>>12995820Also, assuming that it miraculously could happen (it won't ever though) that a QC calculates a finite definitive number of PI, it would either mean that
1.) Our standard (foundational) model of maths is wrong. Thus, we would most likely end up in another foundational crisis of mathematics, but this one would be much more severe this time. We would have to rebuilt everything from ground-up.
2.) The QC calculation was just wrong, and everything's still fine and PI is still not finite.
Either way, even if PI would reach a final definitive value (it won't), it doesn't prove anywhere that we live in a simulation. It would just mean that our current perception/models were wrong. Just because we discovered that the earth orbits the sun and not the other way around, doesn't mean that all of a sudden we live in a simulation. Only retards and pop-sci faggots would believe this.