• Poggervania
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    11 months ago

    God is omnipotent, which means they don’t make mistakes.

    Actually, no - the dictionary definition of omnipotent is literally being able to do anything. God being faultless is a different thing entirely and depending on how you interpret scripture, that is a false statement. He regrets making humans, so you could argue he sees humans as his own mistake - which is an entirely different kind of fucked-up for another day’s topic.

    So whomever is running the simulation would be omnipotent, because they are literally making whatever happens in our universe happen by running a simulation of a universe.

    EDIT: meant “everything” instead of “anything” but fuck it

    • Remmock
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      111 months ago

      “able to do anything”

      I’m all set up right there, thanks.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 months ago

      I mean, the creator of a simulated universe isn’t omnipotent though, for two reasons: first, there are plenty of things that they cannot do in their own universe, being just some regular person there, but more importantly, there must be limits on what they can do in the simulation, because that simulation has to exist on a computer which presumably has finite hardware limitations. “Framerate” or equivalent won’t matter as much because time doesn’t have to pass at the same rate, but the computer still is only going to have so much storage and memory space, or whatever equivalent the technology involved uses, and so nothing that would exceed those limitations can be done in the sim.

    • Clarke
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      011 months ago

      It’ll be a new day in 30 minutes. Can you continue this thread?

    • Zoolander
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      011 months ago

      Actually, yes. If they’re able to do anything then they’re also able to correct their mistakes. That’s not something that can be assumed about the creator of a simulation. Just look at the current state of our simulations.