Spoiled Discussion of Permutation City, A Fire Upon The Deep, and Eliezer's Mega Crossover
Permutation City is an awesome novel that was written in 1994. Even if the author, Greg Egan, used a caricature of this community as a bad guy in a more recent novel, his work is still a major influence on a lot of people around these parts who have read it. It dissolves so many questions around uploading and simulation that it's hard for someone who has read the book to talk about simulationist metaphysics without wanting to reference the novel... but doing that runs into constraints imposed by spoiler etiquette.
So go read Permutation City if you haven't read it already because it's philosophically important and a reasonably fun read.
In the meantime, if you haven't then you should also read A Fire Upon The Deep by Vernor Vinge (of "singularity" coining fame) and then read Eliezer's fan fic The Finale of the Ultimate Meta Mega Crossover which references both of them in interesting ways to make substantive philosophical points and doesn't take too long to read.
In the comments below there will be discussion that has spoilers for all three works.
If by simulationism we mean the belief that the simulation of an entity causes an instance of the entity to exist, then that is dualism. We can all agree that simulations can be carried out in media which, physically, are wildly different. Simulationism then tells us that the real entity, the one being simulated, comes to identically inhabit all those physically different simulators. And then, in Egan's novel, we have only a partial simulation: the model of Permutation City is run for just a few ticks of the clock and then turned off, but it is assumed that it will continue to exist - platonically? - because of its internal logic.
I see people trying to resolve the illogicality of this - the whole Permutation-City universe gets to exist, even though only a few moments of it get simulated - by appealing to the sort of existence that mathematical entities have. The idea is that the being of mathematical entities doesn't depend on particular instances of people talking about them or computers calculating them, they just exist independently of all that; and the same thing goes for possible worlds. But in that case, you should abandon simulationism - where, to repeat, simulationism is being defined as the belief that the act of simulation causes the simulated entity to exist locally. In this second approach to the problem inspired by mathematical platonism, the possible worlds don't owe their actuality to the fact that they get simulated somewhere, they all exist platonically and independently. So why go on thinking that the simulation of Permutation City involves Permutation City actually existing, however briefly, in the universe where the simulation is occurring?
But all that is just one symptom of the same overall situation of self-concealed ignorance, which leads so many scientifically educated people to not see the problems of "consciousness", and to not understand where this whole "qualia debate" comes from. I may literally have said it a hundred times by now: The standard contemporary scientific way of looking at consciousness is dualistic. It's not a dualism of substance, where you have ordinary matter, and then a soul as well; it's dualism of properties. You have the physical properties, the properties that are actually present in our physical theories, and then you have everything that actually makes up experience - the flow of time, the sense of self, the basic perceived qualities of the world like color. And to see the world in terms of the science that we have right now is to just combine in your imagination the stream of experiences that you actually have, with an imagined play of atoms in space, or fluctuating quantum fields, or whatever avantgarde scientific metaphysics captures your fancy.
A switch to "mathematical" or computational platonism also does absolutely nothing to reinstate the excluded qualities of the experienced world into the official scientific ontology. If, having mulled it over, you were to decide that reality is really a set of equivalence classes of universal Turing machines, when it comes to interpreting your actual experience, you will again have to become a dualist. Only now, instead of imagining that your sensations and thoughts correspond with the flow of ions through membranes - that is, pairing in your imagination your sensations and thoughts as directly but subjectively perceived, with imagined microscopic biophysical processes - you will be imagining that they correspond to abstract state transitions in an abstract state machine. Either way, the disjunction between what is imagined to be the fundamental character of reality and what is experienced to be the character of reality, at least locally, by you - either way the disjunction remains and remains unaddressed.
Simulationist philosophy is the same exercise applied to computers, though from the other direction. Instead of starting with conscious experience and trying to identify it with a physical process, one starts with physical processes and tries to identify them or associate them with the existence of simulated entities or a simulated world.
I sometimes feel like I'm being cruel in pointing all this out, because the right answers are not known, and they are not going to be figured out by people just thinking casually about the problem. I can't tell you the big truth about reality, but I can tell you the little truth about your situation, which is that all the available maps are wrong. Quantum mechanics is the same story; I don't know the explanation of QM, but I can say that MWI is false because relativity is true, and MWI requires objective simultaneity. The ontological truth behind quantum mechanics will only be figured out by people who have extensive technical acquaintance with the subject, and most likely it will require extensive immersion in the most advanced physical theories, because that's how physics is: everything interlocks, and the deep answers are found at the highest levels. I would say the same thing about consciousness, and incidentally about the relationships between computation, consciousness, matter, and reality. The right answer is not yet known, not at all, and it will be found only by sustained and dedicated attention to fact, including "subjective facts" about the world as it is actually experienced, and not just the world as it is imagined by people who have mathematical and formalistic skills.
Interesting. Easily enough ideas here for a top-level post (certainly for the discussion area.)
Not really. I suspect that what you're referring to as "MWI" contains the idea that, in addition to a wavefunction evolving unitarily under the Schrödinger equation, there are also ontologically primitive "branches" (or "worlds") which "split". I think this is obviously wrong. (However, note that the SEP article only says that it's "unclear" how to formulate it in such a way as to be compatible with SR). "Branches" are just patterns that emerge when you zoom out to the macro-scale, in much the same way as fluids with thermodynamic attributes such as temperature and entropy only make sense at the macro-scale. In fact, there's a close connection here - the fact that branches "split" but do not "merge" and the second law of thermodynamics are two manifestations of a single underlying principle.
I would interpret the statement "Permutation City actually exists in universe U, which is simulating it" along the following lines: "There is a system in U whose components are causally related to one another in such a way as to be isomorphic to the primitive constituents of Permutation City and their causal relations." (Yeah yeah, at some point I might be called on to explain what I mean by "causal relations" and "primitive constituents", and these are thorny questions, but let's save them for another day.)
So for me "Permutation City actually exists in universe U, which is simulating it" means no more and no less than "Universe U is simulating Permutation City." Or perhaps clearer: once it's established that U is simulating V, there's nothing more to be said about whether V exists in U.
Of course, you won't be happy with this - you want to say (a) that there's either something it's like or nothing it's like to be a simulated human and (b) that actually there's nothing it's like - simulated people are "zombies".
I may as well give the Standard Reply from my camp, though you've heard it all before: "If 'something it's like' is interpreted in the informal everyday sense where 'access consciousness' and 'phenomenal consciousness' are not conceived of as separate, then yes absolutely there's something it's like. Moreover, to the extent that the question carries ethical 'weight', again the answer must be yes. But when you try to do fractional distillation, separating out the pure P-consciousness, and ask whether simulated people are P-conscious, then the question loses all of its meaning."