My confusion was a result of me not recognizing that the Cosmological Horizon would be different if two people existed in different locations. It was also a result of taking a post-warp perspective instead of one which would apply equally well both post and pre warp, which caused me to misunderstand the way that some of those arguments were meant to function.
I don’t think the point about absolute coordinates was relevant, or else I still might be misunderstanding it. The position I’m trying to defend doesn’t say that “nothing exists outside of me”, it takes a more agnostic approach and says that I shouldn’t bother trying to decide whether things exist outside of me or whether or not I’m justified in assuming that everything there is the same as here. I don’t say that the universe actually has a giant sphere built into it, centered on me; I just contend that I don’t know anything about things that I’ll never interact with and that I’m not much interested in them.
My confusion was a result of me not recognizing that the Cosmological Horizon would be different if two people existed in different locations. It was also a result of taking a post-warp perspective instead of one which would apply equally well both post and pre warp, which caused me to misunderstand the way that some of those arguments were meant to function.
I don’t think the point about absolute coordinates was relevant, or else I still might be misunderstanding it. The position I’m trying to defend doesn’t say that “nothing exists outside of me”, it takes a more agnostic approach and says that I shouldn’t bother trying to decide whether things exist outside of me or whether or not I’m justified in assuming that everything there is the same as here. I don’t say that the universe actually has a giant sphere built into it, centered on me; I just contend that I don’t know anything about things that I’ll never interact with and that I’m not much interested in them.
Thank you very much, you definitely helped.