Try GOLD - Free
Robert Nozick's Metaverse Machine
Philosophy Now
|April/May 2022
Lorenzo Buscicchi asks, would you plug into Mark Zuckerberg’s virtual world? He finds that the question has been considered by philosophers for decades.

A comparatively recent contribution to the debate was the ‘experience machine’ thought experiment advanced by Robert Nozick in 1974 in his book Anarchy, State and Utopia (though it’s probably based on a short story called ‘The Happiness Machine’ published by Ray Bradbury in 1957). In this thought experiment, Nozick asks you to imagine a machine that can simulate every experience you would like to have until the end of your life. Once you programmed this machine and plugged yourself into it, you would not be aware that the blissful experiences you are having are simulated, and you would live out your fantasies until the end of your life.
Nozick asks: would you plug in? He thinks that the majority of readers would reply ‘no’, and advances a series of reasons for this. First, he says, we want to have a genuine relationship with reality, not live a fictional life that only feels real. The second reason has to do with personal identity/authenticity. According to him, we want to be certain kinds of people, and connecting to the experience machine would make us merely an ‘undeterminate blob’. Finally, the fact that the virtual world of the experience machine is artificial is taken by Nozick to be in itself bad. He believes the experience machine would prevent us from grasping any deeper reality.
This story is from the April/May 2022 edition of Philosophy Now.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Philosophy Now

Philosophy Now
Pharmaco-Metaphysics?
Raymond Tallis argues against acidic assertions, and doubts DMT discoveries.
7 mins
August/September 2025

Philosophy Now
Nine Spiritual Exercises
Massimo Pigliucci explains how to get Philo-Sophical.
3 mins
August/September 2025

Philosophy Now
Books
We follow mammal's search for meaning, as Mark Vorobej savages John Gray's book of impractical cat philosophy, while B.V.E. Hyde ponders the point of Jordan Peterson. In Classics, Hilarius Bogbinder reviews Plato's Republic.
21 mins
August/September 2025

Philosophy Now
The Centennial of the Scopes ‘Monkey’ Trial
Tim Madigan on the creation and the evolution of a legend.
14 mins
August/September 2025

Philosophy Now
Gödel, Wittgenstein, & the Limits of Knowledge
Michael D. McGranahan takes us to the edge of language, mathematics and science.
10 mins
August/September 2025

Philosophy Now
Weltschmerz and the World
Ian James Kidd takes a realistic and global view of the history of pessimism.
10 mins
August/September 2025
Philosophy Now
What Makes A Work Of Art Great?
Each answer below receives a book. Apologies to all the entrants not included.
16 mins
August/September 2025

Philosophy Now
The Beatles: Nothing is Real
Clinton Van Inman gets back to the psychedelic Sixties.
4 mins
August/September 2025

Philosophy Now
The Post-Truth Kerfuffle
Susan Haack, who is Distinguished Professor in the Humanities, Cooper Senior Scholar in Arts & Sciences, Professor of Philosophy, and Professor of Law, at the University of Miami, talks with Angela Tan about how and when we know.
11 mins
August/September 2025

Philosophy Now
A Crisis of Attention
Paul Doolan attends to our culture of attention demanding.
13 mins
August/September 2025
Translate
Change font size