Magic may well have been real. Healing crystals, shamanry, witchcraft, voodoo, things of this nature may have been real at one point and have since been patched out. These could have simply been glitches in the program.

We’ve all heard of glitches in games that can be exploited that eventually get patched. Could have been real.

  • CarbonatedPastaSauce@lemmy.world
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    26 days ago

    Nothing matters and we’re all going to die. Nobody will remember or care about anything we did. Everything that will ever exist will eventually die a cold death due to entropy. So just have fun and be nice to each other until it’s over.

    This applies whether it’s a simulation or not. The end result is the same.

  • MehBlah@lemmy.world
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    22 days ago

    There was this old cold fusion joke that went something like that. Where a programmer notices someone getting free energy. They proceed to fix the bug, recompile and reboot. Fixing the problem.

    Days late but I’ve found it

    “Yo, Mike!” “Yeah, Gabe?” “We got a problem down on Earth. In Utah.” “I thought you fixed that last century!” “No, no, not that. Someone’s found a security problem in the physics program. They’re getting energy out of nowhere.” “Blessit! Lemme look… <tappity clickity tappity> Hey, it’s there all right! OK, just a sec… <tappity clickity tap… save… compile> There, that ought to patch it. Dist it out, wouldja?” – Cold Fusion, 1989

  • PapaBurrito@lemmy.world
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    26 days ago

    That is actually the entire premise behind the book series Magic 2.0 by Scott Meyer.

    People find the data file for our simulation and modify it to do “magic”.

  • Arkouda@lemmy.ca
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    26 days ago

    I prefer to assume that we are simply the hallucinations of a brain floating through space. Which is more probable than everyone living in a simulation and a lot funnier to think about.

  • Opinionhaver@feddit.uk
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    26 days ago

    People tend to misintrepret what the simulation hypothesis actually suggests. The idea isn’t that these simulated worlds would somehow be fictional or like video games. The point is that we take the known physics of the universe and run computer simulations of it. Things like magic would be just as impossible in these simulations as they are in the base reality. There’s no reason to expect that things would be any different even if we in-fact did live in a simulated world.

  • Mowcherie@lemmy.world
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    26 days ago

    The placebo effect can be incredibly powerful, and remains so to this day. So in that sense, some of the ‘magic’ was not patched out.

  • vane@lemmy.world
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    26 days ago

    Remember that elevators and bathrooms are service desks. They close you up alone in small space to patch your software.
    Everything is real as long as you believe in it.