Mojo
Mostly harmless
I don't doubt your math abilities but you're forgetting that an 8 of clubs from a different deck of cards would be a different 8 of clubs.
But it would be the same card!
I don't doubt your math abilities but you're forgetting that an 8 of clubs from a different deck of cards would be a different 8 of clubs.
Think scientific peer review as it would be carried out by the Spanish Inquisition.
But it would be the same card!
How many pairs of eyes would it be looking out of?
Aw ye of little faith. Here's another jumprope song:
Heeey Jabba!
Wanna have some fun?
Go over to the
Murderboard
With yer pants
Undone.
ETA: Tee hee.
- I assume that no one will volunteer to help me with the map, so I'll just have to review your responses and use what I consider to be the best. I'll plan on continuing my responses here, but use my blog/map as my "murder board."
- If anyone wishes to volunteer, and take the onus off of Jay, I'll be happy to change horses.
Your method presumes that a question has two sides, and that each side can nominate their champion.
Fatal Flaw 7
Not quite true. He explains it, but his explanation assumes something that's not true. When that assumption is made plain to him, he ignores it.
Yes, but let's simplify. You have a fair deck and you shuffle it thoroughly. Now simply turn over the top card.
Now if, ahead of time, you said you'd turn over the three of clubs, and you do, then that's admirably improbable -- p = 1/52. Obviously the probability of any preselected card being at the top of the deck is 1 in 52. What Jabba does, however, is turn over the top card, note that it's the jack of diamonds, exclaim post-draw that it's the card he needed, and marvel at the tremendous luck. The card he needed was whatever card he drew. Some card has to be at the top of the deck. Drawing it establishes the certainty that we'll be talking about some card. The probability that some card will appear is 1.
(We could here talk about an infinite number of "potential" cards, but that would drive us to drink.)
Now here's Jabba's false dilemma expressed in casino terms. Take the fair, shuffled deck. Preselect a card -- as before, the three of clubs. But instead of turning over the top card, draw one from the middle of the deck. It's the nine of spades. Since you didn't draw the preselected card from the middle of the deck, the preselected card "must" be the top card. Right?
In card terms the false dilemma is obvious. If you want to know what the top card is, just draw the top card. You can't infer what one hidden card "must" be just because you know what one other one is. Yet that sort of inference is at the heart of most fringe claims.
Here's how Jabba hides it in his formulation.
Take the proposition "People are immortal." The converse of that is that "People are not immortal," of which one possible condition is that "People have at most one finite life." Jabba formulates immortality as ~H (i.e., "not" some other condition), and that other condition as H, meaning "one finite life." That formulation requires that the union H∪~H is the universe -- all possible conditions. In probability, it means that P(H) + P(~H) = 1. If you can know either P(H) or P(~H), you can compute the other.
Arbitrarily say that P(H) is very small. That's what Jabba does. From that it follows inevitably that P(~H) must be very large, to take us up to 1. The equivocation central to the false dilemma is what ~H exactly is. If ~H is Jabba's singular propostion, then H must be every other proposition. But in determining P(H), Jabba only considered one proposition -- materialism. It's as if he drew only one card from the middle of the deck and proposed that it should represent all the rest of the deck except the top card.
If, on the other hand, H is materialism, then ~H must be the set of all conditions -- hypotheses -- that aren't materialism. And not all of those will lead to immortality. P(~H) may indeed be very large, but Jabba's desired probability really comes from some unknown subset of ~H.
So his argument constantly equivocates between whether H or ~H is the singular, elemental hypothesis, just as the card-deck example flip-flops between whether we're drawing the top card or some other card as the singular card we're going to discuss. You'll notice him variously redefining H and ~H throughout the debate as his critics corner him.
Then there's the notion of preselection, which is what you were really trying to get at. You are just as likely to be dealt a royal flush of spades as you are any other hand. The only reason you have to stifle your tells when dealt a good hand is that we've preselected those hands arbitrarily to have special significance. Jabba doesn't preselect. As you've noticed, he considers himself (or, variously, all seven billion living people) the "target." He doesn't seem to get how that's still the Texas sharpshooter fallacy.
He pulled the same stunt in the Shroud of Turin debate. He tried to Bayes his way through a false dilemma between "Shroud is the burial cloth of Jesus" and "Shroud is a medieval forgery." It was just as amusing back then as it is now. He was trying to argue that the "event" of having stone dust on a piece of cloth that's spent hundreds of years in medieval and modern Europe, in stone buildings, was more probably explained by the cloth having spent a night in Jesus' tomb.
Waterman,Jabba,
You are way ahead of yourself. If order for there to be a ‘murder board’ you first have to have evidence of a murder. You have looked in the window and seen a red stain on the carpet and have jumped to looking for murder suspects. You haven’t even established that there has been a crime! You haven’t produced a body or established that the stain is actually blood and not wine or paint or human.
In a cop show ‘model’ that you are invoking, a dead body is located. The all indicators are that the death is due to natural causes. However the hero notices a bit of evidence which leads them to dig further and uncover the mystery. Without that bit if evidence there is no case no mystery and no murder board.
What evidence (not speculation or wishful thinking) do you have that indicates that the current scientific consensus is insufficient to explain the self as an emergent property of a functioning healthy human brain?
A ‘hinky feeling’ doesn’t count.
There isn't even a red stain on the carpet, there is only Jabba's burning need for there to have been a "murder.."
Waterman,
- I guess that logic could be termed "speculation," but my claim is that my current logic/speculation (that given that I am, in fact, a legitimate "target," my current existence is significant evidence that I am immortal) is correct, and not wishful thinking.
Waterman,
- I guess that logic could be termed "speculation," but my claim is that my current logic/speculation (that given that I am, in fact, a legitimate "target," my current existence is significant evidence that I am immortal) is correct, and not wishful thinking.
Waterman,
- I guess that logic could be termed "speculation," but my claim is that my current logic/speculation (that given that I am, in fact, a legitimate "target," my current existence is significant evidence that I am immortal) is correct, and not wishful thinking.
Jay, I'm going to install a program on my computer to auto-nominate your posts from now on. A great post, as usual.
Waterman,
- I guess that logic could be termed "speculation," but my claim is that my current logic/speculation (that given that I am, in fact, a legitimate "target," my current existence is significant evidence that I am immortal) is correct, and not wishful thinking.
This is sad and ridiculous. Please end the discussion here..... my current existence is significant evidence that I am immortal ....
I guess that logic could be termed "speculation," but my claim is that my current logic/speculation (that given that I am, in fact, a legitimate "target," my current existence is significant evidence that I am immortal) is correct, and not wishful thinking.