Sorry. I can't clear any of that up without going into areas I don't intend to go into.
Then it remains unevidenced and unsupported, and your claims -- direct and indirect -- about our obtuseness in regard to this point are completely out of line.
Toontown said:
In fact, sentience is precisely what I've been talking about, and is precisely what I should be talking about.
Then by all means do. Until I pushed you on this you have mentioned it only as an ancillary factor to the probability discussion. Finally you admit it is central.
Toontown said:
There is no story that tells a rock it's sentience has beaten giganogargantuan odds. A rock has no sentience. A rock has not been told any such story and has no reason or ability to find such a story suspect.
And this matters not one whit. More precisely, you have not shown it matters one whit; you have merely claimed so.
Toontown said:
A rock doesn't even exist in the same sense that sentience exists.
Further confirmation that you are presuming the consequent Jabba has claimed to be able to prove. We'll use your word, sentience, as opposed to soul, though in the manner in which you use it I see no functional difference.
You are presuming that sentience is separate from the matter and the processes of matter that gives rise to it and sneaking in the idea that it exists apart from it.
If you were Jabba (I know you're not arguing his point, but you do intersect with him here), then it would be appropriate to point out that this makes your proposition (or what can be discerned of it) less likely than the materialist model because now not only does your brain have to exist but your sentience has to exist and the two have to connect. You've have increased your gargantuan odds by many orders of magnitude.
Toontown said:
What is it like to be a rock? Tell me about being a rock.
Tell me how this matters. Describe it in detail in relation to your point; do not simply proclaim it as if that is proof. At this point I am not inclined to take you at your word on such things.
Toontown said:
Yes, sentience is different from rocks. Sentience is the only thing in the universe that can be experienced. That fact alone makes sentience fundamentally different from inanimate objects. There is sentient existence and there is inanimate existence. They are not the same.
And again, explain how this matters to the point. Unless you demonstrate that sentience is more than the processes of the matter that give rise to it, your distinction means nothing.
Toontown said:
And probability is nonexistent except in the context of sentience. What can probability tell a rock? What is probability without information? What is information without sentience?
I will leave this to the far more knowledgeable jt512. He has addressed this quite well, I think.
Toontown said:
So we have rocks, which are utterly meaningless in the absence of sentience. And we have probability, nonexistent in the absence of sentience.
I don't concede that, but even if it was true it would still be a hell of lot more than needs to be known about what you've said here.
Special compared to a rock, yeah. You, I'm not so sure about. At this point, I'm not even sure you can tell the difference.
The statistics suit me just fine. It's the story that says my sentience is next to impossible that I piss on. Because I can.
I don't concede that, but even if it was true it's still a hell of a lot more than you've got. Do you really not know the difference between sentience and a rock?
Start with this: A rock can't be told it's sentience is next to impossible, because it doesn't have any. Which means the rock can safely be ignored in questions regarding sentience.
So don't bother me about the rocks any more. Don't bother trying to tell me I need to lump my sentience and all the rocks together in one pile.
I will end with this, and it may be my last response for a while (no promises; it hinges on a few things, only one of which is my continued interest):
This is highly disappointing. It is clear that you are quite knowledgeable on many things and can be very analytical. In your knowledge of probability and statistics it was clear long ago that you know more than I do. Yet you have not used that knowledge or analytic ability to follow evidence to its end; you have inverted the process and decided that sentience is a special snowflake and are now twisting what you know in an attempt to buttress that conclusion.