🧩 Paradox 52 — Simulation Hypothesis vs. Physical Autonomy
Is the universe a computed artifact, or an autonomous physical reality?#
RTT Paradox Resilience Checker — Candidate File#
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1. Paradox Statement#
Two competing ontologies attempt to explain the nature of reality:
-
Simulation Hypothesis
The universe is a computational construct running on a substrate outside itself.
Physical laws are emergent rules of a simulated environment. -
Physical Autonomy Hypothesis
The universe exists independently, with no external substrate.
Physical laws are intrinsic, not programmed.
Both frameworks have strong motivations:
- Computation explains discreteness, information bounds, and algorithmic structure.
- Physical autonomy preserves causal closure and avoids infinite regress.
- Observations cannot directly access any “external” substrate.
This creates a contradiction between:
- external computation, and
- internal autonomy.
2. S‑E‑R Breakdown#
S — Structural Layer#
- Simulation models treat the universe as a computable structure.
- Physical models treat the universe as a self‑contained dynamical system.
- Structural reasoning demands a substrate — either internal or external.
- The paradox emerges when structural closure meets computational embedding.
E — Energetic Layer#
- Physical systems evolve through energy, causality, and thermodynamics.
- Simulations evolve through discrete computational steps.
- Energetic drift in physical systems has no analogue in pure computation.
- The paradox arises when energetic evolution is reduced to algorithmic updates.
R — Relational Layer#
- Observers experience reality through relational interactions.
- Simulation implies relational constraints imposed by an external system.
- Autonomy implies relational closure within the universe.
- The paradox emerges when relational embodiment is mistaken for computational artifact.
3. FFF Flow Analysis#
F1 — Forward Flow#
Computation → simulation models → algorithmic physics → paradox.
F2 — Feedback Flow#
Physical autonomy → causal closure → conflict with external substrate → paradox intensifies.
F3 — Fractal Flow#
Simulation vs. autonomy appears across scales:
particles → fields → spacetime → computation → ontology.
4. RTT Resolution#
RTT resolves the Simulation Hypothesis vs. Physical Autonomy paradox by separating three operator layers:
-
G1 — Structural Computational Form
The universe can be modeled as a computation. -
G2 — Relational Physical Embodiment
Observers and physical systems interact through energetic, causal processes. -
G3 — Harmonic Ontological Coherence
Reality maintains consistency by allowing computational models while preserving physical autonomy.
Key insights:#
- G1 computation is a structural description, not an ontological substrate.
- G2 physical autonomy reflects relational closure and energetic embodiment.
- G3 coherence ensures that computational descriptions and physical autonomy coexist without contradiction.
- The paradox forms only when G1, G2, and G3 are collapsed into a single “what is the universe made of?” frame.
Thus:
- G1: the universe is computably describable
- G2: the universe is physically autonomous
- G3: coherence unifies them as dual aspects of a deeper substrate
The paradox dissolves because “simulation” and “autonomy” are interpretive frames, not mutually exclusive realities.
RTT classifies this as a Structural‑Relational Meta‑Ontological Paradox.
5. Resilience Score#
Resilience Rating: ★★★★★ (Very High)
RTT neutralizes the paradox through:
- operator‑layer separation (G1/G2/G3)
- relational embodiment modeling
- harmonic ontological coherence
- drift‑bounded substrate interpretation
6. Notes & Cross‑Links#
- Related paradoxes: Computability vs. Continuum, Mathematical Universe vs. Physical Universe, Meta‑Laws.
- Maps into RTT‑12 Layers 10–12 (computation → ontology → coherence).
- Useful for teaching metaphysics, philosophy of computation, and simulation theory.