chaotic soup of, of, you know, information where there's so much out there, it's like that percentage that is the truth, whether it's a huge percentage or a small percentage, I don't know what it is. Some people say it's like 80% is true and 20% is bullshit. But like you can never, you can never, you can never, you can never 50, 50. You can never figure out. You'll never know what's real or not because like the incentive,
Starting point is 01:43:45 the incentive to talk about this stuff for people on the internet because they can monetize it with videos, podcasts, movies, documentaries, books and all this stuff. stuff. It's just, it's made the whole topic more convoluted, you know, so it doesn't have to be, there doesn't even have to be, spit stigma. There's an industry. There's like fucking industry around it. Right. That's true. But then, which does not, which, which, which, which, which, which, being accurate has nothing to do with how much money you can make. Yeah. I, I, I think that's very true. And, you know, I've, I've listened to people in, you know, from various aspects of this. And I'm like, I don't think what he's, you know, some of what he's saying sounds reasonable, but the rest of it doesn't.
Starting point is 01:44:22 And then I'll ask somebody, you know, who knows them and he's, oh yeah, he made up about 50% of it. And that's a reasonable number that I've heard now from a few different people at about half of what they say they know for sure. But the problem is they also bring in the other half they don't know for sure and they say it as if, as if they know 100% that it's true.
Starting point is 01:44:40 But now speaking from an academic point of view, though, it's easy to dismiss all of that because you're like, well, they're just a bunch of grifters online making money from TV. And that stops the serious scientists. I mean, even, even... And then you have the human ego, where you have people in academics
Starting point is 01:44:59 who go through, you know, working at the universities, their whole lives, studying and teaching stuff. And they, you know, I've seen this multiple times even with Avi Loeb, where he's described how his colleagues are resentful of him being a public-facing person who's getting all this attention,
Starting point is 01:45:15 writing these books, and it creates this sort of tribal clash between people. Yeah, absolutely. Perfect example of that is Graham, Hancock and Flint Dibble. Yeah, yeah, the whole archaeological. Yeah, it's crazy, man. It's everywhere.
Starting point is 01:45:30 Yeah, but even Avi has said, you know, he was attacked for doing this stuff. And I mean, I've had physicists. So I did an academic study because, again, I was studying how science and technology evolves and its effects on society. And so I did like a formal academic study where I interviewed like 20 professors who actually are studying UFOs openly. You know, people you would probably recognize. like Avi like Gary Nolan
Starting point is 01:45:54 and a bunch of other guys and didn't you talk to Jacques Valais yeah I talked to Jacques as well not for this study but I've talked to Jacques Jacques was nice enough to write the forward for the French edition of simulation hypothesis and he and I talked a little bit
Starting point is 01:46:10 about these theories and I can tell you where some of the overlap I think is between the simulation hypothesis and UFOs but I was going to say on this topic of stigma you know there are people that I talk to and they're like, oh yeah, you know, they're cuckoo for, you know, they're cuckoo for studying this. And they other said to me, they didn't talk about it openly
Starting point is 01:46:31 until they got tenure. So the way it works in academia is, you know, you start off as a assistant professor or associate professor and then you get tenure after like seven years. And then you eventually become a full professor. And some of them, they didn't even wait until after tenure. They waited until they were full professors before they're like like Michael Masters who has the idea of the UFOs being time travel devices. Saucers are time machines. Yeah, saucers are time machines which is a very interesting model. But and others it depends on which field you're in like the more, if you're more in physics there's a bigger stigma to this. Like Jeff Krepple says
Starting point is 01:47:14 you know he he didn't mind talking about this. because as long as he had a job, he didn't care. In, like, the religious studies, it's a little less. Sure. It's still stigmatized, but it's not, it's less stigmatized. And so what it is is you have a socialization that happens. There's this identity thing that goes on. And I definitely found this in my research that they said, did anybody tell you not to
Starting point is 01:47:39 study UFOs? No, nobody ever actually said that, but you know you're not supposed to study them. I said, well, how do you know? He goes, well, you get socialized over time in groups of academics who make fun of people who believe in that weird stuff. And they lump in UFOs and Bigfoot and psychic phenomenon is in that bucket now. All these things in that bucket. And they say, you basically build your identity on we, the experts and the scientists are the ones who make fun of those people. And I think that's a lot of what's going on with Graham Hancock and all these guys as well.
Starting point is 01:48:13 So there's the fame element that you mentioned earlier. It's a group think. It's a group think, yeah. And it becomes an identity thing. Like, do you know, in Texas, they had a tough time getting people to not litter, and then they ended up using a slogan, which turned it around. It was like, don't mess with Texas. They were trying to use the identity as Texans to get people to socially use that social identity.
Starting point is 01:48:41 To not litter. To not litter. And that was a very successful campaign. So it's how we build identities, I think, in groups that is actually still affecting. Now, it's less stigmatized than it was before. Yeah. In fact, some people were afraid of the stigma, but then after they went public with what they were doing, they didn't have any repercussions for them. Right.
Starting point is 01:49:03 But other people do believe that they had repercussions. So how does this, do you think that these accounts that people have, of alien sightings or alien abductions. Do you think that something in their mind is happening where they're able to somehow experience the maintenance workers of the simulation? Are these things like the janitors of our simulation that are coming in and cleaning stuff up
Starting point is 01:49:37 or fixing stuff? Well, maybe we can do a quick break. Sure. and then we can jump into that. Perfect. Perfect cliffhanger. Yeah, we'll be right back. Yeah, find out what that is.
Starting point is 01:49:50 Find out what's the latest Bob Lazar movie. I think it might already be out, actually. The newest Bob Lazar project is part of Projects. So when is this movie coming out? It's a VR experience. Oh, it's a VR experience. Oh, they're trying to say this is what it looks like in S4 and stuff. Oh, it's a documentary titled S4, the Bob Lazar story,
Starting point is 01:50:10 a VR experience and book aimed at presenting Lizar's story. Holy shit. That's crazy. It's coming out this month. Oh, no, no, no. The documentary, which was in development as of June 2025, seeks to clarify and expand upon Lazarus' controversial claims. So they're starting it this month.
Starting point is 01:50:30 I thought they were close to finishing. Can you scroll down more and see what else comes up? We created, click on that video, that YouTube video. So they have the Gravatar project and then they're documenting. it as well. So I think there's a accompanying documentary. Yeah, this guy right here. He's basically the documentary guy. I've invested a tremendous amount of time and resources in the past three years. This was initially not supposed to be a documentary film. Neither was it supposed to be a VR experience. But it certainly has become that. And since we made that decision, we're all in.
Starting point is 01:51:11 So what really excited me about working on this project is when we're talking about the documentary space, you know, there's not a lot of innovations in the VFX department and how the stories are being told. We really want to push the envelope in the documentary space and make this like something very unique. I mean, what better way than to completely recreate something that you're not able to go to or see? You may think it's easy to do a military facility, but it's not because there's so many little tiny things that Bob remembers, colors of the wall and what the walls look like and the little grit. You know, how much dirt and is there dirt or not? I mean, I feel terrible for Bob because this happened 35 years ago for him.
Starting point is 01:51:50 So they're building a simulated reality based on, of S4, based on what Bob Lazar talks about. And they're making a documentary about building this simulated reality. I had no idea that was what they were doing. That's wild. Wow, man. That's interesting. Yeah. Did you ever meet John Lear?
Starting point is 01:52:17 Have I ever met him? Yeah, I mean, he's passed now, but... No, I mean, I've read a lot about him, and I've heard a lot of stories about him. He was close with Bob. Yeah, they were close. I think he introduced Bob to George Knapp, and that's how the story came out. Right, right. Back in the day.
Starting point is 01:52:30 Yeah, no, my theory on Bob now, it's, you know, a lot of people... Yeah, we're recording. Fuck it. So, yeah, my theory on... him now is, you know, essentially, I think he was super useful for the CIA and the projects that was, the project that was going on at Air 51 or S4 to try to figure out how to reverse engineer the stuff and figure out what it was. Like he's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, crack, correct, crack problems and, and, and solve some of the stuff that, like, their typical, uh,
Starting point is 01:53:04 scientists that are already there can't figure out. So if you want to bring in somebody, you want to find somebody that's easily deniable if they try to like blow the whistle on it right so like he was running a brothel he had a he divorced his wife uh there was all kinds of crazy shit he was doing at night you know with with you know his group his friend group he was friends with john lear who was like CIA pilot or something like this
Starting point is 01:53:26 so like if he it would be he would be very easily dismissable if uh anything ever got out about him so i think it's probably likely that he was there doing this stuff. Yeah, you know, I've talked to different people with different opinions on Bob Lazar. Yeah. They run the gamut from, you know, I trust everything he says to some of what he says makes sense.
Starting point is 01:53:52 And I was talking to a guy the other day who, you know, was really into Lazar's story. But then as he became a scientist himself and started to work in aerospace, you know, he started to say, he goes, well, it doesn't, it sounds like somebody who's kind of making stuff up like, you know, in the way that he's talking about things. So it's interesting to me, like this one person I was talking to went through different phases of like thinking, okay, he really liked everything he was saying. But then when he became a physicist, he realized, okay, well, that's not exactly how people who, you know, work in those fields would be talking about this stuff. That said, you know, the fact that he said he saw these different models,
Starting point is 01:54:35 like the sport model, et cetera. I mean, I think that that's, that's, you know, that's. seems reasonable from what other people have told us that they have seen, you know, various, either it's craft or specific technology or pieces of craft and things that have taken me. I also think his, the part of his story where he says he walks by a window and saw an alien, I think that could have been a strategic deceptive move on the government's part. To convince him that there was an alien there. So if he was to tell his story, that's the thing that could just, you know, that could be a step too far for people listening to it.
Starting point is 01:55:07 oh okay you saw a fucking alien in there sure right it's similar to what annie jacobson writes about in her area 51 book when the CIA pilots were first test test flying the jet airplanes out of uh in nevada for the first time the CIA pilots would bring gorilla masks in the cockpit with them in case they got within visual distance of a civilian airplane they would wear the gorilla masks so that way when the civilian pilot goes dude i saw this jet airplane flying around the other day and there was a gorilla in the cockpit you know what i mean it just poisons the, it poisons the story and makes it unbelievable. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:55:41 Well, for me, you know, one of the areas of credibility for Bob that I think would help his credibility quite a bit is, you know, he said he was sent to MIT to study physics for a while. And supposedly he went to Caltech as well. And when people searched, they couldn't find much of a record of that. And so, you know, I basically having spent time at MIT during my undergraduate years in the 80s, he was there, I think, late 70s, early 80s, somewhere around then. If you meet somebody who spent a decent amount of time in that environment, it's a very unique
Starting point is 01:56:16 culture at MIT. I mean, maybe this is true about the universities as well. But MIT in particular has kind of a unique culture and language that people use. And I would have come across people in the physics department probably or that either knew him or were there at the same time. Oh, that's when you were there? I was there later. But I'm saying there would still be people that were around because it's kind of this environment where you have people in the faculty and researchers who hang around for years.
Starting point is 01:56:47 But some of the people that I know that I interacted with would probably have been around in the early 80s and late 70s. Could they have sent him in under like a pseudonymous name to keep him secret? They could have. I mean, it's all possible. So that's. But what I'm saying is, like even if I could spend like a lunch with him, And I, you know, I would be able to sniff it out. I think I could sniff it out whether he'd really been there or not.
Starting point is 01:57:10 Now, if he'd only been there for, like, you know, one class that he sat in on on Thursday nights and that's it, then he's not going to be acclimated to the culture. But if he was really there for a couple of years and actually studying, like in physics classes, he would have had to interact with other students and professors. Right. Right. People leave a trace. They would have had to live somewhere nearby in Cambridge at one of the dorms or one of the other things. And you can look up some of that information, but sometimes you get a sense. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:57:40 When somebody's like they don't know the details of something. They know how to say it at a high level, but they don't know, you know, the specific details underneath that. And so I'm very open to the Bob Lazar story just because, one, it's interesting. Two, it's been consistent with it. And three, some of what he says is consistent with what other people. say and I always take the approach that well let's you know let's look at what different people are saying and then we can triangulate and say the things that they agree on are probably kind of true the things they disagree on could be that they're looking at different you know they're looking at
Starting point is 01:58:13 different parts of crafts or they're in different parts of the government they've got different you know they've got different priorities etc depending on if they're coming from intelligence or they were part of a research lab yeah or they were part of an aerospace company you're going to have very different perspectives on all of these things. I mean, I've heard other people say that, wow, thunderstorm. The last time we had thunder like this on the podcast, there was a satanic person sitting in your seat,
Starting point is 01:58:43 conjuring the devil. There you go. I didn't actually expect thunderstorms here in Florida. But every, what? I've been here a couple days. Oh, my God. We get so many thunderstorms during the summer. It's a daily thing.
Starting point is 01:58:55 Yeah. So it starts in June. Yeah. Yeah. So every day there's been one, but then it'll go away after like 15 minutes or something like that. Usually they're afternoon early morning and afternoon thunderstorms and crazy thunder. Oh, interesting. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:59:08 It's been actually the last couple of years has been like more than that. It's been like really abnormally active. Like the thunder and the lightning has been crazy the last two years. It's interesting. I've been living in Phoenix during the school year, the last few years. And they have a monsoon season in like August, September when you get these huge. storms rolling in and you get flooding and then they're gone and then the rest of the year is very dry and so we don't we don't see much else the simulators have a good sense of humor i think so different
Starting point is 01:59:40 parts of the simulation have been uh you know have their own little percentage uh likelihood of getting different uh things but what were you saying before the thunder interrupted us uh so we were talking about bob yeah oh and i said that you know there's true maybe i shouldn't say this now if that thunder came I was just talking that there are other people I've met who either them or their close family members, you know, have claimed to have gone down into underline bases. Okay. Where they actually saw quote unquote aliens. So even that part of his story. People have told you this all like, like off the record privately.
Starting point is 02:00:19 Completely off the record. Yeah. That or like they've told me they have a family member, you know, for example, who was, has no reason to lie to them, for example. And there's other people that have said stuff like that. But I don't know where this falls. For me, the more people that I hear say something that you assess the credibility of those people
Starting point is 02:00:44 and the closer they are to it, whether they've seen it themselves or they've just heard about it from other people. Yeah. That's the double-edged sort of that. Like more people, like when it becomes more popular in the zeitgeist, the Bobbazar story, like the more people can start
Starting point is 02:00:59 talking about it and elaborating on it and making up stories and constructing these fake realities in their head. Yeah, they could be. But again, I think going back to what we were saying about near-death experiencers before, I mean, enough people have had this experience that we should take it
Starting point is 02:01:15 as a legitimate thing that happens as opposed to it's just a bunch of random chemicals firing and that's it. Similarly here, enough people have come forward to say that we have reverse engineering programs or non-human technology that I think we should take it seriously that there's something there now what that is i mean this comes back to your earlier question to me about abductions
Starting point is 02:01:38 for example yeah yeah that's what we started i was asking you about before we went on the break how does the UFO and alien abduction stuff square with the simulation hypothesis well i think there's a couple areas of overlap with the simulation hypothesis and the first is this idea of presenting how these non-human entities present themselves. And so again, going to the work of Jacques Valet, who I've spent a little bit of time with, he has talked about how in, say, the Celtic folklore, you know, there are these fay or which we call fairies.
Starting point is 02:02:18 There are entities that have been around for a while. And sometimes they would take somebody from our world into their world and time would pass differently inside this world and they'd come back. And, you know, they were presented a certain way. And similarly, I mentioned earlier, like in the Islamic traditions, there are many stories of other entities that live on earth with us. And they call them the gin, for example. That's like kind of a catch-all term.
Starting point is 02:02:48 There's actually subsets, and you can get into, you know, very, very complicated classification of different. types of entities. But the idea is that what we're seeing could be something that is presented to us like an avatar. So like in a video game, you can change your avatar. So you can present yourself, you know, I could be, you know, a tall Viking guy, like if I wanted to be here. And it seems like they have this ability to present themselves inside what we think of as a physical reality. And to me, it reminds me of the stories from these other traditions. So I think at least part of it with the abduction phenomena and the way that people are viewing it as aliens or a particular image of the aliens, there's an element of interpretation of the being. Now, I'm not saying the beings aren't there.
Starting point is 02:03:41 I think there are non-human intelligences that are here. But I think some of those have the ability to change shape. And so it's presented to us as a technological phenomenon. and a spaceship, just like if you go back to the 1940s or 30s, and they talk about aliens, they always talk about Martians. Why? Because they know there's Mars, or Venus. If you look at the contactees in the 50s, they say these entities told me they're from Venus.
Starting point is 02:04:10 Now, we know they're probably not from Venus. I mean, maybe, but as far as we know, Venus and Mars don't have humanoid life on them, unless it's like way underground and hiding or something. but it's almost as if they presented themselves as Venusians or as Martians because that would fit into the mind frame of the observer. So the observer could actually make sense of that.
Starting point is 02:04:33 If they said, oh, we're from another solar system or the galaxy, most people didn't even know about galaxies back then. It just wasn't in the consciousness. And so I think there is an element of interpretation, but also presentation, that goes on where they change their form. Now, I heard a story recently about, with Whitley Streber told this story recently
Starting point is 02:04:57 where he said he met a young man who met a young woman who, you know, they had sex and she got pregnant, and so he thought they were going to get married and she calls them over one day and says, well, I'm not really human, I'm actually a gray alien. And she changes her form. And he literally sees her change her form and change back. And she says, and I'm going to take, you know, the baby
Starting point is 02:05:18 and we're going to go back to the great alien world or wherever it was, and you'll never see us again. Now, that sounds, I mean, you tell that story to anybody and like, you know, kind of the mainstream, certainly academic. There's lots of stories like that.
Starting point is 02:05:30 Yeah, there's lots of stories like that, but they're going to think you're bad shit crazy, right? Have you heard of David Huggins? No, I haven't. There's a beautiful documentary called Love and Saucers about this guy named David Huggins, who's now, I think he's in his, like, in 90s, he lives in Hoboken, New Jersey.
Starting point is 02:05:43 And he lost his virginity to an alien. Okay. And he draws pictures of this, big beautiful alien woman with long hair and voluptuous breasts and draws pictures of her him and the alien fornicating in the woods and he gets kidnapped by these little gray aliens this typical looking gray grays and brought out to the woods to meet her uh his baby mama and she came back a couple times and showed him their their their alien human child hybrid right right there There it is.
Starting point is 02:06:16 Yeah. There's David on the left. That is my favorite alien abduction story is his story. The documentary is great. My friend Brad Abraham's, I highly recommend it, love and saucers. Interesting. Cool. But yeah, so there's a lot of stories like this.
Starting point is 02:06:31 Yeah. People fornicating with aliens and or the aliens extracting eggs and cement from humans. Right. But what I found was when I went back and I was researching, say, the Islamic literature, I saw stories of the gin that were almost, you know, eerily similar to these stories today. And so, for example, there was a story of a man
Starting point is 02:06:54 who supposedly married a gin woman. Okay, you know, married is the terminology they would use and they had at least one child, maybe it was even two children. And one day she said, okay, I'm going back to the gin world. And she took the kids and she immediately vanished and they never saw her again.
Starting point is 02:07:14 And that wasn't an uncommon story. And so I think it begs the question. Well, some people would just dismiss it. Oh, those are just bad breakups, right? And they can't get over them. So they're saying they're an alien. But let's suppose we take them at face value. They take it more seriously than that.
Starting point is 02:07:31 Then they've been happening for a long time. And is it possible these entities can present themselves to look human or to look like a particular race of aliens, but they may or may not actually be aliens? Not to say that some of the extraterrestrial hypothesis may not be true, but it seems to me there's a broader phenomenon here going where these people come into and out of our realities. It's almost like they can render in our simulation. Now, I've heard many tales of saucers that would render, you know,
Starting point is 02:08:03 you look up and there's nothing there, and then suddenly there's a disc there that gets ready. And, you know, Jacques told me about some cases where one person sees the saucer and the next person next to them doesn't see it. Or from Gary Nolan, where they're like people sitting in a car, like family members and looking up and they both saw something. The kids saw the parents didn't, right? Yeah, the kids saw it. Maybe I forget which one that was,
Starting point is 02:08:28 but one saw like a donut shape and one saw a cylindrical shape. Oh, really? The shapes were different enough that to me, that almost seems as if there's an element of conditional rendering going on. Okay, and what I mean by that is in video games, we can say, okay, you're level 30, I'm level two, we're both, we think we're rendering it in the same place, but we're actually not. Like, I'm rendering it on my computer or in my VR headset or in my brain computer interface, and you're doing the same thing.
Starting point is 02:09:02 And is it possible from the server, we say, that guy should be able to see it because he's level 30. That guy, you know, he's a little too left brain. He's only level one or whatever. and he's not going to be able to see it. And that to me brings up this idea of they're subjective and objective, but maybe there's something in between, which is that they are actually there for some people, and they may not be there for other people.
Starting point is 02:09:25 So is it possible that these things can be rendered, subjectively or conditionally maybe? Because subjectively sounds like I'm saying they're not there. Conditionally means they're there for the people that are able to perceive it. And this gets back to your point about DMP, or other techniques that you can use to open up your vision. And so I've heard of this from the ghost perspective as well, where certain ghosts supposedly,
Starting point is 02:09:55 there's a book by Leslie Kane called Surviving Death. And she wrote, there was another investigator who wrote this chapter, but it was a story about a family in Oakland, and they moved in, and every now and then the parents would catch sight of a woman, but the kid could like see this woman all the time. Yeah. And he could talk to her. It turns out it was the same name as the woman that used to live there.
Starting point is 02:10:20 And she was wearing these funny old clothes and the kid would describe. And the kid says that she told him that she could present herself more easily to some people than other people. Right. Which is why like the parents would only catch a little glimpse of it or something. And so is there an element of conditional rendering going on, I think? and that's, I think, one aspect of overlap, as well as this idea that maybe there's other beings here that we can't see, but they can see us.
Starting point is 02:10:46 They're here all along. That's the second aspect. And then there was a really interesting case that Jacques told me about where he said there was a UFO that supposedly landed somewhere in like Northern California or Southern Oregon. If you've been out there, they have a lot of tall redwood trees. And he said that it, they said,
Starting point is 02:11:06 the witnesses said that it came down. at a 45 degree angle and then left some marks or something and they were trying to point out where it landed. And he said he went back to the site with him after other investigators had left and he said, wait, you said 45 degree angle. That would have mean it would have to go through the trees. Like it would have had to cut through the redwood trees.
Starting point is 02:11:25 Yeah. And they said, yeah, that's exactly what it did. It went right through, but we didn't want to say that because we're going to sound crazy. Now that to me sounds like when you're resing something in a game, you know, there's that period where it's not fully rezed and you can actually walk through walls and stuff until it gets locked into the 3D world.
Starting point is 02:11:45 So there's almost this ability to like holographically kind of you materialize something but while it's materializing it's not fully in the world. It's more like a shape. Or if you think of like a game, the mesh, we have these things called meshes, which is like the outline of a person or an object. And then eventually you put the skin on
Starting point is 02:12:05 which makes it look like, you know, what it actually looks like as an object. Otherwise, it's just like, you know, lines, basically. So is it possible that the UFOs are being rendered into our reality along with the beings and we're interacting with them? And for whatever reason, they're being presented to us as technology that looks like it's from another planet. But maybe that's just the latest. You know, if you go back to the, we talked about Diana Posulka and religion and other stuff, where, you know, you have the chariots in the sky, you have all these descriptions of things.
Starting point is 02:12:43 And is this just the latest description? And being in a simulated world would make that more likely. There's another possibility that I think is interesting, which is I talked about how in a simulation you can run it forward and you can run different timelines forward. And this gets back to Michael Masters and the time travel idea. Is it possible that, because many people have reported getting information that we're ruining our planet, at least this was true of contact experiences in the 80s, I think, 70s, 80s and maybe 90s as well. I don't know if that's still true today.
Starting point is 02:13:21 But they're from a future timeline where they know what's going to happen to our planet. And they're somehow projecting themselves back. and you can do that in a simulation. You can go back and say, hey, let's try to make these people, let's try to influence these people to act differently. Seems like a strange way to do that.
Starting point is 02:13:39 The weird thing, though, like, it's hard to wrap your head around, though, with video games, right? Video games, there's really no linear timeline in a video game, right? Like, there's not like, like the way we think of our world is we can go back
Starting point is 02:13:56 and think about the dinosaurs antiquity, the times of Christ, and the Renaissance and the Enlightenment, and we have this linear history of our humanity that we understand through text and paintings and archaeology and all this stuff. But like in video games, it's not really like that. It's just kind of like you're in, you're right now in the present. Like your character doesn't necessarily have a history or a future. Or does it? You know what I'm saying? Well, in the real world, too. So I would say, I would suggest what you're saying is right but what happens with video games
Starting point is 02:14:29 is they fill in the past right so if you've ever played like Farmville do you remember that Facebook game that was really popular or Minecraft they do the same thing I think where you have crops yeah and you plant the crops now what happens is you log in
Starting point is 02:14:44 let's say the next day and supposedly in the world it's been whatever it's been like a year or it's been whatever a season right and so you're born essentially the first time you log on Yeah, but then when you log on the next time, it's not like the game has been running the whole time. What happens is that it fills in what happened to the crops since the last time you've locked in.
Starting point is 02:15:07 So it basically says there's a 50% chance that locusts will come. Also, since it's supposed to have been a season, they should grow this big by now. And you log in and it seems as if time has passed. But really, there's just a present time that you've logged in and it fills in the past. Now, this is where time gets really weird. So most people think of the simulation hypothesis is saying physical space is not real, it's virtual. But there's an element of quantum mechanics
Starting point is 02:15:35 that is really confusing, but I find it kind of compelling, which says that time is not what we think it is either. And so there's something called the Cosmic Delayed Choice Experiment. Maybe we can try to find a... The Cosmic Delayed Choice experiment. Okay. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:15:51 And so what it is is John Wheeler, who I mentioned earlier, he proposed this experiment. And they couldn't really do it at the time. So if we do a search and look for an image, there's a few different images that are good ones that we can use. And what it's saying essentially is if we go back to Strodinger's cat being in super position, and what we choose is when we observe,
Starting point is 02:16:23 yeah, how about that one in the middle, there, yeah, that one. Okay, so that's a good one. But to get back to Shortinger's cat, and then we'll talk about this diagram. Basically, we're saying, we're choosing the state by observing it, whether it's alive or dead.
Starting point is 02:16:40 And until then, it's in both states. But what if we're choosing not just the state, but also what happened to the cat before it came in the box? Like, did it come in through the kitchen, or did it come in through the living room? And before that, did it come in from outside, or was it in? you know, sleeping or whatever.
Starting point is 02:16:56 Right. How do you know if you never observed it? Yeah, how do you know? Yeah, the past. This raises this interesting question about the past. Now, this, I think, shows us that the past may not be what we think it is. So this is the cosmic delayed choice experiment. I mean, it's never been done at this level, but they've done smaller versions of it.
Starting point is 02:17:16 So suppose there's light at the top right there from a quasar, let's say, or some object that's really big and really far away. It's a billion light years away. Okay. So the light is going to come from there and suppose down here we're on Earth and we have telescopes. It's going to take how long to get here? Billion years.
Starting point is 02:17:35 It's not a trick question. It's just billion light years away. It's going to take a billion years away. So that means when the light started, it was back in before the dinosaurs even, right? Right. Now suppose there's an object in the middle like this little galaxy
Starting point is 02:17:49 you see there or a black hole. It's a big object gravitationally. And it turns out the light. has to go either to the right or to the left of that object. And our telescopes here today can pick up whether it went to the right or to the left. That's like the equivalent of two slits in the double slit experiment, but it's much easier to understand like this. So if that galaxy is a million light years away from us, or half a billion light years away,
Starting point is 02:18:17 it's far away from us, but not as far away as that thing, let's say it's a million light years away from us, or let's say 100 million, because that's still kind of dinosaur age, isn't it? Yeah. Okay. So the light would have had to go around the galaxy 100 million years ago at the time of the dinosaur. Now what this experiment is proposing is that it's not until we measure the polarity of the light in the telescope. That's when the decision gets made of whether it went to the left or the right.
Starting point is 02:18:49 from 100 million years ago. So from the time of the dinosaurs, we're used to thinking that is fixed. Like that already happened, right? But it's saying that in fact, the past may be in a state of superposition, meaning it can be in multiple states. And we are selecting one of the past.
Starting point is 02:19:08 We're not changing the past per se. We're just choosing a past. That's crazy. It's nuts. And they've done a version of this where they sent the light to a satellite that was like a thousand miles up. So it's obviously not as big.
Starting point is 02:19:22 But they said the decision of which slit it goes through, which is analogous to whether they said that's not actually made until it's measured, even if it's measured up near the satellite. But it would have taken like a fraction of a second, right? But it would have had to happen before because the slits are down here, the two slits or the two, you know. And so they've measured it. There's an Italian team that did this.
Starting point is 02:19:45 And they actually found that the past may not be as fixed as we think it is. Now that, that is just strange, right? It's a St. Augustine, you know, had a quote where he goes, what is time? If no one asks me, I know. But if someone asks me, then I do not know. Right. Yeah. If someone asks me to explain it to him, I do not know. You cannot, you cannot put it into words, right? Yeah. And similar to DMD. It's like it's a, it's a a hundred and twenty four bit experience that you can only put into four bit uh translations you can only talk about it in like a four bit you can explain it in like four bits but it's the experience itself is like hundreds of bits yeah and that's that's a good way to think about it because you know
Starting point is 02:20:29 people who've whether it's dm t or people who've had near-dith experiences say yeah that experience was more real than this experience and there are colors and sounds there that i can't we can't have here they're just too complex. Now, to me, that sounds like exactly what you said, which is, you know, we're living in like an Atari, 8-bit world, but, you know, 64-bit systems can have many more colors than we're able to have here. And you've got to take that analogy out into, you know, sounds
Starting point is 02:20:59 and other things as well. Right. But that, but this past thing raises a weird question is, has the past actually occurred this way? Or are we on one of these timelines? for the moment where the U.S. and the Allies won World War II, getting back to Philip K. Dick. And so he came to believe that was another timeline that happened.
Starting point is 02:21:23 And are we possibly projecting out to the future? And we're trying different things, but we're only on a branch. Like we're used to thinking, this is it. Like the Japanese guy and the man in the high castle. And our people sometimes maybe catching glimpses in their dreams. are they remembering different runs of the simulation? And that's where the Mandela effect, you know, comes into play. Unlike other AI, Slackbot lives in Slack.
Starting point is 02:21:49 It understands you, your team, and your work, so you can ask it for help with anything. Can I ask it to summarize client feedback? Yes. Can I ask it to find time for a meeting? Absolutely. Can I ask it to turn our meeting notes into a launch plan? Sure.
Starting point is 02:22:03 Can I ask it to call me the boss? Actually, you can. The boss. See how Slackbot can turn you into at Slack.com slash meet Slackbot Where people remember Some subset of people remember
Starting point is 02:22:18 things happening differently than they did Right, right And the Mandela effect Can you explain what that is For people that are familiar with it? It's basically something about people remembering him dying when he didn't die Yeah, so it's about
Starting point is 02:22:31 A subset of people remember Nelson Mandela Dying in prison Right, right. In the 1980s Or early 90s or so But in our reality he didn't. He got out of prison. He became president of South Africa and went on to, you know, win the Nobel Peace Prize, et cetera, et cetera. And he died and like, I think it was 2013. We can look it up. But so there was this blogger named Fiona Broom and she coined this. But she actually coined it because she was at a Star Trek convention. It was like a Comic-Con type convention. And they had some of the actors from the original Star Trek. You know, we're talking like, you know, the William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, Captain Kirk. Mr. Spock days.
Starting point is 02:23:12 And if you know hardcore fans of Trek, you know, whether you call them Trekkies or Trekkers, they know their episodes. And they were people in the audience telling the, you know, the actors saying, well, do you remember this episode
Starting point is 02:23:25 when, you know, you did this and Dr. McCoy did that? And they're like, no, we never recorded that episode. And multiple people in the audience remembered it. And she just thought that was so weird. And so then she went online to see if there were other things that people remembered and that's what the Mandela thing came up.
Starting point is 02:23:41 And so now they call it Mendela effects. Now, I dismissed it like most mainstream scientists do as just bad memory. Yeah. But then I began to take it more seriously when a friend of mine who was from another MIT grad who came by and said, well, simulation hypothesis could be an interesting explanation or the best explanation for that because it means what you're changing variables and you're running things again. And then I'd started to go down the rabbit hole a little more.
Starting point is 02:24:09 And if nothing else, it's a great way to think about this idea that there might be multiple possible pasts. Just like, it's easy to think about multiple possible futures, right? Like I said earlier, I could go to California, I can move to Florida. Those are two different futures. And I can think about what that might mean, the multiverse timeline. But it's hard to think about, you know, there was one where I didn't go to school at MIT. I went to University of Michigan or wherever else in the past. And we can get into this idea of parallel lives as well.
Starting point is 02:24:38 But the Mandela effect is interesting because I found there are instances where there's a proximity or significance to the event such that the person would probably remember it. Right. As opposed to, okay, it was Fruit Loops with an O-O-O-T versus U-I-T. So there's a lot of these logos. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. The Bernstein Bears is the most famous one, which if you look it up, you know, you can see that it says it's Bern-Stane. Bern-Stain. St-A-I-N.
Starting point is 02:25:08 Everyone calls it the Berenstein. Berenstein, which sounds like it just could be a little error, except people will swear that they had discussions with their parents or their Jewish friends on why are these bears Jewish? Why are these bears Jews? And why would you have that discussion if it was spelled Bernstein? Right. Where it gets really interesting to me is when there's either physical artifacts or, like,
Starting point is 02:25:34 major events, like even with Nelson Mandela. I mean, people remember it was his. His wife, Winnie, gave the speech at the funeral and so-and-so was there. Like, maybe it was the early 90s and Bill Clinton was there. I mean, they get very specific. And there's another one with the Reverend Billy Graham. He died. I forget what year he died, but they're like people who are hardcore Christian evangelicals.
Starting point is 02:25:55 One guy was saying how his parents used to get magazines with him, and they remember getting a magazine when he died. And then they found out a year or two later, that's when he died. And it's just weird when you have that significance or you're close to something. There was one blogger who was a journalism student. She claims she went to South Africa to interview Nelson Mandela in the 80s. And they told her he was too sick. And so she wasn't able to interview him.
Starting point is 02:26:20 She had to fly back and she graduated and went to work for NPR. So she was in the news business. And then later she heard he died during that time period. Now, are you likely to have gotten the wrong person if you had just gone to South Africa? Right. Probably not. Now, some random person might just think Nelson Mandel, a black leader in South Africa. Oh, Stephen Biko was also a black leader in South Africa, and he died in the 80s in prison.
Starting point is 02:26:44 Maybe they just made a mistake. Yeah. Yeah. But when you get into scripture, and there's a lot of movie stuff too, that you've probably heard of like Empire Strikes Back, where the line of, you know, what's the line when Dr. Vader tells Luke is his father? Are you a familiar? Are you a Star Wars fan? Luke, I'm your father. Right.
Starting point is 02:27:02 That's how most of us remember it. But supposedly if you watch it again, it just says, no, I am your father. Really? And I just saw an artist. Oh, yeah, you're right about that. Yeah. I just saw a little video, which somebody could have doctored for all I know, but they said they recorded it at the movie theater somehow while they were there
Starting point is 02:27:18 where he says, no, Luke, I am your father, which is like a whole other, a third possibility. Sure. But again, those are smaller things. But when you get to scripture, that's where it becomes really interesting because there's a whole sub, there's a whole factor of Mandela effect. Religious stuff? Bibles, Bible verses. There are websites that, like Isaiah.
Starting point is 02:27:42 This is, yeah. Which is the lion and the lamb. You may have heard. There's this phrase, we can look up the exact phrase. But if you look at it, there's nothing about the lion and the lamb. It's the wolf will lay with the lamb, is what it is now. And there are people who swear, well, one, there are physical artifacts where they've got like pictures of a lion and a lamb and they've got Isaiah.
Starting point is 02:28:03 I forget the number one and 11 or I forget the exact number. Yeah. And then there are other people who, you know, you think, well, maybe it's another translation. Yeah. You know, and they're like, no, I have the physical Bible that I had when I was a kid. Right. The King James Bible. And this is where I memorized it.
Starting point is 02:28:18 Yes. And so then I started to wonder, is it possible that there are other scriptures like the Quran? you know other religions scriptures that have changed and in the Quran in Islam they actually memorize the Quran word for words it's a big it's a big book and be like memorizing the Bible word for word and they have a whole class of like priests who can you know it's like they graduate it's they have a designation called a hafiz that says they can read the Quran like from their memory word for word exactly in Arabic I always thought that's kind of dumb why would they need to do that we got books right And so I looked into it and I said, I wonder if there's been anybody who claims that any of the verses have changed.
Starting point is 02:29:00 And there was one Sufi Imam who says that one of the reasons why they memorized the Quran word for word is supposedly there is a class of entities who exist outside of our space and time, but who can modify objects in our timeline. They can go back and modify objects. But they're not allowed to modify our memories. And so those are called the Jin. So this is another example of the Jin coming out. And he said part of the reason why we still memorize the Quran word for word is because these gin can change objects like the physical objects, but they can't change our memory. They're not allowed to change our memory.
Starting point is 02:29:45 So we will remember it allowed by God, I guess, in this case. I'm not, you know. But that was interesting to me because it's like. like, oh, there's an aspect of this that I hadn't thought about. But if it's scripture, people will take it more seriously. Yeah. And the problem with scripture, too, is not only is there, you know, multiple versions of scriptures that where things are omitted or added to it, but the biggest problem is that there's now
Starting point is 02:30:15 different dictionaries that are created. that different sects of religions will use exclusively because they want certain words to mean different things according to their belief. And their interpretation. So it's like, okay, let me look up the traditional Greek dictionary of what this word means. Oh, no, no, that's not what that guy was.
Starting point is 02:30:45 Hold on. We need to make our own dictionary and change the meaning of that word. So it lines up with our beliefs and our teachings and all this stuff. Yep. That's true. Yeah. And there's different, you know, translations along the way. I mean, for example, the, you know, the prayer where they say, forgive us are trespasses.
Starting point is 02:31:04 I mean, some people claim that has changed, that that's not what it was. But that may just be a translation issue. Right. Because the original word might have meant debts, not trespasses. Right. So there's stuff like that. But at the same time, there are people who claim that they were specific, you know, verses. they've memorized in English
Starting point is 02:31:23 and that the English translation has changed. And that's bizarre to me. And I take that more seriously than, Luke, I am your father or no, I'm not your father. Yes. Or since I am a big Star Wars fan, like if Harrison Ford died, I would know it, right?
Starting point is 02:31:39 If there was a funeral for George Lucas or Harrison Ford or Mark Hamill 10 years ago, I'm unlikely to get that wrong because I'm a big Star Wars fan. So I call that proximity or significance to you. But one of my favorite ones, ones is the Tiananmen Square. Do you remember, did you ever see the video of the guy with a tank standing in front of the tank? Maybe we can bring it up. Didn't the tank go around him?
Starting point is 02:32:02 Well, that's the, that's the Mandela effect. So most, the majority remembers the tank went around him or he moved and the tank went this way and he went and stood in front of it and it came back that way. So, so they called him Tank Boy online. Tank Boy. Tank boy. But a subset of people say that they actually saw the tank run him over. And they say it was the bloodiest thing they ever saw on TV. Now, most of the videos you'll see will not show that. They'll show that the tank is kind of moving around him. And maybe something happened to him afterwards.
Starting point is 02:32:36 But I did a little poll. I was on a panel at Contact in the Desert. And we had a few different people on the panel like Paul Hynick and a few other people. And they were like five or six of us. And sure enough, One person insisted, one of the speakers on the panel insisted that they saw the guy get run over. Really?
Starting point is 02:32:56 20% in this case. Now, that's an informal poll. But to me, that's an interesting. Hmm. That is interesting. Now, I'm not saying all these Vandall effects are true, but it is a phenomenon. People do remember things differently. Right.
Starting point is 02:33:10 And so we could say it's all bad memory. Okay, here's the video, right? We're watching now. Yeah. So you're standing there. The tanks stopped. Yeah. And then I think the tank, as I recall it, and I think as you recall it, the tank tries to go around him and then he moves in front of the tank.
Starting point is 02:33:26 Okay, now it cut. And it's, okay, nothing happened. Just cut. Oh, now he climbed up the tank. Oh, he climbed up the tank. Okay, that's interesting. What the? Now, I don't remember that.
Starting point is 02:33:37 I don't remember this either. Yeah. I just remember the tank, like him standing in front of the tank. Now he's like messing with the cannon on the tank. now there's two guys there a bunch of guys running out there now they're grabbing him and they're moving
Starting point is 02:33:57 maybe this is later in the video than the scene that they broadcast I mean I'm old enough that I did watch that on TV at the time in 1989 oh yeah it was this scene where he was standing with the parcels yeah
Starting point is 02:34:10 I don't remember him climbing up in the tank I don't remember that either now is it just because they didn't broadcast it is it because we're remembering But it's a useful way to think about the possibility that there could be multiple timelines running in the simulation and that if you change a variable. So the rest of Philip K. Dick's speech,
Starting point is 02:34:31 I told you that line, the famous line, which is we are living in a computer program reality, and the only clue we have to it is when some variable has changed. Some alteration occurs in our reality. And we would be having the sense of reliving the same events again. Like deja vu. He literally said like deja vu. And he goes,
Starting point is 02:34:48 The feeling of deja vu is a clue that at some point in the past, some variable was changed and they re-ran the simulation. Now, I find it interesting. Tessa also told me that he came to believe that he was communicating with some people that were outside of the simulation. He was doing a lot of drugs. He was doing a lot of drugs. But according to her, he was not around that time.
Starting point is 02:35:12 So however he wanted to, but again, were the drugs doing something like DMT? Yeah. And I asked her. He was in a lot of cocaine, I think. Oh, was he? So I asked her, well, what did you see when he was communicating? She was, it was kind of like a blur or something. Like, there was like something in the living room or wherever.
Starting point is 02:35:28 And he claimed that they told him that they made it so JFK didn't get assassinated in Dallas. And that what happened was then it went into a timeline where JFK got assassinated in Orlando. And then they changed that. And then something else bad happened. And every time they changed it, they ended up with a bad outcome, including a nuclear war in one of these instances. Wow. And then they said, well, let's just go back to the original timeline, which was him being assassinated. Philo Kedek said this?
Starting point is 02:36:00 Well, he said it to his wife, who said it to me. To his wife. Yeah, I didn't find that documented, but, I mean, she told me directly. Holy crap. Yeah. So, again, I can't validate that. That's not a Mandela effect that I've heard other people talk about, although there are Mandel effects related to. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:36:15 But what he said at the end of that was we would. would have to find a group of people who, like him, remembered either an alternate past or an alternate present. And that's what with the internet now, because that was back in the 70s. Yes. So the internet, you couldn't really have something like the Mandela effect, because people
Starting point is 02:36:35 wouldn't be able to communicate with each other so much about it. So now people can say that they remember things. So anyway, that's just a way of saying, I think it's interesting to explore this idea of multiple timelines. And it's a kind of an offshoot of simulation I don't get it to it as much in this new book, the simulation hypothesis, but I did get into it in the simulated multiverse. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:36:55 The idea of multiple timelines is way easier to comprehend when you think of it in this idea that we're in this data universe, this informational cosmos. But like, so one of the, one of the perplexing things when you're looking at this whole thing from a, physical perspective is using physics to explain consciousness is impossible. Right. You can't start from protons and neutrons and dead particles and work your way up to consciousness. But if you're looking at it from a simulation perspective, if we're living in a informational cosmos and this, this universe created of bits, you need. consciousness to interact with that data, right? Because this chaotic data means nothing.
Starting point is 02:37:57 It's absolutely meaningless unless you can ascribe meaning to it. So you need consciousness to project meaning. People have called us meaning machines, humans and beings. Consciousness is like a meaning machine. So if our consciousness is turning this chaotic, slurry of bits into meaning for us, that would at least explain consciousness. But still, it doesn't really explain where consciousness comes from. Right.
Starting point is 02:38:31 So this even gets back to this question of free will. Can you have free will within a system? Or do you need to step outside of that system? Yeah. Because if you have just NPCs that are just AI, can they really have free will if they're just code? Well, they can be unpredictable like with LLMs today.
Starting point is 02:38:50 Like they'll hallucinate stuff and you know, they won't know exactly what they're saying. They can hallucinate? Well, they create, they make stuff up. Oh, okay. So they call it those hallucinations. Oh, okay. Like I first came across this with one of my students,
Starting point is 02:39:04 you know, had a little assignment and they had the references at the end. And it was kind of generic. You know, the answers were kind of generic. And I thought, yeah, it sounds like chat GPT or something. but then he had some references near the end. And I thought, well, at least let me check the references because, I mean, the first reference was Bostrum.
Starting point is 02:39:21 It's a real reference. Second reference was my book. That's a real reference. Third reference was something about simulation and religion. And I thought, I've never heard of this reference. Like, I'm an expert on this topic. I designed the course. I wrote my book.
Starting point is 02:39:34 Why have I never heard of this article? It looks, you know, like a cool article. I clicked on it. And so you have URLs. And for academic articles, they have URLs that are like DOIs, It's a digital object identifier. So it's just like a URL, but it's like a number. And it clicks into a database, and usually all the academic articles and journals have these DOIs.
Starting point is 02:39:54 Right. And so I clicked on it, and it turns out it was fake. Like that URL didn't exist. So then we looked at the names of the authors of the article. They were real professors. So we emailed them in the UK, one of them was in the UK. And the journal, I'd never heard of the journal. but it sounded like a real academic journal.
Starting point is 02:40:16 So did you guys write an article about simulation and religion in this article? They're like, no, we never wrote anything like that. So literally they got real name. What an LLM does is it basically uses statistics to predict what the next word should be. And so somehow it said, you know,
Starting point is 02:40:36 it got like a pretty decent title of the article too, something like simulation and religion because it was an article, you know, the assignment was about the simulation. So it was able to do that, but you wouldn't necessarily be able to predict that that's what it was going to do. So sometimes you have to run a process to see what's going to be the outcome, even if it's deterministic. I mean, LLMs are deterministic. They're based on code, right?
Starting point is 02:41:00 So you can, if you have the exact data and the exact code, if you run it, you know, you can reproduce what they said. It's just that there's so much data and it gets so unpredictable based on the prompt, you know, can be different. and what they call the context window, which can include all kinds of hidden prompts, system prompts, things you don't know about that they put into the system. But a lot of physicists will say, well, free will is just randomness in the simulation.
Starting point is 02:41:28 Like, does the particle go through slot one or slot two? That's free will. And I'm like, that's not really free will. Free will would be more like an entity choosing to do something within the simulation. And I think you almost have to step out of the, the context and say that consciousness is the player looking at the game and the free will, just like if I'm playing a video game, I have the free will to choose whether my character is
Starting point is 02:41:53 going to go down this path or that path. But it may not be completely open. I mean, there are only certain choices that might be available in the game to me. So I think the NPC versus RPG versions hit at the same issue that physicists and philosophers have been debating for some time, which is, does consciousness exist outside? of the body or as Max Planck says, consciousness is fundamental, material world is derivative,
Starting point is 02:42:17 or is it the opposite? The material world is the real world and consciousness just emerges from putting the neurons together in the right way. So that's kind of like the more materialist scientific. What was the one before that?
Starting point is 02:42:29 Consciousness is fundamental. It's fundamental and the material universe is derivative. So meaning consciousness makes the physical universe in some capacity. Like it exists outside of the physical universe. Okay.
Starting point is 02:42:43 Which would be the idea of... Which would work with simulation. Yeah, which would be like the player watching the game. And it's... So if it's fundamental, where did it start? Well, that's a big question, right? I don't take a strong view of what's outside the simulation. I like to say I can give you theories.
Starting point is 02:43:03 Firetrop. Oh, yeah. And assumptions, but in terms of, you know, the world that we're in, It seems like it's built on information. And even like you were describing, there's a guy named Donald Hoffman. I don't know if you've ever. Yes, I've heard of him. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:43:19 So he wrote a book, I forget the name of the book now, but he basically came up with what he called the user interface idea, which is, he says if you look at a desktop and you see an icon of a file folder, there's no file folder in the bits, right? That's just a visual representation of the bits. Yeah. Like a word file. We're putting meaning to it. Yeah, we're putting meaning to it.
Starting point is 02:43:43 Our consciousness creates meaning out of that. Exactly. And I think that's very true in simulation hypothesis as well in the player version. We are taking that information or in the matrix. If you remember in the matrix, there were the guys who were in the matrix. And to them, everything seemed real while they were in it. And then remember there was the guy, I think it was Cypher. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:44:02 He was just looking at the green, you know, the green text. And he's saying, I can tell, okay, that's a lady in a red dress, that's this, that's that. because he's just looking at the raw information and it hasn't yet been rendered. And that's what video games are. I mean, video games are just, we're just sending data down from the server. And then you're using that data
Starting point is 02:44:22 to create what looks like an actual virtual world. Have you seen, so there's a lot of ties from the Matrix directly to religion. Like the writers of that, like a lot of that stuff is based on biblical stories and like ancient Greek texts and stuff like this. Well, I know it's based.
Starting point is 02:44:40 a lot on philosophy, you know, like Plato's Cave. So, like, there was an interview with the guy who plays Morpheus. And he was talking about how all of the scenes, like, are directly correlated with, like, religion. Oh, that's interesting. Yeah, it's crazy. And, like, Morpheus is, or not, I'm sorry, I think Neo is supposed to be, like, Jesus. Yeah, they call him the one, right? Yeah, he's the one.
Starting point is 02:45:04 And Cypher is supposed to be Judas. Right? Right. He betrays him, right? And there was a point in that, find the, we should just play this clip because it's really good. It's of Morpheus being interviewed by, oh, my God, what's his name? Neil de Gras. Neil deGrasse Tyson, that's who it is.
Starting point is 02:45:29 Yeah. And he talks about, like, there's a scene where they're walking through a sex club. In the Matrix. In the Matrix. Yeah. And he's like, he's like, what? Well, you know, there have been so many interesting theories about the Matrix. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:45:44 Like it's a trans allegory. I talk about the AI stuff. Like if you go to that scene where Morpheus explains what happened with AI, he says, we mastered AI in the early 21st century, which is exactly where we are now. And I asked, the Wachowski's were inspired by Philip K. Dick, supposedly, in his work. So I asked Tessa, his wife, what would he think of the Matrix? Yeah. She said, well, number one, he'd love it because, you know, he likes that stuff. Right.
Starting point is 02:46:12 Secondly, he would call his agent to see if he can sue these guys to get these of the prophets because so much of his work is about what is real or what is not real. And Morpheus is named after the Greek god of dreams. And I'll tell you a synchronicity story with Morpheus and Jeffrey Kripo and my book. Really? Yeah. Yeah, can you find the Matrix part? Yeah, I think I found it.
Starting point is 02:46:32 All right, play it. Okay. You're my savior. You're my regular Jesus Christ. Yeah. You're my own personal Jesus Christ. That's a script line. That's right there.
Starting point is 02:46:38 Okay? Yeah, it's right there. Right there. Okay? But let's not stop there. Mm-hmm. All right. So, we keep going.
Starting point is 02:46:43 There's the part where he gets brought into the Nebuchadnezzar for the first time. He's still wrapped and looking around. And there's Joe Petit. Joe Pants. Yeah. Joey Pantiliano. Patiliano. And he's there and he's just looking.
Starting point is 02:46:55 And then that character, Cypher, is startled. And he says, oh, you scared the be Jesus out of me. Yeah, that's two. Okay, so hang on. Yeah. Hang on. Who betrays the group? Seifer.
Starting point is 02:47:06 Seifer. Yes. He betrayed. He's the Judas. He's Judas. Yeah, he's Judas. He's Judas. After the, but Jesus was scared after.
Starting point is 02:47:12 Yeah. He doesn't have Jesus in it. He doesn't have Jesus in him. Okay. No. All right. Let me keep going. Keep going.
Starting point is 02:47:17 Okay. If you can. Because you think you know the movie better than I do. And you might. I don't know. You might. Let's go. Here's the difference.
Starting point is 02:47:23 It's my favorite movie and you've made 100 movies. Right. So. Right. So. Okay. Okay. All right.
Starting point is 02:47:29 So then everyone sort of decide that he's the one. Right, right? When he's like pulling Trinity up. Oh, yes, yeah, yeah, yeah. He is the one. I told you, he is the one. He is the one. Do you believe it now, Trinity?
Starting point is 02:47:40 I don't know what it needs to compliment you on exactly imitating what you were paid to do in a movie. And I would say, hey, you should be that character. Too late. Oh, but the weird thing is you're not imitating that character. You were that character. Yes. Even not. Yes.
Starting point is 02:47:54 Yes. Yes. So let's fast forward towards the end. Mm-hmm. He gets shot. Point blank. Right. By Smith.
Starting point is 02:48:01 Yes. Yes. P-p-p-p-p-p-p-p- Yes. Then he drops. He keeps firing into him. Yes. Okay? Just, all right.
Starting point is 02:48:09 Do you know how many bullets he put in him? I don't. You don't. I'll tell you. Tell me. Okay, it requires a little bit extrapolation. Okay. Okay.
Starting point is 02:48:14 Do the bullets you see, it's like four bullets point blank to the chest. Okay. At that point, we go back to the Nebuchadnezzar, and you see his body responding. Right. Okay. But what if you track the rate that bullets are being fired? Yeah. And continue them into that scene.
Starting point is 02:48:27 Then we come out of the scene, and there's a few more bullets that you observe. Right. It's 14 bullets. Okay. Okay. There are 14 stations of the cross. I didn't know that. I didn't know that.
Starting point is 02:48:37 Now, the non-Catholics out there in every church, Catholic church, typically in the pillars that surround the main open area from the side areas, mounted facing inward are 14 drawings, paintings, relief maps. Of the 14, they're called stages of the cross. Got it. Okay. And they're key moments in Jesus is life. And it's an early movie, really.
Starting point is 02:48:55 Oh, wow. The movie doesn't even exist. Exactly. Right. But a sequence. It's a visual. It's a visual. Okay.
Starting point is 02:48:59 And it's all of it. And it's, he's tried under. Ponschus pilot. He carries the cross. He's put up on the cross. He dies on the cross. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, got it. You can look it up on any 14 stages of the cross. Yes. 14 bullets. Now, interesting. And he dies. Right. Then he's resurrected. It's come back
Starting point is 02:49:13 more powerful than ever before. That's right. Is that not Jesus? That's Jesus all time. Joining the side of God. That's Jesus all day. All day, all night. So who's Trinity? Well, okay, so we got it like. In the Catholic. That would have to be Mary Magdalene. Okay. But I'm thinking, let me not go that far. She doesn't take him to a sex club. That's where they meet.
Starting point is 02:49:31 Was that a sex club? That's a sex club? No. They were just dancing. No, it's a sex club. You look behind and you were looking deep in the background. They didn't allow them to show all of that, but it's a sex club. Really?
Starting point is 02:49:40 Okay. Mary Magdalene, right there. And who's Morpheus? In the Christ mythology. I know. I'm trying to. He's the Baptist, right? John the Baptist?
Starting point is 02:49:47 He's John the Baptist. Oh, because John the Baptist knows Jesus is coming. Yes, he knows who he is. And he sets everything up. And he's been looking for him. And when he meets him, he goes, I'm supposed to be baptized by you. So that's who Morpheus is in the Christ mythology. But there's also mythology.
Starting point is 02:50:01 Greek mythology. Tell me. Tell me. There's, well, Morpheus is the Lord of Dream. It's the God of Dream. All right. From Greek mythology, right? Persephone, who's in the second or third movie,
Starting point is 02:50:10 who's played by Monica Balucci. The Oracle is Greek. That's an actual Oracle. The Oracle is Greek. Yeah. Tibet, we lost her before the second film. She was really a strong character. Nyobi.
Starting point is 02:50:19 There's an element on the periodic table called Nyobium. Is there? Yes, there is. Crazy. Well, it's great because there are so many different aspects of religion and mythology that are wrapped into the Matrix. Yeah. And in fact, this summer,
Starting point is 02:50:31 I'm going to be doing a series of screenings of the Matrix in different cities with the new book, the simulation hypothesis comes out. Like in Boston and Phoenix right now we have scheduled and there may be, we're probably going to do one in L.A. at some point as well. But there's so many angles you can take on this film
Starting point is 02:50:49 and how people interpret it and also how they interwove so many different themes around AI, around virtual reality. Yeah. I mean, the betrayal scene itself is interesting. And that's one of my favorite scenes where Seifer is with Agent Smith, and he's sitting there eating the meat or the steak that he's eating.
Starting point is 02:51:10 And he goes, look, I know this isn't real, but man, it feels so good. And I don't want to remember nothing. I want to just be in this reality because it's great. But I was going to tell you about a synchronicity related to Morpheus. Oh, yeah. So when the first edition of my book came out, it was back in 2019. back before we had chat GPT. And so Jeff Kreppel and others put on this seminar at Esselin every year,
Starting point is 02:51:41 so I can invite-only seminar. And that year, and I had released it on the 20th anniversary of the Matrix. Now we're at the 25th anniversary of the Matrix. And so I mentioned I had talked to Jacques Valet about it. He gave me a nice blurb. And so I heard this from several people that were there. I actually wasn't there. So they were basically giving, Jacques was giving a presentation,
Starting point is 02:52:04 and it was just before lunch. And so he gives a set of slides. And the last slide has my book on there, and he's like, this guy, Rizwanberg, just wrote a book about the matrix and simulation hypothesis. And he talks about reality being a matrix. And so that was the slide that was up there that everybody's kind of looking at.
Starting point is 02:52:21 And then they end and go outside, and they walk to the cafeteria, and look who do they see in the cafeteria? But Morpheus. So Lawrence Fishburn was actually, sitting there. No way. And I heard the story from Jeff Kreppel initially. And we always joke about it as a synchronicity about me that I wasn't actually present for. Oh my gosh, that's so wild. It was really wild. Yeah. And then I heard it from other people as well. And so,
Starting point is 02:52:46 wow. That was pretty wild. That is pretty insane, man. What is your like, have you ever tried to like contemplate with the, with the craziest sort of experiment that we could do? And that we could do now or in the future to like really test the simulation theory like is there anything like even like even if it's super speculative hypothetical futuristic like what would be the optimal way to test it well it's an interesting question because the first question is is it possible to test if we're in a simulation and then the second question is should we test if we're in a simulation and there's been different theories on all of these fronts. Now, one guy is a philosopher named David Chalmers, who's pretty well known. He also wrote about Matrix hypothesis back in 2003, the same year that
Starting point is 02:53:42 Bostrom did. And he says that basically if the simulation was perfect or the virtual reality was perfect, there would be no way to tell. But that's if it was perfect. I mean, any of us who build computer programs know that it's rarely perfect. There's always glitory. glitches that come up in there. And I think a lot of these glitches that we've talked about, whether it's synchronicity, whether it's near-death experience, whether it's telepity, are showing us that we are more likely to be in a simulated world than not. But just because you can't prove we're not in a matrix or in a simulation,
Starting point is 02:54:16 doesn't mean you can't find evidence that we're in a simulation. So different people have proposed, you know, looking at like the geometry of the simulation, and they found that there was a geometry that makes it looks almost as if the world is built of some kind of a pixel. Pixelated structure, like they called lattices, but they go one way versus the other way.
Starting point is 02:54:38 So there's that class of looking for pixelated things. There's also groups of people that are trying to test out if we're, is it, do you need a conscious observer for the collapse of the probability wave? Right. And if so, then that's more akin to a video game rendering. So Tom Campbell and a guy at Caltech, Human, Omadi, I think you have to look up that name.
Starting point is 02:55:08 And a few other people wrote an article on that, and there's a group trying to perform those experiments at UCAL. Sorry, at Cal Poly. And I met those guys, and it's interesting. They're moving along very slowly. So that's another angle is to test, you know, do things happen at the moment of observation or do you just need measurements? Another group says, well, we should be able to, another group of experiments is can we actually overload the system in some ways? Can we overload the computation? Now, where I think it's difficult to devise these tests is if we're thinking about it from,
Starting point is 02:55:52 a classical computing point of view, I don't think we're running on a Pentium processor. I think it's more likely to be something like a quantum computer. And in a quantum computer, you have bits, but you have qubits. And these qubits take on multiple values at the same time. So normally a bit is either one or zero. Yes. So only have one of those values. Right.
Starting point is 02:56:20 So a qubit, which is what quantum computing is based. off of. They have both of those values, zero or one, until a certain measurement occurs, which is like an observation from our perspective. So what it means is that the bit is in superposition. Okay. Now this is really weird too, but there are quantum computers that companies, Google, Amazon, Microsoft have built. And if you have two bits, if you think about it, and both of them are in superposition, that means there's four possible values. that they can have. And then, you know, if you have three bits, it's eight, two to the third, and then 16, and, you know, so on from there.
Starting point is 02:57:04 And what quantum computers can theoretically do is explore all of these different possibilities and come up with an answer. But that's very strange because some of these problems, they grow so big. If they grow exponentially, they grow really big to the point where it would take a classical computer thousands of years, and in some cases millions of years, to go through every possibility. Yet, quantum computing can theoretically,
Starting point is 02:57:35 and in some cases it's already been demonstrated, they can solve problems which would take thousands of years. And one of those problems is encryption, which, you know, you might have 64-bit encryption or you might have different algorithms. Like Bitcoin runs off of Shaw, 256, but they run it twice. So that's like 512 bits,
Starting point is 02:57:55 which is 2 to the 512, possibilities of values you would have to search. Right. The problem is that's more particles than are in the physical universe. So some people have tried to use this as an argument against simulation to say, well, it would take a computer as big as the universe
Starting point is 02:58:10 to keep track of all that information. But they're counting on if you have to compute everything, and they're not counting on optimization, getting right back to our original discussion about the real. reason there's this collapse is so you only have to render the part that's actually being observed
Starting point is 02:58:26 at that point in time. So that's without optimization. But I think quantum computing itself might show us there's something really weird going on here. Now by itself it doesn't prove we're in a simulation but it does show that some guys like David Deutsch who's a quantum computing
Starting point is 02:58:42 physicist at Oxford who says he modified Wheeler's phrase, it from bit. He called it from qubit. Oh wow. Because Because basically the universe seems to be computing. And that's what particles are. They are like bits of information. But because they're in superposition
Starting point is 02:59:00 and there's all this quantum weirdness, it's almost like the physical universe is a kind of quantum computer in itself. Right. Like even the idea of morphic resonance, right? Like a problem being solved on one side of the world and then simultaneously being solved on the other side of the world,
Starting point is 02:59:16 it makes sense. Because if you're a computer program I'm trying to conserve energy and processing power, you would just automatically make that. If the problem is solved in one space, it's automatically solved in another space, right? Right. It's almost like it's cashing the solution.
Starting point is 02:59:31 It's cashing the solution in the whatever it is, in this dark matter computational cloud, if you will. Yeah, the computational cloud. Yeah. No, I like that. And it's also possible, like, you know, Native Americans, certain tribes have a saying that like a story stalks the storyteller. And similarly, meaning it's like trying to get to you.
Starting point is 02:59:53 And similarly with inventors, so maybe there's actually someone outside the simulation that's trying to influence the people inside and trying to send it to multiple people and one of them gets it. And now it's cached and now the other people can get access to it. Much more easy because now it's in the database, right? Before they were...
Starting point is 03:00:11 And it's only when somebody actually intentionally, you know, figures it out here that it gets into the database that we can access more easily, maybe. Anyway, those are really interesting ideas, I think. Yeah, definitely. Rizwan, thank you for doing this, man. This has been a mind-bending conversation. Yeah, this has been great.
Starting point is 03:00:33 I really enjoyed it. And I'm really happy to be able to be here in person with you. Yeah. Here, hold your book up so people can see the cover. Yeah, absolutely. Hold it up a little bit higher towards this camera. Oh, this camera. Here we go.
Starting point is 03:00:46 So it's the simulation hypothesis, an MIT computer science. It just shows why AI, quantum physics, and Eastern Mystics agree we're in a video game. And even if you've seen the old edition, this one is 400 pages and they're completely new in a lot of places. Can people order it now? Yeah. Can you pre-order it? Yeah, they can pre-order. By the time this comes out, we may be close to already being released, but they can pre-order it even now while we're recording it.
Starting point is 03:01:10 Fantastic. Well, thanks again, man. I really appreciate it. This is super fun. Thanks for having me. I'll link all the stuff below for everyone. And that's it. Good night, everybody.
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