godless dave
Great Dalmuti
- Joined
- Jul 25, 2007
- Messages
- 8,266
Why do you think your current existence is extremely unlikely?
caveman,That was the basis for my assumption that the immortal soul only came into existence at the same time as its body since, as far as I know, that's how it works in Christianity.
Dave,Why do you think your current existence is extremely unlikely?
LL,All of this is a bunch of nonsense. Jabba's argument has nothing to do with Bayes or anything else. He is saying:
1. If I am mortal, there is no chance that I exist.
2. If I am immortal, it is certain that I exist.
3. I exist
Therefore: I am immortal...
Dave,
- I forget how to use a link from the previous "chapter," but my answer is #3000 in that chapter.
11.1. Re P(E|H):According to science, I would never exist if
11.1.1. My parents had never met…
11.1.2. They had never had intercourse.
11.1.3. The necessary sperm cell (of the sextillion produced by my dad) had not met up with the necessary ovum (of the 500 carried by my mom).
11.1.4. The same three events (of above) had not occurred for both sets of my grandparents.
11.1.5. And all four sets of my great-grandparents.
11.1.6. Etc., etc., etc.
11.1.7. All the way back to the beginning of life on this planet.
11.1.8. And then, there’s the big bang.
11.1.9. And what if I had been (would have been?) the combination of a particular sperm cell of my dad and a particular ovum of Cleopatra?
11.1.10. How many human sperm cells and ova have existed since the beginning of (just) human life?
11.1.11. And, wouldn’t each potential combination of particular sperm cell and particular ovum represent a different potential person?
11.1.12. And what about all those potential persons of potential but unactualized persons?
11.1.13. However, my particular conscious existence probably doesn’t depend upon a particular sperm cell and particular ovum, anyway…
11.1.14. Rather, a certain organic state must naturally produce the emergent property of consciousness, and each new consciousness must produce its own, brand new, “self.”
11.1.15. IOW, there probably is no limited pool of potential beings – and consequently, the ‘number’ of potential beings is infinite…
11.1.16. Wow!
11.1.17. And then, there’s the anthropic principle.
11.1.18. And, what’s the likelihood that the 14 billion years of apparent universe existence would currently be within the years of my life.
11.1.19. And, what if time is infinite in both directions?
LL,All of this is a bunch of nonsense. Jabba's argument has nothing to do with Bayes or anything else. He is saying:
1. If I am mortal, there is no chance that I exist.
2. If I am immortal, it is certain that I exist.
3. I exist
Therefore: I am immortal.
The problem isn't in his logic above, it's in the logic of his givens. They have absolutely no foundation whatsoever in testable fact. There's no way to assign a truth value to them. Thus, there's no way to assign a truth value to his ultimate conclusion.
If Jabba wants to advance his argument, he needs to provide evidence that his givens are true. This is something that he cannot do. He cannot even define what he means by "immortality," let alone provide falsifiable evidence for it.
And this all rests on the largely unspoken assumption that God exists. After some thousands of posts, Jabba has finally and very recently referred to a "creator." He can't provide a working definition for that, either.
As much as I'd like to oblige, I'm not sure what -H is.LL,
- My only givens are H and ~H. You seem to be saying that there is absolutely no evidence for ~H.
- Is that what you're saying? I'm not trying to put words in your mouth -- I just suspect that I don't know what you're saying.
Dave,...
All that means (everything through 11.1.7, after which it stops having anything to do with the scientific model for consciousness) is that if you go back far enough in time, your existence is one of many possibilities, just like the current existence of Mount Rainier.
All of reality works that way. So what?
Below I've linked to a photo of Mount Rainier. Consider the exact details of what it looks like, the position of each piece of rock. What do you think was the likelihood that it would look exactly like that at the time the photo was taken?
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Mount_Rainier_from_the_Silver_Queen_Peak.jpg
My only givens are H and ~H.
You seem to be saying that there is absolutely no evidence for ~H.
- Is that what you're saying?
Dave,
- We've already been through all that. It started on the 24th of April. If you can find your last unanswered question/objection, I'll see if I can answer it.
If you can find your last unanswered question/objection, I'll see if I can answer it.
My point was that you could abandon all this jargon and make your argument though conventional methods.
I like that!
[T]he real issue for me (so far?) is whether the likelihood of my current existence, given H, is an appropriate entry for P(E|H) in the formula I'm using.
I need to establish that the likelihood of my existence is not of the same order as that of the likelihood of winning the lottery...
What is the appropriate terminology for that kind of situation in which the particular winner, whoever it is, of a fair lottery will be extremely unlikely?
What is the appropriate terminology for that kind of situation in which the particular winner, whoever it is, of a fair lottery will be extremely unlikely? Bayes must talk about that kind of entry somewhere -- but so far, I can't find it.
All of this is a bunch of nonsense. Jabba's argument has nothing to do with Bayes or anything else. He is saying:
1. If I am mortal, there is no chance that I exist.
2. If I am immortal, it is certain that I exist.
3. I exist
Therefore: I am immortal.
The problem isn't in his logic above, it's in the logic of his givens. They have absolutely no foundation whatsoever in testable fact. There's no way to assign a truth value to them. Thus, there's no way to assign a truth value to his ultimate conclusion.
If Jabba wants to advance his argument, he needs to provide evidence that his givens are true. This is something that he cannot do. He cannot even define what he means by "immortality," let alone provide falsifiable evidence for it.
And this all rests on the largely unspoken assumption that God exists. After some thousands of posts, Jabba has finally and very recently referred to a "creator." He can't provide a working definition for that, either.
LL,
- My only givens are H and ~H. You seem to be saying that there is absolutely no evidence for ~H.
- Is that what you're saying? I'm not trying to put words in your mouth -- I just suspect that I don't know what you're saying.
jt and caveman,No. You assign values to P(E|H) and P(E|~H). These are among your givens, and your choice of numbers for them is the magical thinking that rejects anything you want to define as H, regardless of how probable H might be...
All of this is a bunch of nonsense. Jabba's argument has nothing to do with Bayes or anything else. He is saying:
1. If I am mortal, there is no chance that I exist.
2. If I am immortal, it is certain that I exist.
3. I exist
Therefore: I am immortal.
The problem isn't in his logic above, it's in the logic of his givens. They have absolutely no foundation whatsoever in testable fact. There's no way to assign a truth value to them. Thus, there's no way to assign a truth value to his ultimate conclusion.
If Jabba wants to advance his argument, he needs to provide evidence that his givens are true. This is something that he cannot do. He cannot even define what he means by "immortality," let alone provide falsifiable evidence for it.
And this all rests on the largely unspoken assumption that God exists. After some thousands of posts, Jabba has finally and very recently referred to a "creator." He can't provide a working definition for that, either.
LL,
- I like that!
Mojo,That's kind of the problem.
Mojo,
- But, it is -- pretty much -- what I'm saying.