caveman1917
Philosopher
- Joined
- Feb 26, 2015
- Messages
- 8,143
Right?
Argument by analogy never works.
It's not an analogy, it's an equivalence.
Right?
Argument by analogy never works.
If you think you are correct (which you are not), present a well-defined mathematical argument rather than simplistic thought experiments.In X, the odds of any soul at all is already zero so trying to take it into account is nonsense.
Let X be the set {1, 2, 3, 4}, let Even be the set {2, 4} and Odd be the set {1, 3} (ie the subsets of even and odd numbers in X). Then the argument being made was: for a number to be in Even it must be in X and be even, which is an extra condition over just "must be in X", therefor there are more numbers in Odd than in Even.
Differently, having a body and a soul does not stop you from having a body. Therefor (body) can not be the same as (body) + (not soul).
It's not an analogy, it's an equivalence.
You want mathmatical proof that we don't need to take ham sandwiches into account when checking if a wooden block is square or triangular. That is what you're saying.
Fine! Let me repeat myself but strip it down to the bare bones.
1. Picking a random number with a value of either 1 or 2, you have only two distinct results. 1, or 2. This means the odds of each specific result are 50%.
2. Picking a random number with a value of either 1 or 2, and then picking a random letter with a value of either A or B, you have four distinct results. (1,A) (1,B) (2,A) (2,B). This means the odds of each specific result would be 25%.
3. 50% and 25% aren't the same thing.
I don't see why it follows that there must be more odds than evens.
If you think that is relevant: back to the loop you go. In the meantime, I'm going to try a tactic I've seen used around here, big red letters:
A non-empty set can NOT be a subset of two distinct sets.
You want mathmatical proof that we don't need to take ham sandwiches into account when checking if a wooden block is square or triangular. That is what you're saying.
Fine! Let me repeat myself but strip it down to the bare bones.
1. Picking a random number with a value of either 1 or 2, you have only two distinct results. 1, or 2. This means the odds of each specific result are 50%.
2. Picking a random number with a value of either 1 or 2, and then picking a random letter with a value of either A or B, you have four distinct results. (1,A) (1,B) (2,A) (2,B). This means the odds of each specific result would be 25%.
3. 50% and 25% aren't the same thing.
I said present a well-defined mathematical argument. You have a probability space with events H denoting "we do not have souls" and E denoting "Jabba exists". Define explicitly your claim in terms of that space, and provide an explicit proof for your claim.
That term may not mean what you think it means.
My post is right there. You even quoted it. Where in my post do I say "we do not have souls" or "Jabba exists"? I want you to address what I actually wrote, not what you think I should have written.
Which of those three points in my post are you having trouble understanding,
caveman1917?
So your statements are irrelevant? Well no need to bother with them then.
Yes, you are completely right about picking square and triangular coloured blocks. Too bad this thread is not about picking square and triangular coloured blocks though.
Meh, disjoint
SOdhner,Hopefully we can both agree that 'feeling' like there's a flaw and actually identifying a flaw are different in a quite vital way.I think the most important thing if we want to come to an agreement on this is to examine it without a lot of distractions - this is a really mathematical thing so we don't need to muddy the waters with your larger formula to discuss it.
That's not really what I'm saying, but also if we're going to do any math we should avoid using infinity like it's an actual number.
Okay, let's try this again and for the first few questions I would ask that you forget your theory entirely. I don't want you to get distracted by it. Just evaluate the following and tell me which points you do or don't agree with.
1. I have a bag of wooden shapes. There are two squares, and two triangles. The only variable we are working with is the shape, so for a specific result I have a 50% chance of getting it. Right?
2. Okay now one of each shape is painted red. If I am looking for two characteristics (both square AND red) then I've got a 25% chance - that's 50% (square) times 50% (red).
3. Every time I add more criteria on the same thing happens. Adding another thing I'm looking for means I multiply the odds together, and since each of those odds are less than 100% the overall odds must go down.
PLEASE confirm if you agree with the above before we try to apply this to your specific theory. I've been in too many discussions on these forums where people (not you specifically) sidestep the logic part and then dive right back into their specific theory. Establishing this logic is really vital to having a productive conversation. Okay, assuming you've done that and moving on...
4. Since you are trying to establish that we have an immortal part of ourselves (I'm going to call this a soul because it's easy, I'm not trying to put words into your mouth or anything) by referring to probability, we can't just assume the existence of a soul in all cases. That would make your argument circular...
I hope breaking it down step by step was helpful to you.
You haven't bothered with them at any point. You've put words in my mouth, misread, misinterpreted, and invented arguments to criticize without ever actually understanding what I said.
Whoops, was about to post and noticed that you added a sentence:
If you can't connect the dots from there I don't see what the point is in even trying.
The universe with souls would also require a specific soul to be attached
It doesn't, that's the error. What follows is:
-there must be more numbers than odds
-there must be more numbers than evens
The error is because of equating "number" with "number and odd" (ie equating "body" with "body and not soul").
- I do think that each of us humans involve something (a "process" is a "thing") that continues to exist after the death of our brains (I assume that other animals do also). If that's true, we must involve something that we don't currently call "physical." Some day, science may discover such a thing and decide that it is, in fact, "physical"...
[...snip...]
- So far, I don't understand why assuming that we all experience this thing would make my argument circular.
- Apparently, we humans all experience something that we call "self," or "self awareness." This is what I think is immortal.
- Are you suggesting that even if souls are real that some humans may not have one?
So you're refusing to provide a mathematical argument, one wonders why...
Which one?
Sure was impressive all in red and large font, though, wasn't it? Especially after demanding mathematical precision of others
Luckily, this is not a discussion and not a confrontation, right? So, yeah, meh.
I guess I just don't understand philosophy because "number and odd" seems the same to me as "number and not even".
I did, more than once. You ignored it because I didn't make the specific argument you wanted me to make.
Exactly. That's literally the point.