Are we living in a simulation? Scientists say we all chose at BIRTH to be characters in the world of advanced AI


In the old blockbuster movie ‘The Matrix’, people are taken captive AI because it needs our body heat to use its computers.

Although this sounds straight from the annuls of sci-fi, the professor of physics he says we may be living in a Matrix simulation.

Melvin Vopson, an associate professor of science at the University of Portsmouth, thinks there’s more to it than showing up every day. this world is not what it seems.

Now, you have solved a hypothetical and logical question: If we are living in imagination, what is the purpose?

Speaking exclusively to MailOnline, he outlines three ideas, including that we are all destined at birth to be characters in an advanced AI world.

“All of these events work under the guidance of an AI expert, created by a review of our development,” Professor Vopson told MailOnline.

‘It’s possible that no one is watching anymore and we get caught up in a virtual reality, controlled by AI.’

The so-called ‘simulation theory’ is popular with other figures including Elon Muskwho said that what we live in ‘reality’ – the real universe as opposed to a simulated one – is ‘one of billions’.

An astrophysicist thinks we might just be imagining things - and now he's sharing his pioneering ideas as to why

An astrophysicist thinks we might just be imagining things – and now he’s sharing his pioneering ideas as to why

In the classic blockbuster movie The Matrix, humans are enslaved by AI because they want our body heat to power their computers. Filmed, Keanu Reeves as Neo wakes up in the real world

In the classic blockbuster movie The Matrix, humans are enslaved by AI because they want our body heat to power their computers. Filmed, Keanu Reeves as Neo wakes up in the real world

Professor Vopson – whose research focuses on experimental and theoretical studies of applied and fundamental science – emphasizes that these three phenomena are hypothetical and not supported by scientific research.

But some of his research at the University of Portsmouth has shown that the entire universe is a virtual creation or supercomputer.

The first thought is that we chose to enter the simulation at birth as a form of entertainment – to keep our minds happy and busy.

The real world we’ve chosen to leave is not very interesting, the theory goes, so people have created a very interesting, even artificial, simulation of life – the ultimate VR game.

And with so many celebrity gossips, sports events, political scandals and more, the current music scene is boring.

“We created a metaphor as a happy place that we can choose to enter (at birth) and experience a new life with all its components,” Professor Vopson told MailOnline.

As for how we had the power at birth to make the decision to enter the image, it is possible for our consciousness to have made the decision before our new self was born.

The second point is that simulations can help people ‘learn something’ that can provide a solution to a real problem.

Are we living in a virtual reality? Professor Melvin Vopson at the University of Portsmouth thinks it's possible (file photo)

Are we living in a virtual reality? Professor Melvin Vopson at the University of Portsmouth thinks it’s possible (file photo)

What is comparative theory?

Simulation theory suggests that what people perceive as reality is a computer simulation.

People are being fed unknowingly to do things for their own benefit or because of abusive methods.

In 2003, Oxford University academic Nick Bostrum began to explain the concept that ‘we are living in a computer simulation’.

The concept of simulation is explored in sci-fi films including ‘The Matrix’ (1999) and others, as well as ‘The Thirteenth Floor’ (1999) and ‘Dark City’ (1998).

According to the so-called guinea pig theory, we can all be involuntarily in our own minds for the greater good – the long-term benefit of society.

‘Imagine that our society has a difficult problem to deal with – environmental, economic, energy problems, war,’ Professor Vopson told MailOnline.

‘If we had the ability, the best way to solve this problem would be to run a simulation (or several similar simulations) and see what solutions our simulation model comes up with.

‘If any simulations are confusing the problem, then we can take them to the truth as a solution.’

Finally, the theory of ‘near-immortality’ or ‘Narnia’ suggests that time in the real world moves very quickly compared to virtual time.

For example, one minute in the real world can be 100 years in comparison, while one life in the real world can be equal to 4.2 billion years, or more than 52 million lives in comparison, based on the average lifespan. 80 years old.

By choosing to live in that image, we can live many lives over and over again, especially achieving immortality.

‘A hundred lifetime experiences can only be 100 minutes in real life,’ said Professor Vopson.

Melvin Vopson, an associate professor of physics at the University of Portsmouth, has previously suggested that we are living in a similar situation.

Melvin Vopson, an associate professor of physics at the University of Portsmouth, has previously suggested that we are living in a similar situation.

At a 2016 conference, Elon Musk said that the odds of us living in 'virtual reality' - the real world as opposed to a simulated one - are 'one in a billion' (file photo)

At a 2016 conference, Elon Musk said that the odds of us living in ‘virtual reality’ – the real world as opposed to a simulated one – are ‘one in a billion’ (file photo)

‘This is how time dilation works when we dream.

‘In a dream, the events we experience may seem to be minutes, hours or days, but in reality the dream is actually a fraction of a second.’

Professor Vopson has already explained signs that show that we are living in the real world.

The fact that there are limits to how light and sound can travel suggests that they can be controlled by the speed of a computer’s processor, for example.

And the laws of physics are similar to the laws of computers, he says.

He also said that the proof that what people say is correct is written in the Bible.

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