Jabba
Philosopher
- Joined
- Feb 23, 2012
- Messages
- 5,613
TreeBranch2-TexasSharpshooter
Continued from #137 (
Continued from #137 (
)
20. If you really think that, then I don't think you know what the word target actually means.
Target:
A person, object, or place selected as the aim of an attack.
Select as an object of attention or attack.
An objective or result towards which efforts are directed.
Etc.
The word target loses any meaning if you don't need to declare what you intend to hit or achieve before you try and achieve your objective.
You're doing your utmost best to try and try and make everyone else think you're not guilty of the sharpshooter fallacy, but you're truly doing a lousy job of it. Either you don't actually understand what the sharpshooter fallacy is or you're being disingenuous in trying to sweep it under the carpet.
21. You're right. I used the wrong word. I should have said "pre-specified."
22. Try this.
- You and I move about 200 yards from a barn in Texas. I take my old M-14 with me, tell you that I'm a sharpshooter, and start firing away at the barn. We walk back to the barn and find a tiny shot group centered around a small hole in the barn wall.
- I didn't need to pre-specify my target...
- And, in this case, we'd have a high degree of targetness.
- If my shot group wasn't all that small, we'd have a lower degree of targetness.
23. Changing the phrase from "pre-selected" to "pre-specified" in no way addresses my point.*
What's the difference between a pre-selected target and a pre-specified target?
24. Pre-specified means that you have told someone, or have otherwise indicated your selection,*prior to shooting.*I'm saying that there are ways for others to know what your target was, without being told.
25. No. For the purposes of determining how to evaluate the significance of the data in your model, "telling someone else" or "others knowing about it" has nothing to do with it. Please stop just making stuff up.
26. Sure it does. That way we know what the shooter is shooting at, and we can give him a score accordingly. I must not understand your objection...
27. No, it doesn't. The crux of the fallacy is when the significance of the data is determined, not whether that significance is communicated to someone else. You would do better to stop torturing analogies and look at your argument instead. You're conflating problems that arise only in your analogies, not in your argument.
28. Note above that I included when the significance of the data was included -- "prior to shooting." That's typically how we know what the target was. I'm claiming, however, that there are other ways of being "pretty sure" what the target was. A farmer shoots a deer -- we can be pretty sure he was shooting at the deer.
