Section 4
Section 4: World Model
In Section 3: The process to make a new world, we introduce how to make the new world briefly. However, it will take lots of effort to work on it. For example, we need world model as a blueprint.
To show how to build a world model, I show an example here.
Let’s start with a person who lives in a small house.
In brief, this person in a house is already a model model. What we need is to extend it and make it more stable.
To reach this goal, we can ask questions. For example, how does it look like outside the house? We can add an endless meadow to answer this question.
Then we go on asking how does it look like in the sky? We can add the sun, the moon and stars there.
Keep on asking this kind of questions we can end up with a good world model.
I could make a new world based on this world model and put people inside it. At that time, a person who can trust me unconditionally will help stabilize the world a lot.
That’s because when there is a question beyond the world model, he/she will trust me and they will believe this problem is solved already. As the world is conscious-based, their belief will help complete the world model.
This is the story version of world model.
The world model can be also in other versions. For example, the equation version.
That is to say, we can collect all the fundamental equations and define the world from the set of equations. However, the way is not preferred as it is not efficient to make a flexible world and it is difficult for most of people.
Also, from my perspect of view, how to define the world model in a more efficiently way is another big question. I show it in the following example
Now we need a thousand bricks to build a house.
We firstly give two basic definitions:
- Define atom A as the smallest particle in the new world.
- Put A in periodic structure by force and define the size.
Robot can define a 1 cm3 cubic crystal as a brick. To build a house with a thousand bricks, we can definitely let Robot repeat the process a thousand times. Instead, to be more effectively, Robot can define a big piece of brick at a time and deliver it to Robot 1 which helps cut it into smaller pieces.
Please note that the above two processes are not limited by two simple definitions, which means each of them can also consist of a series of definitions based on the reality. Further tests will be carried in the new worlds for these processes.