Living Earth Simulator Aims To Simulate Everything 241
H3xx writes "An international group of scientists is aiming to create a simulator — nicknamed The Living Earth Simulator — that will collect data from billions of sources and use it to replicate everything happening on Earth, from global weather patterns and the spread of diseases to international financial transactions or congestion on highways. The project aims to advance the scientific understanding of what is taking place on the planet, encapsulating the human actions that shape societies and the environmental forces that define the physical world. Perhaps this is Asimov's concept of Psychohistory come to fruition."
Everything? (Score:2, Interesting)
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Somehow I doubt that all the computing machines in the word combined have the necessary processing power to computationally simulate *everything* that happens on the planet, even when if we try to limit the variables. So I'll just go ahead and assume the science team will compromise on a flawed model which produces equally flawed results.
The interesting bit comes when the simulation reaches the point that the computer simulation started. The computers then have to simulate themselves running the simulation.
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And this isn't just an academic point. If their predictions are of any value, they will be incorporated into major decisions made, and thus will be critical for the simulator to predict.
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But if the system converges to a fixpoint, the infinite recursion can be avoided, right?
Not that it seems likely to actually convege to a fixpoint. I'm just thinking aloud.
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Five
Four
Three
Two
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Fortunately, the solution is (relatively) simple: when using simulations in decision making, they run what-if -scenarios. The Earth Simulator can simply save the current state in a checkpoint, then run these what-if -scenarios.
The real problem is predicting the likely parameters used in these simulations. That, and all othe
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Fortunately, the solution is (relatively) simple: when using simulations in decision making, they run what-if -scenarios. The Earth Simulator can simply save the current state in a checkpoint, then run these what-if -scenarios.
Good luck with that. So far attempts to model the effect of computerised trading on the stock market (much simpler than everything) have failed miserably. Also you have the chaos problem, where small changes can cause divergent and difficult to predict behaviour. What would have happened if we had a clear unambiguous warning of the sub-prime crisis a year before it happened? Would it have happened much earlier, been avoided, or just mitigated to an extent? What if the model included a prediction of what eff
A simplified version of everything... (Score:3)
Somehow I doubt that all the computing machines in the word combined have the necessary processing power to computationally simulate *everything* that happens on the planet, even when if we try to limit the variables. So I'll just go ahead and assume the science team will compromise on a flawed model which produces equally flawed results.
Every model is flawed according to that definition.
They'll try to simplify the earth, and model it... and hopefully it can predict future events with a certain degree of certainty.
I agree that the word "everything" is too strong... but it's just sad and silly that the entire Slashdot forum attacks these guys because they said this.
There is some value in this exercise. Just like you can model an ant colony, you can probably model the world. We're all awfully predictable anyway.
Re:Everything? (Score:5, Insightful)
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At least
- it'll be a lot of fun to just stare and browse this thing, zooming to your own areas. This can make a lot of money on advertisiments!
- Some portions of this can be used to improve forecasts, weather forecasts.
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You know what? Simulating stuff is just another way of saying that we're running a mathematical model. Such models are typically mixes of discrete and continuous equations. The latter require discretization and solving with some sort of a differential equation solver. So while their proposal may use vague terms, in the end you "just" end solving lots and lots of differential equations. To see what is the state of the art here, just go to, say, the tool page of the Modelica Association [modelica.org]. Modelica is a languag
some kind of constant (Score:2)
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Personally, I’d be thrilled if they could just accurately predict next week’s weather.
Name it Second Life (Score:3)
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A: There is NOW!
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You are not of the body!
Not yet (Score:2)
Not even close. Possibly a matrix, but, there is no spoon.
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Dwight: It's called 'Second Life', it's a game without losers.
Jim: Oh, there's losers.
Too late (Score:2)
what about good enough socio-economic model? (Score:2)
I am not sure if having everything in a single model is a good approach. Certainly seems too computationally expensive.
I would much prefer if people start looking into socio-economic modeling. We now have pretty good climatic models, and this started in the 50s, when there computers had almost no power. Now we have such power, and we could feasibly simulate social (i and economic behavior of whole country on a home PC.
We could start like this: Each person in simulation would have possible actions (these wo
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It's just another model at another scale.
Sometimes you need alrge scale models, and sometimes you need small scale models.
This would be nothing more than a very large scale model, just not in a spatial sense, as the sub-models in use there are already on a globale scale.
Yes, it's computationally expensive, but if you have the hardware to throw at it - just do it.
Fools. (Score:2)
I hope... (Score:2, Funny)
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The psychiatrists are not going to be happy.
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Re: Psychiatrists Happy (Score:2)
Citation:
Feeling Good - David D. Burns, M.D.
Name it Matrix (Score:2)
is it written in BASIC? (Score:2)
Yes but is the simulator written in BASIC?
Chaos (Score:2)
Weather is a chaotic system, and weather affects living things in very significant ways. I'm sure there are plenty of other chaotic non-linearities in what they're trying to simulate as well.
Doesn't such instability doom any world simulator to crappy fidelity?
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Weather simulations are very useful. Doesn't that doom this effort to producing a very useful result?
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Not necessarily. My basic concern is that weather is chaotic, and probably something dependent upon the weather has its own intrinisic chaotic properties even if the speicied weather were accurately forecast. So I'm thinking that the overall simulated system would have a composite degree of chaos much greater than that of just the global weather system.
En Attendant Laplace! (Score:3, Interesting)
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"I have personal (philosophical) reservations about this concept, for it negates the concept of "free will".
In other words, because I don't want it to be like that, it can't be like that.
Personally, I've always thought that the idea of "free will" is in the ropes. Even if there is no such thing as predictability, how can we actually change the physical processes that happen in our brain, if we ourselves are a product of them?
That does not actually mean that we should change because of that, since maybe the
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Apologies to both Arthur and Douglass (Score:3)
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A certain section of scientists seem to lack the necessary insight into what they're actually doing when they develop a model on a computer. It's a conceptual representation, not a realistic simulation and it can only model those concepts that are well understood.
If economic models fai
The many uses of simulation... (Score:2)
I agree with you in general about the limits of simulations and even intelligence itself.
Still, simulations can be used to:
* predict (you are right, they often fail for reasons of chaos theory and limited accuracy or missing aspects);
* understand (where you play what ifs to see the consequences of your assumptions);
* to gain insight (something other than understanding of details, where you gain a sense of the gestalt, a feeling, or some new summarizing key idea, like I say with my sig about the irony of the
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In my view this story is a good example of the arrogance and stupidity embedded in our scientific establishment. Moreover, I have no doubt that the control climate models have given activist scientists over the pol
And that's why we are living in a simulation now? (Score:2)
http://www.simulation-argument.com/ [simulation-argument.com]
Redundant (Score:2)
So, is this the Coen brothers remake? (Score:4, Funny)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synecdoche,_New_York [wikipedia.org]
International? European! (Score:3)
The simulation is a European project, part of the FuturICT-programme, a part of the European Union research framework programme [europa.eu].
It intends to unify hundreds of the best scientists in Europe in a 10 year 1 billion EUR program to explore social life on earth and everything it relates to. The FuturICT flagship will produce historic breakthroughs and provide powerful new ways to manage challenges that make the modern world so difficult to predict, including the financial crisis.
The FuturICT Knowledge Accelerator is a previously unseen multidisciplinary international scientific endeavour with focus on techno-socio-economic-environmental systems. The three main achievements of the FuturICT flagship will be the establishment of
- a Living Earth Simulator (global-scale simulation of techno-socio-economic systems),
- Crisis Observatories (for financial instabilities, scarcity of resources, emerging risks and conflicts, epidemics, etc.), and
- an Innovation Accelerator (identifying innovations early on, evaluating them across disciplines and supporting co-creation projects between different scientific disciplines, business, and governance).
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The FuturICT flagship will produce historic breakthroughs and provide powerful new ways to manage challenges that make the modern world so difficult to predict, including the financial crisis.
The only thing difficult about the financial crisis was predicting when it would occur. That it would occur was obvious from the levels of risk that the financial and real estate institutions were taking on.
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"The only thing difficult about the financial crisis was predicting when it would occur. That it would occur was obvious from the levels of risk that the financial and real estate institutions were taking on."
The main problem with the financial crisis is getting things to change while so many people have short term, highly personal reasons to let it exists. This is such a big problem that most people seem to address this issue by putting their hands on their ears and shout "LALALALALA" on top of their voice
Aren't they overreaching? (Score:2)
Are our super computers even capable of doing the calculations for, well, everything on earth?
I'm going to say, no.
You'd have to do too many shortcuts to get accurate results, let alone we don't know how most the crap works in this world anyways. Sure, we know some, and learn more, but enough to simulate it?
I'm going to put this up there with Duke Nuke'm coming out before 2010 is over.
Call it "Life On Line" or LOL for short (Score:2)
Starting from such farcical first assumptions, its hard to believe this stupid idea is going to get funding, much less even conceivably work.
Look: every "sim" rationalizes inputs, creates a facade of activity that looks like real life, so as to produce reasonably realistic outputs. The point of modeling is to EXCLUDE as many variables as you can, to make what you're studying as simple as possible, to try to draw it down to its essentials.
To build a true sim, you have to start at the "lowest protocols" that
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Clearly then we should just stop the similarly farcical expenditures on weather modelling.
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Reading comprehension -1.
Clearly modelling is a useful technique.
Weather modelling - which clearly needs significant work - is a laudable goal.
Tectonic modelling, a laudable goal.
Economic, social, etc. modelling, all worthy efforts to analyse very difficult systems.
To claim it's imperative that we immediately start to build systems that will draw conclusions from yet-to-be-invented systems built on top of these models that are decades from completion themselves? Histrionic grant-fishing.
So does Civ V (Score:2)
So does Civ V. So does my globe. Anything can be used to simulate anything else poorly. Nothing can be used to simulate everything else exactly. The quality of the output will be determined by the areas they focus, the choices made when they write the algorithms and the data they get to put into the system. 'We're simulating the whole world and how it interacts' provides little information about the quality or usefulness of the simulation.
Not Psychohistory (Score:2)
Not even close.
Psychohistory had nothing to do with simulating things on a computer. It was a mathematical construct to predict human behavior in groups, in the same way that you can predict what a large enough group of atoms will do even if you can't know what any one atom will be doing at any given time.
This is more like a Matrix 0.001 alpha. I imagine their Neo being a little piece of CoreWars code.
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Then Lorenz and Mandelbrot appeared on the scene, and the whole premise of psychohistory went out the window.
I want a simcity like game with a custom road syst (Score:2)
I want a simcity like game with a custom road system Simcity 4 + plugs ins is nice but old and buggy.
Citys xl lacked the custom road systems and the highway interchanges are to big and just have roundabouts.
Conversation we hope they never have (Score:2)
Cough 'cough "matrix" 'cough (Score:2)
In related news (Score:2)
In a related news story, a group of scientists have formed a company named Magrathea with long term plans of building a massive planet which will be capable of fostering the design and manufacture of custom luxury planets.
Uncertainty Reigns (Score:4, Insightful)
The big problem with this is that most of the world's and humanity's interesting systems are chaotic. You may get lucky and find an attractor or two.
In any case, simulation can show you plausible futures, but they'll have no predictive value. The outputs will be little more than cybernetic speculative fiction.
On the other hand, there's no explaining chaos to a politician, or to a scientist who believes that more data and higher resolution are all that's needed to clear up the confusion; the grant money will keep flowing.
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Chaotic systems are much more usefully simulated than non-chaotic systems. Non-chaotic systems can be usefully described with pen and paper, while chaotic ones require substantial computation in order to usefully simulate. A good example is weather modelling. Another is biological modelling. Another is lattice QCD. Another is fluid dynamics. All of these models of chaotic systems produce highly useful results which cannot be obtained without substantial numerical computation. It seems your argument ach
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Seeing as how ... (Score:2)
... we are nothing more than a simulation created by some super alien CS student as a senior project this should be interesting. It also has implications as to whether our universe will die slowly due to entropy buildup (a memory leak in the simulation) or in some cataclysmic, world ending event (when the simulation is ported to VB.Net and crashes).
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Yes, you get recursion, until a stack overflow occurs.
mmmm... just a thought (Score:2)
How Useful Is It? (Score:2)
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wait.
What?
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Now this is art...very tasty. May I have some more pudding sir?
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Philip K. Dick sent a message through a spirit medium. He wants his novel plots back.
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simulating everything?
Yes. You only think you posted that. You are really part of the simulation.
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simulating everything?
Will simulate even the discovery of "the theory of everything"... have to tell you, that would be about time... I'm already sick of the super-string theories.
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Will simulate even the discovery of "the theory of everything"... have to tell you, that would be about time... I'm already sick of the super-string theories.
String theorist tells wife he can explain everything.
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That is exactly why in Asimov series there is the second foundation.
Re:Will they simulate themself (Score:5, Interesting)
simulating everything?
That thought crossed my mind too and reminded me of this town containing a scale model of itself. [digital-brilliance.com]
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IIRC wasn't the name of the computer WOPR?
How about The General [wikipedia.org]? Just ask it, "Why?"
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If you see the Dolphins leaving Earth, try to keep up.
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Recession is too profitable to be ever allowed to end. You can keep on asking and receiving public financial support, then turn around and loan the public's money back to them at interest, setting them up for a lifetime of debt slavery.
Capitalism for the poor, socialism for the rich. Isn't global economy fun ?-)
Think of it as a global version of The Sims (Score:2)
Does this make me a bad person? =P
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Re:Simulation or recording? (Score:5, Interesting)
And isn't the point of modelling to look at a small part of the whole, to abstract the bits you're interested in?
No. The point of a model is to create a simplified version of something that is to compilcated to understand.
Modelling and concentrating on only a small part is a valid approach to that, but using simplifications (even the ones known as inaccurrate) is another one. (i.e. Atoms as pool balls, earth as an exact sphere, even internet as tubes.) You only need to know which simplifications you made, so you know on which scale your results out of that model are valid.
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I suppose I worded it badly, but in essence, what is the meaning of "a simplified version" of "everything"? There isn't a specific aspect of "everything" that seems natural to simplify, given the scope of the project. "Atoms as pool balls" makes sense for certain contexts. There doesn't seem to be a context for this simulator.
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I may have interpreted to much into the summary, but i was expecting the context of this "model" to be to find out about the relations between other, seemingly unrelated (sub)systems.
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Exactly, how do diseases and weather patterns influence traffic and economic patterns? It's hard to say for sure, but these guys want to answer that question.
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And isn't the point of modelling to look at a small part of the whole, to abstract the bits you're interested in?
No. The point of a model is to create a simplified version of something that is to compilcated to understand.
And that's abstraction, folks. There's no disagreement here.
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Suppose you start the simulator, and it veers off. You'll want some kind of corrector mechanism, no? So you get some feedback from the real world. The trouble is, if you don't have a plausible model of how "eveything" works, you end up having to correct an awful lot.
Welcome to the world of computers. It is quite feasible to take a gusher of data and automate the building of models fitted to that data. If as a result, you find a model that takes little memory and explains some aspect of the data flood relatively well, then you may have discovered a useful model.
These models can be useful even if they appear to breakdown. For example, if the model doesn't fit at a later point, then it either wasn't appropriate in the first place, or the real world transitioned into an
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Is that even a WORD?
(Hint: it is NOW)
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Even if recently coined (like this morning), it would obviously come from googol [wikipedia.org], which is 10^100. The term was coined in 1938[1] by 9-year-old Milton Sirotta (1929–1981), nephew of American mathematician Edward Kasner. Kasner popularized the concept in his book Mathematics and the Imagination (1940).
I would imagine "googlean" to be a perfectly valid adjective, even if it's new (and I don't know if it is or not, I suspect not).
it IS asimov! (Score:2)
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data from billions of sources and use it to replicate everything happening on Earth, from global weather patterns and the spread of diseases to international financial transactions or congestion on highways.
"Aim small, miss small", -- The Patriot
Simulating "everything" is pretty much impossible. Who do they think they're kidding, anyway?
A Fool's Errand (Score:2)
This sounds more like an effort to bamboozle politicians into funding supercomputer centers. Anyone remotely familiar with numerical analysis and combinatorics would recognize that this is a fool's errand for two fundamental reasons. 1) the nature of much data lies at the boundary where systems become chaotic and consequently solutions to such datasets will be ill posed and have high condition numbers, where even minute differences in coefficients, that will likely result from just shear volume of computa
Re:more (Score:4, Insightful)
But, it'll simulate everything, then it will also simulate itself, running the simulation, and so on. Looks like a recursive simulation :)
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Contrary to the parent, sadly, and in line with the GPP, simulating "everything" (for any values of "everything" more detailed than "a game of pool") really IS impossible. There's a reason that despite the thousand-million-fold increase in computational power over the last 70-odd years (between ENIAC and Tianhe-IA... wait a minute, a computer named 'ia' is bad right? If it ever says "fhtagn" it's too late to pull the plug...) anyway, we still can't tell with any surety what the weat
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http://qntm.org/responsibility [qntm.org]
Your comment reminded me of this short story that was posted to Slashdot a while back.
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not enough data!!
"...for meaningful answer."
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A stopped clock is right twice a day, and his clock is stopped on economic disaster. Wake me up when he can correctly predict upturns too, and then he might have something interesting going on.
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The human arrogance of thinking we as a species are capable of knowing everything, machine assisted or otherwise, is the source of many of the most serious mistakes we have made. Everything from the introduction of insects from other countries to control our pests (and having the introduced species run wild) to plans to fertilize the oceans to address global warming -- arrogance, the root of much of the worlds bad deeds.
The drive to "know everything" is what has lengthened our lifespans and bettered our quality of living.
Look at the big picture: The missteps you site will aide us in the decisions we make while colonizing & terraforming other lands and planets.
What you would call "arrogance" I would call "making uninformed decisions without performing adequate testing first". Applying an untested hypothesis is indeed folly in any case except experimentation.
A simulation test bed will be a great tool to help test the gl
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I never could figure out why Brits call their car's trunk* [google.com] a "boot". A car's trunk is decended from the buggy, with its hinged box (a trunk) sitting on the back.
Why "boot"? It makes no sense.
* link randomly chosen from Google