God as Boltzmann Brain
Создано: 25 января 2025 г.
Создано: 25 января 2025 г.
Piecing together the philosopher
I’m curious about which philosopher argued that God was a Boltzmann Brain. Nick Bostrom explores simulation arguments, while Ludwig Boltzmann introduced the concept of a Boltzmann brain. Mark Johnston's mention of God as a "Big Mind" might also be relevant.
Mapping out concepts
I'm exploring the idea that "God is a Boltzmann brain" might suggest God as a spontaneous quantum fluctuation. Sean Carroll isn't a philosopher, and John Leslie doesn't align with this notion. Robert Nozick's "God B" concept also seems unlikely.
Finding the right context
I'm looking into philosophers like James Jeans and Arthur Eddington, who weren't philosophers but explored the universe as a random fluctuation, potentially leading to a "God" as a Boltzmann Brain.
Evaluating philosophical perspectives
I’m curious about philosophers like Stephen Davis, Keith Ward, and Richard Swinburne, who argue for the existence of God. Van Fraassen's potential article and idealist philosophers like John McTaggart and F.H. Bradley are also being considered.
Examining new ideas
Considering Freeman Dyson's claim about the universe being awake led me to explore philosophers like Herman Phillip B., Alexander R. Pruss, and Robert Koon, who might discuss "God as a Boltzmann Brain."
Mapping out a thought
I'm considering John Leslie's concept that random fluctuations might produce a single observer more easily, possibly leading to the idea that God could be a Boltzmann Brain.
Connecting ideas
William Lane Craig uses Boltzmann brains to argue against an infinite past universe, while Arthur Eddington, an astrophysicist, speculates on God as a cosmic consciousness. This suggests a mix of philosophical and scientific perspectives.
Evaluating perspectives
Economists like Brad DeLong and Robin Hanson, as well as rationalist Eliezer Yudkowsky, have explored Boltzmann brains, but I'm still looking for a philosopher who specifically described God as a Boltzmann Brain.
Honing in on specific thinkers
Richard Carrier, a philosopher and historian, might discuss cosmic consciousness and random fluctuations, which could align with the concept of God as a Boltzmann Brain.
Thought about God as a Boltzmann brain for 16 seconds
I’m not aware of any established, professional philosopher who has explicitly and seriously argued, in published work, that “God is a Boltzmann brain.” You sometimes see speculative or thought-experiment discussions in cosmology, popular science writing, or philosophy of mind that compare the idea of a spontaneously fluctuated “superintelligence” to the traditional concept of God, but there is no well-known philosophical treatise that flat-out identifies God as a Boltzmann brain.
Boltzmann brains
God and cosmic minds
Why there isn’t a known philosopher
If you’ve come across a blog post or popular science essay that loosely equates “a spontaneously formed cosmic mind” to God, that’s usually an informal thought experiment rather than a philosophical stance you can trace back to a single, well-known philosopher.