Steve
Penultimate Amazing
Yet here I am, and......I have a banana with me.
I have a bunch of 6 bananas, but they are on the other side of the room. Is the likely hood of that 6 times less than a single banana?
Yet here I am, and......I have a banana with me.
Wouldn't you agree that if H is correct, our current existences are exactly as unlikely as any given set of bananas?
Dave,
- OK. I didn't say it right anyway.
- Let's go with H being that the self is entirely physical.
- Therefor, ~H is that the self is not entirely physical.
- Wouldn't you agree that if H is correct, our current existences are extremely unlikely?
- Anyway, we've fouind a couple of points of agreement. I.e., there must be an infinity of potential selves -- and given H, our current existences are extremely unlkely.Not any more unlikely than the existence of a particular blade of grass.
- Anyway, we've fouind a couple of points of agreement. I.e., there must be an infinity of potential selves -- and given H, our current existences are extremely unlkely.
how unlikely are we if we invoke what the probability was 'before' the big bang?
- Anyway, we've fouind a couple of points of agreement. I.e., there must be an infinity of potential selves -- and given H, our current existences are extremely unlkely.
- Anyway, we've fouind a couple of points of agreement. I.e., there must be an infinity of potential selves -- and given H, our current existences are extremely unlkely.
- We still disagree upon how unlikely our current existences are; but, how unlikely are we if we invoke what the probability was 'before' the big bang?
Give it up with the dishonest misrepresentations.- Anyway, we've fouind a couple of points of agreement. I.e., there must be an infinity of potential selves -- and given H, our current existences are extremely unlkely.
- We still disagree upon how unlikely our current existences are; but, how unlikely are we if we invoke what the probability was 'before' the big bang?
The quotes in no way say "there must be an infinity of potential selves" - you made that up out of whole cloth.- Anyway, we've fouind [sic] a couple of points of agreement. I.e., there must be an infinity of potential selves -- and given H, our current existences are extremely unlkely. [sic]
- Anyway, we've fouind a couple of points of agreement. I.e., there must be an infinity of potential selves -- and given H, our current existences are extremely unlkely.
We still disagree upon how unlikely our current existences are...
...but, how unlikely are we if we invoke what the probability was 'before' the big bang?
... given H, our current existences are extremely unlkely ...
- Anyway, we've found a couple of points of agreement. I.e., there must be an infinity of potential selves
- Anyway, we've fouind a couple of points of agreement. I.e., there must be an infinity of potential selves -- and given H, our current existences are extremely unlkely.
Or more to the point: wouldn't he agree that if H is correct, our current existences are exactly as unlikely as if H is not correct.
- Anyway, we've fouind a couple of points of agreement. I.e., there must be an infinity of potential selves
Dave,
- OK. I didn't say it right anyway.
- Let's go with H being that the self is entirely physical.
- Therefor, ~H is that the self is not entirely physical.
- Wouldn't you agree that if H is correct, our current existences are extremely unlikely?
- Anyway, we've fouind a couple of points of agreement. I.e., there must be an infinity of potential selves -- and given H, our current existences are extremely unlkely.
Jabba isn't actually trying to distinguish between H and ~H, because he has defined two alternative hypotheses rather than allowing ~H to be defined as everything other than H.
[Y]ou haven't dealt with the fact that ~H is not a single proposition but is, in fact, a set of several propositions, not all of which are mutually compatible.
His calculations of likelihoods under H can't get him any closer to his goal as long as his H is a strawman.
- Anyway, we've fouind a couple of points of agreement.
Dave,
Dave,
Dave,
- So, let's give that hypothesis a try.
Dave,
Dave,
- Anyway, we've fouind a couple of points of agreement. I.e., there must be an infinity of potential selves -- and given H, our current existences are extremely unlkely.
- We still disagree upon how unlikely our current existences are; but, how unlikely are we if we invoke what the probability was 'before' the big bang?
Dave,That's a meaningless question.