
Tom Bilyeu interviews cognitive scientist Donald Hoffman in part two of a mind-bending discussion about the nature of reality. Hoffman elaborates on his theory that consciousness is fundamental and that space-time is a simulation, exploring the implications of this view on physicality, free will, and the nature of qualia. They delve into the mathematics behind his theories, discussing the halting problem, Markovian dynamics, and the potential for a scale-free notion of free will. Hoffman explains how his models point towards a single, indescribable consciousness and how the properties of conscious agents might map to the properties of particles. The conversation touches on near-death experiences and psychedelics as potential insights into consciousness beyond the space-time interface, and they discuss the possibility of exploring different dimensions of experience upon leaving the simulation.
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