Sean Carroll's Mindscape: Science, Society, Philosophy, Culture, Arts, and Ideas - 262 | Eric Schwitzgebel on the Weirdness of the World

Episode Date: January 15, 2024

Scientists and philosophers sometimes advocate pretty outrageous-sounding ideas about the fundamental nature of reality. (Arguably I have been guilty of this.) It shouldn't be surprising that reality,... in regimes far away from our everyday experience, fails to conform to common sense. But it's also okay to maintain a bit of skepticism in the face of bizarre claims. Philosopher Eric Schwitzgebel wants us to face up to the weirdness of the world. He claims that there are no non-weird ways to explain some of the most important features of reality, from quantum mechanics to consciousness. Blog post with transcript: https://www.preposterousuniverse.com/podcast/2024/01/15/262-eric-schwitzgebel-on-the-weirdness-of-the-world/ Support Mindscape on Patreon. Eric Schwitzgebel received his Ph.D. in philosophy from the University of California, Berkeley. He is currently a professor of philosophy at the University of California, Riverside. He is the author of several books, including the new The Weirdness of the World. UC Riverside web page The Splintered Mind blog Google Scholar publications PhilPeople profile Wikipedia

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Starting point is 00:00:31 Hello, everyone, and welcome to the Mindscape Podcast. I'm your host, Sean Carroll. If any of you out there own a copy of my book, something deeply hidden, you can go to the copyright page, the page right after the title page where there's the copyright information, et cetera, printed in the United States of America or whatever, there is a little notation on that page that gives the version number. And the version number is not used.
Starting point is 00:00:59 your copy of the book personally, all of you and your friends and I and everyone else that we know has the same version number. And the version number is $756 trillion, 132 billion, 390,815,553. If you know the story about what that version number is, when I wrote the book, I generated a quantum random number between one and a quadrillion, an integer. And that's what this version number is. If you believe, or if you, for the moment, imagine that the world is described by the many worlds' interpretation of quantum mechanics, which I explain and defend in the book, then there are different branches of the wave function with almost exactly the same book written in that.
Starting point is 00:01:57 but different version numbers. Every different integer of that size is represented somewhere on the branches of the wave function of the universe. Somewhere, it's all zeros or all threes or whatever, and there's got to be some comment in that version of the book,
Starting point is 00:02:13 well, wow, I guess we got really unlucky about that. But this idea, this little joke that we sneaked into the book, was supposed to be a way of really making you face up to the claims involved in the many world's formulation of quantum mechanics. And those claims, I am very quick to admit, are weird. They are bizarre. The implications of the many worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics are very, very far away from our intuitive, everyday experience of the world. And
Starting point is 00:02:49 some people will say, you know what, they're too far away. I'm just not going to go there. I do not believe there are a quadrillion different versions of something deeply hidden out there in some quantum multiverse with different version numbers in them. So what are we to do about that objection, that this idea, the many world's interpretation of quantum mechanics, is just too weird because quantum mechanics is not the only place where this issue arises. There are other attempts to make sense of the world, to in other words understand it even better than we do that like it or not lead us to some place that seems bizarre and weird to us. That is the theme of Eric Schwitzgables' new book. Eric is a philosopher at University of California, Riverside,
Starting point is 00:03:41 and he has a new book that is going to come out tomorrow by the day that this podcast gets released, and it is literally called the Weirdness of the World. And in this book, he basically faces up to the fact that some of our best attempts to make sense of the world end up looking pretty weird. In fact, he argues that in some cases, they're going to have to look pretty weird. There is no version of the correct theory that doesn't look weird to us. Now, weird is an interesting thing. Weird in his definition of it is a little bit different from bizarre. He defines bizarre to mean contrary to our common sense.
Starting point is 00:04:22 and weird is a little bit stronger than that. It's contrary to our common sense in kind of an irrevocable way. It's not going to go away just because we understand it better. We're going to have to buy into it. So he talks about not only quantum mechanics, but consciousness is a big theme.
Starting point is 00:04:38 All the different versions of consciousness theory, just like all the different versions of the foundations of quantum mechanics, Eric will argue, involve a certain degree of weirdness. And there's other weird things that may just be false, like maybe we live in a simulation, or maybe we're a brain in a vet or whatever, maybe those you can dismiss,
Starting point is 00:04:56 but what about when you can't dismiss it? What do you do when you need to balance different levels of weirdness, of different kinds of theories? Should we just ignore the weird possibilities? Should we give substantial credence to them? Should we be more cautious when all the options on the table are pretty weird?
Starting point is 00:05:14 So I like it as a work of philosophy that faces up to the real challenges that come along with taking seriously, our best ways of understanding the world. So over the course of all over different podcasts here, we've gone to some pretty weird places. We might as well celebrate it. Let's go.
Starting point is 00:05:49 Eric Schwitzkable, welcome to the Mindscape Podcast. Thanks for having me. So you've written a book about the weirdness of the world, which is just a great provocative title that I'm sure we'll give us a lot to talk about. But before we do that, I have to bring up a couple things that you've also been involved with.
Starting point is 00:06:07 that are really interesting, but not on that topic, but I have to get them out of the way a little bit. One is virtual Dan Dennett. You know, we had Dan Dennett as a previous Mindscape guest. I think that's his claim to fame these days. But those are before the days when we had large language models and could just program up a Dan Dennett to interview. So you did that and did a little experiment. So tell us about that. Yeah, we sure did.
Starting point is 00:06:33 So we did this, I should say, this is collaborative with Anna Strasser. and my son, Davich, with Scable, and Matthew Crosby was a collaborator earlier on, but he had to leave to work for Deep Mind. That happens, yeah. So he couldn't publish something using open-a-I technology. I'm sure he's handsomely compensated for his problems. He was involved early on and actually did some of the fine-tuning. So people know chat GPT, probably most of your listeners know, right, this is a large language,
Starting point is 00:07:07 model, it can produce text, it's very human-like. A precursor to that that came out, I think, in 2020, was GPT3. Yeah. And one of the things that you could do with GPT3 was you could fine tune it on a corpus of text. So it's basically, it consumes large portions of the Internet, and from this it can predict the next word when you input likely text. So when you fine tune it, what you do is you add some more corpus. and then it readjusts its weights so that its outputs look like a compromise
Starting point is 00:07:44 between what it is in its original state and the corpus that you've input you fine-tuned it on. So what we did was we took GPT3 and we fined it on the corpus of Dan Dennett, about two million words. Most of his, I don't know how many books he has in the teens and articles. We just pumped them into GPT. And then what we did was we asked the actual Dan Dennett 10 philosophical questions, and we asked our fine-tuned model we called Digi-Dan, the same 10 questions. We got, we did it four times.
Starting point is 00:08:18 We got four answers from each of the Digi-Dans. We didn't do any cherry-picking of those answers to see for quality. We did make sure that they were sufficient length. Yeah. So we excluded short answers. We wanted length similar to Dennett's. own answers. And then what we did was we took experts in Dennett's work and we said, hey, could you guess which is Dennis' real answer and which has come from the model? So chance would have been 20%.
Starting point is 00:08:46 Right. The experts got it about 50% right. So they did better than chance, but still half the time they chose the model's answer over Dennett's answers. And on two of the questions, the plurality of experts actually chose one of the models' answers over Dennett's answer. And in one of the models' answers, And in one of the questions, Dennett said, you know what? I kind of see why the experts chose that answer over my own answer. If I thought about it more, I should have said something different. So arguably, on one question, the model actually I performed Dan himself. So anyway, that was our experiment.
Starting point is 00:09:23 We wrote it up. We published it. And it was a lot of fun. And when you did it, it was only a short while ago, but probably it was much more surprising at the time. It wasn't quite as public the whole excitement these days about large language models. That's right. We did it. We actually ran the experiment before chat GPT was released, and so people were getting the wind about the power of GPT3, but it wasn't quite the phenomenon that it has since become. And when you, just as a technical matter, when you download this corpus, does that mean you had to have electronic copies of all of Dan's writings?
Starting point is 00:10:00 Did he help you with that? or did you just pirate a book or get a Kindle edition? He helped us with this, and he collaborated with us on the project throughout. And Anastroster did a huge amount of work converting these old PDFs and junkie files into clean text that could be uploaded into the model. But you've written things. You have a blog. Have you been tempted to do this for yourself, too? Does that save you time?
Starting point is 00:10:28 Yes. actually the first thing we did was we uploaded my blog into this. So this didn't become a publication, but we uploaded our blog into my blog into GPT three kind of lower power version of it, actually, not the Da Vinci model, but the Curie model, which is a slightly lower powered version. And then we had it produce blog posts in the style. And so readers can go if they want, look on my blog, the Splintered Mind, and they can see the GPT generated blog post.
Starting point is 00:10:59 which were actually pretty interesting. I mean, I don't, I think I write blog posts better. But it was kind of cool. Yeah. And at the time that we did this, it was not generally well known that GPT could create well-structured answers over long strings of text. I mean, if you're thinking,
Starting point is 00:11:17 it essentially does next word prediction. So you would kind of think it would lose the thread of ideas over time and wouldn't be able to create a well-structured argument that runs for paragraphs. Anyway, that's kind of what we thought, but it was surprising. One of the blog posts was, I think, not a convincing argument, but at least it had a kind of philosophical argumentative structure over the course of several paragraphs, which we found really interesting and surprising, given the basic structure of these models. Clearly, GPT does have some memory of what it's recently said, right? It's not literally going from one word to another.
Starting point is 00:11:54 Right. It's got a window of, I forget how, something like a thousand tokens, and a token's like three quarters of a word. Something in that ballpark. So yes. So did you give it topics for those blog posts? Or did you just say write another blog post that would fit in here? We gave it titles. Okay.
Starting point is 00:12:17 And then it wrote the post given the title, yeah. This is very scary. Do you think that the world is going to change dramatically because of this technology? Yes. Yeah. Okay. It's hard to know exactly how it's going to change. Hard to know how, right.
Starting point is 00:12:32 Yeah. Okay. But for sure, it's going to change. So that was one thing I wanted to get out of way. The other one, which I only found when I saw your Wikipedia page, is that you're one of the people involved in asking the questions, are ethicists, especially ethical? Or does, you know, studying moral philosophy make you a more moral person? Is that right?
Starting point is 00:12:53 Yeah. arguably I'm the world's foremost expert on the moral behavior of ethics professors. And what are your conclusions about this? Well, I've done a fair number of empirical studies on this, and what I've found over and over again, almost without exception, is that they behave about the same as comparison groups of other professors. So sometimes we do the comparison group would be other philosophers who don't specifically. specialize in ethics. Sometimes the comparison group is other professors at the same university in different departments. There have been a couple studies where we found a little bit worse or a little bit better behavior in some respects for ethicists, but generally speaking, it's a big
Starting point is 00:13:43 null result. We just find they behave the same as other people, which I think is kind of interesting because you might have thought that ethicists would reflect on ethics and then behave differently as a result of their reflections. And mostly that seems not to be the case. One particularly interesting example of this is with respect to vegetarianism, because ethicists on some issues will embrace more demanding moral standards. So, for example, ethicists are much more likely than professors in departments other than philosophy, where they were in 2009 when we collected these data. To say that it's bad to eat meat, bad to eat the meat of mammals in particular is what we asked about.
Starting point is 00:14:31 And yet in our research, we found them just as likely to report having eaten meat at their previous evening meal. Now, is that correlated? I mean, are the people who say it is bad to eat meat also eating the meat? Right. It had the correlation they would think. So the people who, we gave them a nine-point scale from very morally bad to very morally good. And the people who ticked one or two very morally bad or one tick toward good from that, few of them reported having eaten meat at their previous evening meal.
Starting point is 00:15:06 But the ones who ticked three or four on our nine-point scale, which was a lot of ethicists, seemed basically just as likely to have reported eating meat. So there was a individual, there was a kind of correlation between the strength of the opinion and the self-reported eating, but there wasn't the group difference that we expected, right? So ethicist as a group said the majority, 60% said it was morally bad. But I don't know, 30 some percent of them reported having done it at their previous evening meal nonetheless compared to, I think was 38% of ethicists. 37% of ethicists and 38% of respondents overall. So if this is a surprising result, which I'll entertain the possibility that it is,
Starting point is 00:15:57 what's your theoretical understanding of what's going on? Is it just that ethicists are better at arguing about ethics, but not actually better at being ethical? Is there a different kind of study that would make you better at ethics? Is it like coaching versus playing a sport? Yeah. I think coaching versus playing is a sport.
Starting point is 00:16:17 interesting comparison. We don't hire ethicists to be saints, just like we don't hire coaches to be football stars. And yet, you would expect if you took a coach and a random member of the population of the same age and gender and put them on a football field together, you would expect the coach would still outperform, even if the coach is not a superstar. Right. Right. So I think that's an interesting comparison that reveals partly why you might think it's still a little surprising, even if we don't hold ethicists to saint-like standards. I mean, and the vegetarianism results again, you know, I think that strikes people as somewhat surprising.
Starting point is 00:17:02 Yeah. So one of the things that I draw from this is it fits with a view I have about moral psychology. I suspect that real answer is complex and multi-causal. But one of the things I think it fits pretty well with is the idea that people in general aim to be morally mediocre. Okay. So my inclination is to think, and this is grounded both in personal experience and in reading social and moral psychology, right, the people don't generally aim to be good or bad by absolute standards. Instead, they aim to be about as morally good as their peers. They don't
Starting point is 00:17:50 want to make the sacrifices that would be involved in being very morally better. But they also don't want to be the worst in the bunch. Interesting. Right? So people aim for peer relative moral standards. So if you think about that from the point of view of thinking philosophically about ethics, maybe what you do when you think about ethics is you discover moral truths, like maybe you discover it's bad to eat the meat of mammals, right? But if you're aiming just for peer relative goodness, your peers are still eating meat. So what happens is your opinion about your peer's moral behavior and your own moral behavior goes down, but your behavior doesn't change. People turn to telehealth for weight loss. They're looking for real support. That's why more people are choosing orderly meds.com.
Starting point is 00:18:38 Orderly meds connects you with real doctors and access to proven GLP1 medications like semaglutide and terseptatide. No guessing, just a more supportive experience, and all shift directly to your door in discrete packaging. Do your research. Ask questions. Then visit orderlymeds.com slash podcast for an exclusive offer. That's orderlymeds.com slash podcast. Individual results may vary. Now medical advice, eligibility required seaside for details. Hey, everyone, it's Cal Penn. I'm the host of Earsay, the Audible and I Heart Audiobook Club. This week on the podcast, I am sitting down with Ray Porter, the narrator of Andy Weir's
Starting point is 00:19:17 audiobook Project Hail Mary, massive sci-fi adventure about survival and science, and what happens when you wake up alone very far from Earth? I really had to make a decision because I caught myself getting that frog in my throat and starting to get teary as I'm narrating some of these sections. And it's like, okay, yo, yeah, yo, is this indulgent? And I really thought about it. I was like, no, at this point, it would kind of be betraying the trust the author and the listener have in telling this story if I don't go through it. But there's places in this book that deeply emotionally affected me and I left it on the mic.
Starting point is 00:19:54 That's great. Because it served the story. People will say like, oh my God, I cried at the end. It's like, yeah, dude, me too. Listen to Eursay, the Audible and IHeart Audio Book Club on the IHeart Radio app or wherever you get your podcasts. That's actually very nicely consonant with other podcasts I've done recently about other aspects of things like psychology or even epistemology, having much more of a social slant than we would expect. Brian Lowry explained to us how our sense of selves serves mostly a social function.
Starting point is 00:20:31 Eugomersier explained how our use of reasons serves largely as social function, and you're saying that there's a very big social function that is served by our ethical practice at any rate. Yeah, right, absolutely. Social animals, there we are. But I guess this does segue even more smoothly than I thought it would into the weirdness of the world,
Starting point is 00:20:57 because when you say the world is weird, And now we're going to get into topic of your book. Immediately, part of me wants to say, come on, the world can't be weird. It's the world. What we're seeing is a mismatch between our expectations and the world, and maybe those can be colored somehow. So what does the title of your book mean? Right. So, yeah, you're right.
Starting point is 00:21:24 It's not that the world is intrinsically weird. I'm not sure what that would mean. The idea of weirdness or bizarreness, which is a closely related idea in my book, involves violating our expectations or our standards or a sense of what's normal or violating common sense. So when I say that the world is weird, I mean something like our common sense understandings of how the world is, are going to be. sharply violated by how the world actually is, that's the bizarreness element. And then there's also an element which I call dubiety, which is that, and all of our answers to this are dubious.
Starting point is 00:22:15 It's not like, oh, well, it violates common sense, but we perfectly well understand it. It's also a dimension of weirdness is that it kind of exceeds our ability to fully comprehend. Right. So I think the example you gave in the book is special relativity, which tells us various things that happened at the speed of light, might seem bizarre to us. It's anti-commoncensical. But it's not weird in the same sense. We can fully understand it once we learn what's going on. Correct. So special relativity is a nice example of something that's highly bizarre. It violates common sense. But it's not dubious. So the full weirdness thesis also involves this Dubai.
Starting point is 00:22:59 Deutriety claim, yeah. Yeah, you use the word dubiety in your book much more often than I've ever seen it used before. So just to let people know, it's the existence of, or I guess, the claim that you should be dubious about something? Right. Doubity. Doubt is justified. Doubt is justified. Good.
Starting point is 00:23:19 You know, the name, the URL of my personal website is preposterousuniverse.com for exactly the same reason. It came out of thinking about naturalness and cosmology and the cosmological constant and the fact that the universe is surprising to us. And it's funny because I get critics, you know, the usual crackpot on the street with opinions about cosmology saying, oh, Sean Carroll thinks the universe is preposterous. He doesn't realize that it's just our ideas that are wrong. But I'm trying to say like, no, that's the point. I don't think the universe is making a mistake. It's definitely we are making a mistake. That's the whole message that is trying to get across.
Starting point is 00:24:01 Exactly. And I like the word preposterous too. I was flirting with just borrowing that word from you. But I decided I liked weirdness a little bit better. Weirdness works, especially weirdness of the world, the alliteration, etc. Okay. So let's take the universe's point of view here. You know, why is it our fault that the universe looks weird to us?
Starting point is 00:24:25 Is there something about us that is, despite the fact that we're part of the world, that kind of doesn't quite match on to what we see out there in principle? Right. Well, I'm inclined to think that our theories and our common sense, well, especially our common sense. Let's start with that. Our common sense is trained upon, built upon a very limited range of experiences. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:24:55 Right. So with respect to big picture cosmology, right, it's relatively low energy, middle-sized, slow-moving stuff on Earth, right? And that's what we're good at. That's what we evolved to be good at. That's what the social pressure is a learning environment makes us good at. You take something at a very different scale, much larger, much smaller, much more energetic. And those aren't the kinds of things that there's any particularly good evolutionary or developmental
Starting point is 00:25:24 or social reason to think we would have well-tuned common sense judgments about. So in other words, the way that I've said similar things in some cases, we have, we only experience a tiny fraction
Starting point is 00:25:38 of what the world is, but we make efforts to experience more and more of it, and guess what? It looks different and surprising to us. Yes, I completely agree with that. So...
Starting point is 00:25:48 And I think the same is true for our understanding of consciousness, although less obviously so, right? So the thesis of the weirdness of the world, you know, is partly about large, big picture, cosmological issues, but it's also equally or even more about consciousness. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:26:10 Right. So again, with respect to issues of consciousness, we're familiar with the human case and with, you know, certain familiar vertebrates we like. And that's about what we know about consciousness. And we have not had experience, for example, with sophisticated AI systems. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:26:34 So we shouldn't expect particularly to have well-tuned, common sensical intuitions about such things. Good. And so in some sense, I don't want to put words in your mouth, but it seems to me that the motto of your book should be that you're asking us to be courageous. to say, you know, we should expect that as we learn more and more about the world, we'll find that what we're learning seems weird to us,
Starting point is 00:27:03 and we need to develop tools and techniques to deal with that and handle it. Yeah, absolutely. And, yeah, I guess that's, in a sense, courageous, although I'm not sure that's the word I would use. I like the word wonderful instead. Okay. Because it's got this, it's got two, the idea of wonderful, it's got two dimensions to it, right? So it's got the root sense of wonder, right? That we live in a world that promotes wonder in us.
Starting point is 00:27:38 And wonderful, of course, is also something like a synonym for good. Right. So I think that's a good thing about the world that it's kind of defies our, understanding. So you have lessons and nostrums that we should get from contemplating the weirdness of the world. But I thought that maybe we could just go through some examples, really think about them in depth, and that will help us extract what these lessons are. And as you said, consciousness is a big one, but I first wanted to just talk about the existence of the external world, you know, these radically skeptical scenarios. Like you talk a lot about, are we,
Starting point is 00:28:20 sure that we're awake. Right. For example. So give us the general lay of the land here. Like how do you think about these skeptical possibilities? And what are your favorite ones? Right. So you have a few different chapters where I tangle with these skeptical possibilities
Starting point is 00:28:39 in different ways. The dream argument, of course, is a famous one. That's the one that you started with. But I'm also interested in the simulation hypothesis, the idea that we might be living in a simulation, the Boltzmann brain idea, which you, of course, talked about in your work very wonderfully. And, you know, just the idea that,
Starting point is 00:29:01 even the idea that the universe might consist wholly of my own mind and nothing else. All right. So I talk about all of those possibilities in the book. But we could start with the dream one, which is maybe the most familiar one. Sure. So this goes back in philosophy all the way, at least to the ancient Chinese philosopher,
Starting point is 00:29:20 Zhuangza, although of course, Descartes makes a famous use of it. The idea is, how do you know, if you do know, that you're not currently dreaming right now? And normally,
Starting point is 00:29:38 we think we feel pretty confident that we're awake, at least if you ask a waking person, if they're confident they're awake, they'll tend to say yes. Yeah. But what justifies that? And I think there are a few ways it could be justified.
Starting point is 00:29:53 I think there are some empirical features of dreams that are that make them different from waking life. So for example, I think of waking sensory experience as pretty richly detailed and pretty stable. Whereas the experiences we have in dreams, arguably, are less detailed. kind of sketchier, more image-like, less stable. Do you know this claim that in dream, there's a claim that I think actually has some backing, but I'm not sure how right it is, that you can't read text in dreams.
Starting point is 00:30:38 The text does not look like text. It looks like that sort of bad AI text. It's sort of like letter-like without actually having any meaning. Yes, that is sometimes called a dream sign. These are hypothesized tests for whether you're dreaming or not. So look at text and see if it's stable and if you can read it. And some people think of that as for themselves a good dream sign. But of course, there are also dream reports in which people report reading stable text.
Starting point is 00:31:06 So it's not universally accepted. All right, good. So, right. So I think that if we accept this fact about the stability of text is, at least in the majority of dreams, you can't have a stable text. That creates some evidence that I'm not dreaming right now.
Starting point is 00:31:31 But a lot of dream researchers, including, for example, Jennifer Vint, who I think is really amazingly knowledgeable about this kind of stuff, think that we do often in dreams have stable experiences that are a lot like waking life, maybe even experientially indistinguishable from waking life, even boring, boring, mundane experiences like that of listening to a podcast.
Starting point is 00:32:05 That's a very exciting experience, Eric. And so if we think that there are some dreams like this, or if we invest some credence in a theory of dreaming, according to which there are either often or at least sometimes experiences like I'm having right now or like your listeners or you are having right now in dreams, then it becomes kind of less experientially obvious. Okay. I can't now be sure that I'm not dreaming based on what,
Starting point is 00:32:47 seems to be this stable experience that I'm having right now of seeming to be awake. And of course, lots of people, including me and probably most of your listeners, have had false awakening experiences where you kind of seem to wake up and think, oh, I just had a dream. Now I'm awake. Right. And then you wake up again. Right.
Starting point is 00:33:11 So there are reasons, I think, not to be perfectly certain that you are not. dreaming right now. Hey, everyone. It's Cal Penn. I'm the host of Earsay, the Audible and I Heart Audio Book Club. This week on the podcast, I am sitting down with Ray Porter, the narrator of Andy Weir's audiobook Project Hail Mary, massive sci-fi adventure about survival and science, and what happens when you wake up alone very far from Earth?
Starting point is 00:33:43 I really had to make a decision because I caught myself getting that frog in my throat and starting to get teary as I'm narrating some of these sections. And it's like, okay, yo, yeah, yo, yeah, is this indulgent? And I really thought about it. I was like, no, at this point, it would kind of be betraying the trust the author and the listener have in telling this story if I don't go through it. But there's places in this book that deeply emotionally affected me, and I left it on the mic. That's great. Because it served the story. People will say like, oh my God, I cried at the end. It's like, yeah, dude, me too. Listen to Eursay, the Audible and IHeart Audio Club on the IHeart Radio app or wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 00:34:23 Is it also worth contemplating a kind of inception scenario where we are all dreaming? There's a more awake version of us that dreams like our existence, pretty detailed, we can read text, etc. and then we dream that we are dreaming in this fuzzier way, right? I think that's possible, but I want to draw a distinction between what I think of as grounded and ungrounded skepticism. So ungrounded skepticism says, well, I could be a brain in a vat, and then I wouldn't be able to tell the difference. So can I really rule that out? Right. An ungrounded, ungrounded dream skepticism could be like, oh, well, maybe we're in an inception scenario. Right. Grounded skepticism starts with our ordinary background assumptions and says, looking at these assumptions, there's some positive reason to give some credence to skeptical doubt. Right. So there's no real positive reason to think that you're a brain in a bat to assign that any more than that. a most trivial likelihood, right?
Starting point is 00:35:42 There's no positive reason to think we're in an inception scenario, but there is positive reason to think that this experience might be a dream experience. Once we start thinking about the nature of dream experiences and whether experiences like this at least maybe sometimes occur in dreams, at least according to some theories that might be true, right? So I prefer to focus on these grounded kind of sources of skepticism. So I think it's not just, I mean, one of the critics, one of the critiques that philosophers sometimes give us skepticism is, you can cook up anything. There's no reason for us to take it seriously.
Starting point is 00:36:20 Whereas I think with dream skepticism, given the fact that we dream every night, given that theories of dreams, at least some mainstream theories of dreams, postulate that we have experiences like this in our sleep, that creates grounds for doubt. It's not completely just cooked up out of nothing. Maybe you can add to that the idea that at least most of the time while we're dreaming we don't think of ourselves as dreaming. Right, most of the time. Of course, there are some so-called lucid dreams. And it is the case that if you can get yourself in the habit of thinking, am I awake so much that that thought starts to come to you while you're actually dreaming, then that's one way to discover. whether you're dreaming and start to have lucid dreams. I'm very bad at remembering dreams.
Starting point is 00:37:11 But even in the dream, sometimes people will say, am I dreaming and then decide, no, I'm not dreaming, even though they really are. That's just what I was going to ask, because I was just going to say, I don't remember my own dreams very well at all, but I don't have any memory of ever being in a dream saying, I wonder if I'm in a dream and then going, nope, I don't think I am. But you're saying other people have reported that experience. Yes, that's definitely not an uncommon experience. All right. All right. Now you see you're increasing my credence.
Starting point is 00:37:40 It could be the case that the majority of times when people are dreaming and think to themselves explicitly, am I dreaming? They come to realize they are. But it's not clear that that's a majority. And even if it is, it's not an overwhelming majority. Yeah. Okay. Okay, good. Then what are, let's just go through some of the other famous ones, because you've drawn a very interesting distinction between grounded and ungrounded skeptical scenarios. What are some of the other skeptical scenarios? you would classify as grounded, in other words, worthy of our attention? So I find the simulation hypothesis pretty interesting. So this is the idea that we might be artificial intelligences living inside a simulated reality,
Starting point is 00:38:21 kind of like the matrix, except in the matrix, they're really biological bodies, but you could have a matrix-type scenario where the confused entities are AI systems. Or you could imagine the video game, the Sims, with these artificial simulated people going around these environments,
Starting point is 00:38:40 except the Sims are really conscious. That's a couple ways of thinking about the simulation hypothesis. Right. So Nick Bostrom has a famous argument that gives us some grounds for thinking it's at least possible that we are Sims, right? So the idea here would be that it's not ridiculous to think that consciousness could arrive and arise in artificially intelligent computational systems, right? Philosophers have disputed that.
Starting point is 00:39:16 John Searle, who was actually one of my dissertation advisors, is one of the most famous skeptics about that. But there's certainly no consensus that it's impossible. So if we accept, give at least some credence to the possibility that artificially intelligent beings could arise on computers, then it seems possible that such beings could exist in simulated artificial environments that they take to be their own, the base level of reality, as Bostrom puts it. Some of them might even think they're living in Earth in the 21st century. And then the question arises, okay, how many such beings are there?
Starting point is 00:40:07 And one possibility would be, look, you know, they're not ever going to be beings like this out there, right? The civilization will not get that far enough. Maybe it's really expensive to make such things and no one would bother. Or maybe there'd be some ethical regulations. Like you don't want to create real, you want to create really conscious entities inside your computer who think they're living in reality. Right. But on the other hand, it also seems like it's possible that there would be many such beings. Just like we run computer games like the Sims right now and we run scientific simulations, it could be the case that there are lots of games or scientific projects that involve real conscious beings inside them who think they're living in the base level of reality.
Starting point is 00:40:55 If the universe contains many such beings, then it seems not totally implausible to think we might be among them. So there are various reasons to think We're probably not them Right? Every step of this argument Admits of doubt Yeah But and you kind of stack those doubts On top of each other
Starting point is 00:41:17 And it seems like, okay, probably not Right, but again, it's like with a dream case It doesn't seem like we should be absolutely certain That we're not Sims. Right. So yeah, I guess it could be. So I find that possibility interesting. And then, I guess to turn this into a skeptical scenario, so one of the things that David Chomers has particularly emphasized in talking about this is he says, well, look, if you're living in a simulation, but it's large and stable, then that's not really a skeptical scenario at all, he says, because you have a long past, you're going to have a long future.
Starting point is 00:41:56 All the people you know really exist. And, you know, there might be, say, a coffee mug. And it might be fundamentally made out of computational bits, but, you know, that's enough. It's still going to be there. It's going to react the way that you want. So it really is kind of a coffee mug. So basically most of your ordinary beliefs would end up being true. So to turn this into a skeptical simulation scenario, what we have to do is think about what's the possibility that if we're living in a sim, it's a small or unstable one.
Starting point is 00:42:30 And there, I guess I'm inclined to disagree with Chalmers. And I'm inclined to think that if we are in a sim, there's a decent chance that it's a smaller, unstable one. So if we think about the simulations we run, they tend to be small and unstable. If we think about the question of resources, right? And it probably would take a lot of resources to run a whole galaxy from the Big Bang through now and on into the future.
Starting point is 00:42:59 So what scientist is really going to want to do, that if maybe all they're interested in is human cognition, right? So just run a short, you know, a few people having a discussion on a podcast, right, or something like that. So I think conditional upon thinking we're living in a sim, we should assign a substantial portion of that credence, you know, maybe 50%, maybe 90%, maybe 10%, to it's being a smaller unstable simulation, right? And in that case, then that in my mind counts as a radically skeptical scenario because you might be radically wrong. Maybe this whole simulation was created only 10 minutes ago, or maybe, you know, there's no one outside of your room. It's just you listening to a podcast or just the two of us having a conversation.
Starting point is 00:43:43 And beyond the walls of our rooms, nothing exists. Those would be various ways of it's being smaller and stable. So as a professional philosopher, of course, you know that the idea of these skeptical scenarios goes back to antiquity, not just Zhuanzah, but the ancient Greeks thought about this. So we've been worried for millennia now that reality is not anything like what we think it is. Absolutely. I love the ancient skeptics. So what are some of your favorite ones? Well, Javoggs is probably my favorite philosopher. But sexist empiricus is also really wonderful. And they did not know about the simulation argument. Right. They didn't know about the simulation argument. Right. They didn't know about the
Starting point is 00:44:30 relation argument. So that opens up the possibility that there are some grounds for doubt that future philosophers and physicists will think of that didn't even occur to us. And maybe we should have some degree of skepticism reserved for that. Right, I call this wildcard skepticism. The idea that I am, I should have a certain amount of doubt. about my ordinary assumptions about the world, just on the basis of the fact that there's some skeptical possibility that I'm not even capable of considering. Right. Okay, good.
Starting point is 00:45:11 So there are other skeptical scenarios, but we have the general feeling between living in a simulation, we're just dreaming. What do we do about it? Do we just ignore those possibilities because they're too weird? Do we reserve a little bit of our credences to say, you know, who knows? tomorrow change my mind and think this is right. Yeah, I think we reserve a little bit of our credence. So the way that I think about it in terms of numerical credence is that I think it's rational
Starting point is 00:45:44 to assign about a 0.1 to 1% credence to some radically skeptical scenario or other being correct. Now, that's rough and fuzzy, right? somewhere between, you know, just being completely confident they're false and being, you know, kind of radically uncertain. So 99%, 99.9% the world's basically just how we think it is, right? Setting aside the kind of cosmoload, the big picture cosmological stuff, right? But kind of the ordinary Earth world of middle-sized, dry goods at slow speeds is more or less how we think. 99% of our credence maybe should go to that,
Starting point is 00:46:31 but save a little bit of your credence space, so to speak, for these radically skeptical possibilities. And then I think that having that little bit of space there can have some influence on your choices and your behavior. Actually, I do want to get to exactly that issue, but I realize there's a hanging thread that we should deal with, which is there's another kind of way, which the world could be very different, I mean, the world could be very different than what we think it is,
Starting point is 00:47:00 which is just there is a lower microscopic level beneath our manifest image kind of world, right? So you're not counting, we are not talking about something like, oh, there's a whole new theory where everything is little strings or wave functions or whatever, like that doesn't count, because in those scenarios, the macroscopic world is still the macroscopic world and obeys the rules, right? Exactly, right. So I don't count that as a radically skeptical scenario of the relevant sort, because there still would be, our everyday beliefs would still mostly be true, right?
Starting point is 00:47:38 It would be true that, you know, Earth has existed for billions of years, and it would be true that, you know, there's a coffee mug here and that sort of stuff, and the sun will rise tomorrow, so to speak. Good. Okay, good. So then let's, then we can go back to that one percent, one percent skepticism. you're advocating. I mean, one question is just, where did that number come from? You're saying we should attach a 10 to the minus two, 10 of the minus three credence to just being completely wrong.
Starting point is 00:48:07 I absolutely agree that we should attach some credence to any crazy idea you have. I'm a disbeliever that you should attach zero credence to almost anything. But why not 10 to the minus 10? Why something as big as 10 to the minus two or three? I don't have a rigorous argument for that, but let me just do it for, say, the dream scenario. Yeah. Right. So let's say we invest a 20% credence in the theory, which some major dream researchers accept, that we commonly have experiences like we're currently having in our dreams.
Starting point is 00:48:55 Let's say we get 20% credence to that and 80% credence to now dreams are basically just always sketchy. Then conditional on that, we say, okay, how often do I have experiences relevantly like this in dreams? Well, you know, maybe this is not the kind of thing that I would tend to dream about very much, right? But again, you know, if we ordinarily have kind of sensory, ordinary kind of sensory experiences of mundane things, it seems like this is the kind of thing that we should have.
Starting point is 00:49:29 So maybe I should assign, you know, a 2%, maybe 2% of the time I'm having experiences like this is actually in sleep. Or I should invest 2% of my credence to the idea that I have experiences like this in my sleep. Now, once I've attached to 2% credence to the idea that I have experiences like this commonly in my sleep, it's hard for me to see on the basis of that how you would then go, okay, so I now only have a 1 in 10. billion credence that this is a dream. Right? It seems like you can't knock too many orders of magnitude down
Starting point is 00:50:08 off that 2% I'm not sure what the epistemic what the grounds would be for that kind of decrement. Hey everyone, it's Cal Penn. I'm the host of Earsay, the Audible and I-Heart audiobook club. This week on the
Starting point is 00:50:26 podcast, I am sitting down with Ray Porter, the narrator of Andy Weir's audiobook Project Hail Mary, massive sci-fi adventure about survival and science, and what happens when you wake up alone very far from Earth? I really had to make a decision because I caught myself getting that frog in my throat and starting to get teary as I'm narrating some of these sections, and it's like, okay, yo, yeah, yeah, yo, is this indulgent? And I really thought about it.
Starting point is 00:50:52 I was like, no, at this point, it would kind of be betraying the trust the author and the listener have in telling this story if I don't go through it. But there's places in this book that deeply emotionally affected me and I left it on the mic. That's great. Because it served the story. People will say like, oh my God, I cried at the end. It's like, yeah, dude, me too. Listen to Earsay, the Audible and IHeart Audio Book Club on the IHeart Radio app or wherever you get your podcasts. When people turn to telehealth or weight loss, they're looking for real support. That's why more people are choosing orderly meds.com. Orderly meds connects you with real doctors and access to proven GLP1 medications like
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Starting point is 00:51:48 Medical advice. Eligibility required, C-Sight for details. I think it's a big philosophical problem that I don't know whether you know if anyone sort of specializes in this particular question, but what do we do with issues or questions or scenarios where the credence that it'll happen is incredibly tiny, but the consequences of it happening are incredibly large. And it seems, you know, maybe AI destroying the world is an example of that, or even better because people think that AI destroying the world might be 10%, but the large Hadron Collider turning on in a black hole,
Starting point is 00:52:28 whole eating up the world. And someone says, well, it's less than a one in 10 billion chance. And someone else says, but it destroys the world. That should still count. How do we reason about those cases? One in 10 billion times 10 billion people. So that's why I chose the number, right. It's one expected murder as soon as you turn it on. But even the number one in the 10 billion, I mean, if someone said, oh no, it's really only one in 10 million or it's one in 10 trillion, and probably I couldn't give a principled argument in any of those directions. Right. When you talk about those kinds of magnitudes,
Starting point is 00:53:03 sometimes it's hard to get... You lose your sense of magnitude once you get over, I don't know, a trillion or something like that. So do philosophers have a toolkit for dealing with these weird numbers? No. It's an interesting issue that's been starting to get attention in the philosophical literature.
Starting point is 00:53:25 you know, there's this idea that sometimes called Nicolausian discounting, which is the thought that once something has a low enough chance or you give a low enough credence to it, you just ignore it completely. Yeah. So that is one approach. What was that called? And I, Nickelodeon discounting
Starting point is 00:53:49 after someone named Nicholas, but I forgot which Nicholas it is. So, right, so for example, in the weirdness of the world, I suggest that
Starting point is 00:54:02 once you give something 10 to the negative 30 credence, you kind of just forget about it. And this helps solve certain kinds of puzzles and
Starting point is 00:54:14 paradoxes in decision theory. But there are also arguments against this. So there's been back and forth about this. This also comes up in the debate about the ethics of long-termism. Right, exactly.
Starting point is 00:54:28 Right, so long-termism is this idea in the effective altruism movement that there's a small chance that things we do today could have a huge impact on a huge number of lives in the future. Right. So, for example, if humanity goes extinct now, then maybe there are no other entities in our galaxy who will ever have the kinds of lives with the kind of value that our lives have. And if we managed not to go extinct now, then maybe we will have 10 to the 40 happy descendants before the heat death of the universe. So even if there was a one in a quadrillion chance that something you did now could prevent
Starting point is 00:55:14 humanity from going extinct, given the stakes, maybe you should invest a huge amount. in that tiny little chance. So that's, yeah, so that's this interesting issue that's been coming up recently with long-termism that where this issue about
Starting point is 00:55:32 what do you do when you're trying to balance tiny credences and giant values against each other. Do you have a take on what we should do or is it just an open kind of question? So I have two takes. One is I'm still going to stand by Nicolausian discounting.
Starting point is 00:55:52 Okay. And the other take is radical ignorance about what would be, what actions that are currently available to us would have good versus bad effects. So the long termists will typically say or assume that human extinction is likely to have a bad effect instead of a good effect on the, on future history. I don't think that that's necessarily true. So for example, maybe humanity, because we are so technological
Starting point is 00:56:31 and prone to violence, is a kind of unstable species that is more or less certain to doom itself sometime in the next 10 to 100,000 years we're going to blow ourselves up. But, and if we do it in a explosive way, then we ruin the earth for other future inhabitants. But if we were to say, bow out peacefully now by deciding never to reproduce again, as antinatalists suggest, then maybe we leave the earth in a good position for other species, like, say, dolphins,
Starting point is 00:57:12 who might have descendants that are capable of lives as rich as ours, but who aren't technological, aren't going to blow themselves up, and could endure potentially four billions of years on the planet, or maybe not billions, but maybe a billion. If that's the case, and you put the numbers into the equation in a certain way, then maybe it turns out that it would be better from a kind of long-term perspective for human beings to peacefully extinguish ourselves now.
Starting point is 00:57:47 So I'm not saying that's true. What I'm saying is it's very hard to know. When you take a billion year time perspective, what really is kind of objectively good versus bad among options that we have available to us now.
Starting point is 00:58:06 I think that's fair. So radical ignorance about the very distant future. And relatedly then, what is the actionable fact about 1% skepticism? Like, how does it affect our daily lives to think that maybe there's a 1% chance or a 10th of a percent chance that I'm dreaming or that I'm living in the simulation? Right. Well, for example, just a fun example to start with. I had been reading a lot about dream skepticism, and it was particularly vivid for me this one particular winter break when I was walking across campus and no else was around. I was thinking,
Starting point is 00:58:52 I wonder if I'm dreaming. Maybe I should try to fly because I'm probably not dreaming. But look, if I'm dreaming, it would be so awesome to fly. No one's around. No one's looking. There's no cost. It was kind of walking across campus to the science library to get a book, right? why not just like try to fly to the library? So I did try to fly to the library and I failed. But I think that was a rational decision because I could have been dreaming and then it would have been awesome. It was not so rational that you would have done it had people been watching.
Starting point is 00:59:29 Right. So low cost things, right? Don't try to fly when you're standing on the edge of the cliff. Yeah. All right. Plug that into your utility calculus. you will not get a positive result, right? But if they're no, if they're very small or no costs to trying to fly,
Starting point is 00:59:44 then why not if you think this might be a dream, it would fly? Well, the other thing... Of course, as soon as you try to fly and fail, then that should reduce your credence either that this is a dream or that if this is a dream you could fly. So it might not be repeatable. You might not just be spending all your time trying to fly. In my dreams, I can fly at least a little bit.
Starting point is 01:00:07 I can float. Right. It's just a matter of willpower. Anyway, this is all, you know, fun, but it is 1% stuff. And a lot of the book, I don't want to give people the wrong impression, a lot of your book you're talking about consciousness, which has the feature that we're all familiar with it. I don't even want to say the feature that it exists,
Starting point is 01:00:28 because people argue about that. But at least we're all familiar with the idea. So what is it about our attempts to understand consciousness that drives us into the weird zone? Right. So philosophers have tried over and over again for centuries to make sense of how consciousness fits into the world. And one of the striking empirical facts about the history of philosophy is that every single attempt to make sense of this is jaw-droppingly bizarre. So there are, I divide attempt. to deal with the question of how consciousness fits into the broader world into four broad categories.
Starting point is 01:01:16 One is substance dualism. You've got an immaterial soul. Another one is materialism. There are no immaterial souls. You're just a biological entity. Another one is idealism. This is the idea that there is no material world at all. All that exists are minds or souls. And then there's a what I call compromise slash rejection views, this kind of grab bag. of other alternatives. And the striking thing to me about this is all of these alternatives end up committing to bizarre and dubious feces of one form or another. There's not really a live option here that is non-bizarre.
Starting point is 01:02:01 It's not always obvious. I mean, idealism is bizarre on its face, I think. It's contrary to common sense to think there's no material world and it's only just minds, right? dualism and materialism are not maybe bizarre in their face, but once you try to get into the metaphysical details and think about how it really works, end up pretty swiftly faced with theoretical choices where there are going to be bizarre consequences for any of the choices that you make.
Starting point is 01:02:29 I think that's the important point, because people are going to hear you say that, and there'll be both materialists and dualists in the audience who go, I have no trouble thinking that consciousness works that way, but your point is that if you really take the consequences of that view seriously, you're led to something that we should recognize as bizarre. Correct. Right. So why don't you tell us, for either pick one, yeah. So for example, with dualism, right, the dualist faces two questions where all of the answers seem to be bizarre. One concerns what kinds of entities have.
Starting point is 01:03:09 souls and the other concerns the causal relationship between material world and souls. The causal question is a little more complicated. So let me just talk about the question of what entities have souls, right? Basically you have four choices. You could say only humans have souls. Or you could say everything in the world has a soul. Both of those are pretty bizarre, right? if you think souls are the locus of consciousness, then if you accept the first, like Descartes,
Starting point is 01:03:44 then you think dogs and cats aren't conscious. So there's this story of Descartes taking a cat and throwing it out of a second story window saying, see, cats, they're just machines. I never heard that story. He probably didn't actually do this. Man. But that story kind of reveals the bizariness of the view that only humans have souls. Right. And of course, the panpsychist view that everything has a soul. even say a proton, that's also pretty bizarre. So then there are two other options. One is that there's a sharp line somewhere.
Starting point is 01:04:18 So, okay, dogs have souls, cats have souls, but not frogs. Where do you draw that line? Across the continuum of animals, it seems like there's a continuum of psychological capacities, a continuum of physiology. It would be weird if you said, okay, toads of this genus have souls. toads of this other genus do not. So a sharp line is pretty implausible, at least bizarre, right?
Starting point is 01:04:47 And then that gives you maybe the fourth option, which is having a soul is not an on or off thing. You could have a kind of soul or a half soul, right? So maybe like frogs have like, you know, an eighth of a soul. I mean, what would that even mean? We normally think of souls or things that you either have or don't have. It seems like a discrete category rather than a graded category. Right.
Starting point is 01:05:05 So, but you got to take one of those horns, but they're all bizarre, right? So that's, that illustrates why I think, you know, on the face of it, it seems like, oh, having a soul is not a bizarre view, right? But as soon as you face that choice of saying, okay, what animals have souls, you're just, you're forced into committing to some strikingly bizarre position. And as a matter of fact, this was a hot topic in ancient philosophy, which animals have souls, right? Exactly. Right. And the ancient, well, I mean, and the modern conception of the soul as the locus of consciousness is a little different from an ancient philosophy. There was the vegetative soul as well. So there's a sense in which even plants had souls, but they didn't think of souls maybe as a locus of consciousness. So actually the concept of a soul that we find in our current philosophical and religious tradition has a certain history. It doesn't not a straightforward translation from, say, ancient Greek. So it's complicated, but yes, it's been an issue throughout philosophical history.
Starting point is 01:06:08 But here are the Mindscape Podcasts. We are hardcore materialists about consciousness. So tell us why that leads us to weirdness. Well, one of the issues here to think about is, again, what kind of entities have experiences? I guess there are a few different ways to angle in on this. but one of them, and this is the theme of chapter three, is to point out that, according to a broad class of materialist theories, it's very plausible that the United States has a stream of conscious experience. The United States conceived of as a concrete entity with people as a
Starting point is 01:07:07 its parts, kind of like you are a concrete entity with cells as your parts. Right. So, think about that concrete thing with hundreds of billions of people, right? Hundreds of millions. Sorry, hundreds of millions. Sorry, I misspoke there. Don't want you misquoted. Yeah. So that entity processes a lot of information. That entity represents itself. that entity responds to its environment, kind of intelligently or semi-intelligently, right? You scan space for asteroids that might threaten Earth, and we're prepared to try to deal with them if that happens.
Starting point is 01:07:51 The United States monitors its borders. It engages in import and export. It sends us army out to do certain things. It scolds people in UN Security Council meetings. It digests bananas. mounts of finance, right? It exudes smoggy exhalations. So if you take kind of standard materialist theories of consciousness kind of out of the box
Starting point is 01:08:19 and you don't kind of rule around with them post hoc to try to exclude the case, then I think it turns out that probably the United States is going to count as consciousness, as conscious. So there are a couple ways to react to this. You could say, okay, well, so much the worst for materialism. Or you could say, okay, well, look, we need to mess around with these theories to exclude this bizarre possibility. And I think that is maybe a reasonable response. One question here is how we know the United States is not conscious whether you should take that as a fix.
Starting point is 01:09:02 point in our theorizing about consciousness or not? You know, and the third possibility is to say, okay, well, maybe there is group consciousness. I mean, we don't have a conscientometer that we could put up against the head of the United States. Doesn't even really have a head, right, to determine whether it's conscious. So that would be one area where I think if you accept the United States as conscious, then you end up, I take that as pretty bizarre kind of view. If you don't, then you adopt other theoretical commitments, and then we could get into the details of those, but I think those other theoretical commitments often then involve
Starting point is 01:09:45 kind of further choices among various bizarre possibilities, right? Kind of like with the immaterial soul case, right? As soon as you start making those commitments, once you develop them, you see, oh, boy, this is going to have this consequence. This is pretty unintuitive. Well, how certain should we be in that conclusion? Is there a theorem that says that any version of materialist theories of consciousness are going to have this property? Or is it just, well, as far as we know, according to our best current art, that seems to be the case?
Starting point is 01:10:21 In other words, could the appearance of bizarreness go away with better understanding? Yes, it could. And there are two separate reasons, right? One is, kind of as you suggested, right, unlike the, what I call the dualist quadrilema, I don't think we have a kind of rigorous argument that all of the choices have to be bizarre. It's that the choices that I've seen articulated all have bizarre consequences. Yeah, okay. But there might be some unarticulated choice that I haven't run across yet that turns out to be
Starting point is 01:10:55 commonsensical, right? So I think that's possible, but empirically unlikely, given the current state of things and the history of philosophical discussion on this. So it's an empirical conjecture. The other way in which bizarreness could end up vanishing is our intuitions and our
Starting point is 01:11:12 sense of common sense could change, right? So the idea that the earth moved around the sun was bizarre when Copernicus suggested it, but we no longer seem to find that a sharp violation of common sense. Common sense
Starting point is 01:11:28 has changed over time, right? So it could be that someday we'll find it very common-sensical, for example, that the United States is conscious. Oh, yeah, of course. Or maybe panpsychism. Oh, the whole universe is conscious, right? The ordinary person in the street, of course they think that. Common sense can change. It's not a fixed point.
Starting point is 01:11:49 And we should, so it's a little bit different than the previous examples of the skeptical scenarios. Right here, unless I'm misinterpreting, you're not arguing that we should hold. hold out 1% credence for some bizarre possibilities, you're just saying, look, all the possibilities seem to be bizarre. We should, I guess, learn to accept that or fold that in, not use it as a as a knockout argument against something. We can't say, well, I can't accept that. It's bizarre because all the other options are, too. Exactly. So this is why people like pan-psychists and idealists like my stuff on this, right? Because part of the reason, the main, the main
Starting point is 01:12:30 reason I think people reject panpsychism, for example, the idea that everything in the universe, or maybe the universe as a whole, is conscious, is that it just seems so contrary to common sense. But if I'm right, well, something contrary to common sense is probably true, so maybe that's it. Right. So, right. I mean, I do think we have to rely on common sense to some extent. I don't think we can just toss it out the window when we talk about issues like this. We don't have, in my view, really any great tools for answering these questions. And so we have to rely on highly imperfect ones like common sense. But the fact that something violates common sense is not automatically defeated. It does seem very similar to things that even I have said about quantum mechanics. I presume that
Starting point is 01:13:20 we're going to put the many worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics into the bucket of things that you would say are pretty bizarre. Yes. I remember a quote from, I think it was David Merman, who is a very famous, very great physicist, who is an epistemic person when it comes to quantum mechanics. So he thinks the wave function is just a tool for understanding our knowledge and prediction, not reflecting anything real. And he does little surveys of the field, et cetera, and at some point comes to many worlds. And he says, yes, you can follow the Schrodinger equation and its consequences. and you end up with a theory and the price you pay is seriousness. So basically he's just saying like, surely you can't take that seriously, right?
Starting point is 01:14:08 And that's it. That's the entire argument. And that feels like not a good enough argument to me because, like you said, in the context of consciousness, for me, every version of quantum mechanics is going to lead us somewhere strange. Right. In fact, I think the, I like the interpretations of quantum mechanics as an illustration of what I call the universal dubiety and the universal bizariness claim. Because I think maybe especially your listeners will find that plausible, right? Every viable interpretation of quantum mechanics is bizarre.
Starting point is 01:14:46 There's no like common sense way of thinking about quantum mechanics. Right. And, you know, with apologies to. to the many worlds advocates, right? They're all dubious, right? There's at least grounds for doubting all of them. I don't mean, when I say dubious, I don't mean that we have to assign a very low credence to them,
Starting point is 01:15:07 but it's reasonable to be doubtful among them, to not feel like, ah, we're epistemically compelled to accept many worlds over all the other interpretations. So it's a good, interpretation as a quantum mechanics is a good example of a domain in which I think the universal dubiety and universal bizarreness claim is true. And then I want to say the same thing about, say, the theories of consciousness. Right.
Starting point is 01:15:33 And theories of the fundamental structure of the cosmos. And both of those, I think, are, I mean, the interpretation of quantum mechanics and the nature of consciousness are both part of the fundamental structure of the cosmos. So you kind of almost get that for free once you get those two. You know, I generally, when pressed, put my credence in many worlds at between 90% and 95%. Depending on the time of day, I'll give one of those two numbers. And I did that in conversation with Philip Goff, famous panpsychist and previous Mindscape cast. And he was just flabbergasted. He's like, you give a 95% credence to the many worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics?
Starting point is 01:16:14 And I'm like, dude, you're a panpsychist. Do you think electrons have feelings? Don't give me a hard time for giving large credence to following the Schroeder equation. I'm sorry. Right. Totally fair. Totally fair. I mean, I wouldn't give many worlds quite that high in interpretation. I think we should be more epistemically cautious about our favorite interpretation of quantum mechanics. But yeah, there's room for reasonable disagreement.
Starting point is 01:16:40 I mean, I think if you're in the ballpark of 90 to 95%, you're getting on the cusp of denying universal dubiety. But, you know, how, what exactly counts as being dubious is kind of a fuzzy. You do suggest in the book that when you're in this position where every option is bizarre, we should give fairly large credences to the competing possibilities because we kind of don't have a right to be too confident. When about preferring one bizarre alternative to other bizarre alternatives, we shouldn't be too definitive. Yes. I think that's generally true about the kinds of questions that we're asking, because I think we have basically three broad types of epistemic grounds for choosing among these theories, right? One is common sense, which is that we've already talked about is going to be imperfect and things are going to violate it. These theories are going to violate it in one respect or another. another is scientific evidence,
Starting point is 01:17:46 you know, just direct scientific evidence, you know, like measure it, right? And on something like whether electrons have souls or what interpretation of quantum mechanics is correct, we don't, we can't now at least run an experiment that says, ah, yeah, this experiment proves, obviously on the face of it, many worlds interpretation, right?
Starting point is 01:18:07 And then the third tool we have is something like theoretical elegance. and again, that's kind of going to be indecisive because, you know, there's something elegant about panpsychism and there's something elegant about materialism and there's something elegant about many worlds and there's something elegant about other approaches too. So these are not going to be, they're going to be tradeoffs among these very imperfect ways of trying to settle these questions rather than strong solid grounds. Well, I wanted to ask you this specifically in the context of quantum mechanics, because I've put it the following way sometimes. I wanted to see how it fits in with your views. If you take something like hidden variables, versions of quantum mechanics, so those listeners who don't know what I'm talking about,
Starting point is 01:18:57 we did an episode with Tim Maudlin recently where he will explain. And in those theories, you have particles, and they have locations, and that's what you observe when you do a measurement, and then you also have a wave function. And it's the phenomenology is much closer to the world than it is in something like many worlds where you have this abstract wave function and there's many copies of reality, et cetera. I think that there's much less elegant simplicity, austerity to the hidden variables version. As a theory, I think this is indisputable.
Starting point is 01:19:31 I think that whether you agree that it's the best theory or not, you should also agree it's a clunkier theory than many worlds. Many worlds is very simple and austere, but I should also accept that many worlds is much further away from our everyday life and our experience than the hidden variables theory is. So the question is, how do we weigh these different considerations? Like how it's good to have a simple theory. It's also good to have one that tells you pretty directly and immediately what it predicts and how to understand it. I mean, how do we be? good philosophers and scientists when we're faced with that kind of choice. Right, exactly.
Starting point is 01:20:13 And I'd say just leave that hanging as a question. So I am inclined to agree, one of the things, I mean, you're much more expert on this than I am, but one of the things that I like about many worlds is it has a certain kind of simplicity to it. And these other theories all seem to involve a certain amount of fussing around. But, right, how do you weigh that against other aspects that, reasonably draw people to resist many worlds and prefer these other approaches. And I don't think that there is a really good general answer to that kind of question. And that's one of the reasons
Starting point is 01:20:52 to have kind of non-extreme credences in these various theoretical possibilities. Good. Yeah. So, and if you do have non-extreme credences, then you can hope for progress. You can hope to get better. I guess maybe to wind up the conversation, I like giving actionable advice to, you know, the people out there. We've talked a little about how to deal with these crazy things. Maybe to go back to that idea that I'd never heard of before, Nicolosi in discounting, maybe that's the same idea as when your credences get small enough, I'm allowed to stop thinking about it. Is that? Right. That is basically the idea, yeah. That's basically the idea. I think that idea is important, but I mean, maybe part of your message in the book is don't be
Starting point is 01:21:44 quite so quick to dismiss the tiny or more bizarre possibilities. I don't know. Is that, is that right? Yes, that is one of the messages. Absolutely. I think that we have a, people will tend to have a gut reaction against views that strike them as bizarre. whether it's many worlds or panpsychism or the idea that only humans have souls or whatever it is. And I think there's reason to take that kind of reaction seriously, but there's also reason to not just rely on that and to allow that some of these theories that you might think are so bizarre as to be absurd. maybe they're only bizarre and not actually absurd. Well, I guess I'm caught maybe in a little bit of hypocrisy here
Starting point is 01:22:46 because that's exactly what I want to say to David Merman and his friends. Like he will just dismiss many worlds, even though he's a brilliant physicist, he'll just say that's too bizarre. I'm just not going to accept that. And I want to say, no, you have to take it seriously. But then there are other people, panpsychists, maybe are an example, who will say, who I will say, no, that's too bizarre. I don't need it.
Starting point is 01:23:10 And I'm not quite sure what the principal stance is here. Right, yeah. Maybe you should give a little bit of your credence space to panpsychism. But there is, I guess, just a little. You know, but there's, like, maybe here is the issue. There's sort of in principle credence space, and then there's what I will spend my time worrying about credence space, right? Like when the credences become so small, I'm not going to lose sleep.
Starting point is 01:23:35 over it, even if maybe someday evidence will come in that will change my mind. Right. Yeah, that's fair. That's fair. Yeah. Especially as an academic choice, right? So there's also this question of what do you spend your academic time thinking about? What do you invest your energy in? And even if you were to say, give a non-trivial, say, 5% credence to panpsychism, that's not tiny. But that might not be worth enough of your academic time to build theories on. I have spent more time than my credence would warrant
Starting point is 01:24:13 thinking about panpsychism, so I actually take this advice very well. You've given it more than it's 5% due. I think so. I think so. Anyway, Eric Schwitzke, well, this was, if it was all a dream, it was a very fun dream to have. So I appreciate, thanks very much for being on the Mindscape podcast. Yeah, thanks for having me. It's been fun.
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