No, because you ALWAYS exist when you exist.
It's scary how beautifully this sums up the entire counter argument.
No, because you ALWAYS exist when you exist.
Caveman,
- (Einstein vs Bohr or Wheeler-Dewitt?)
- I'll try to do as you ask. I had revised my own expression in an attempt to make sure that my claim worked. I don't think that your attachment about "being born" is appropriate.
- Anyway, I think that P(E|I) > P(E|~I) because I currently exist and my current existence is more likely if I'm immortal than if I have only one finite life to live.
LL,No, because you ALWAYS exist when you exist.
It's as if we're currently experiencing a rain storm, but we ask, "How likely is it to rain if there are no clouds in the sky?"
LL,
- P(E|I) is not P(E). It's how probable (likely) is E if I is true. It's conditional.
- It's as if we're currently experiencing a rain storm, but we ask, "How likely is it to rain if there are no clouds in the sky?"
How does adding an unlikely soul increase the likelihood of your body existing?
I do admire your persistence. Unfortunately, like the going 60 mph question, it will be ignored as Jabba's goal is to generate quote mine-able content for his "map", not to engage in debate.
LL,
- P(E|I) is not P(E). It's how probable (likely) is E if I is true. It's conditional.
- It's as if we're currently experiencing a rain storm, but we ask, "How likely is it to rain if there are no clouds in the sky?"
No it's like walking outside, discovering that it is raining, and somehow making the stupid and illogical leap that the rain must be happening forever because the idea of a process stopping and starting scares and confuses you.
LL,
- P(E|I) is not P(E). It's how probable (likely) is E if I is true. It's conditional.
- It's as if we're currently experiencing a rain storm, but we ask, "How likely is it to rain if there are no clouds in the sky?"
P(E|I) is not P(E). It's how probable (likely) is E if I is true.
- Sure. But how likely is it that time would happen to be at the point that a particular raindrop fell? The sharpshooter argument should be your only objection in that situation.No, it's like a raindrop asking what the chance is would be raining at the exact moment the raindrop happens to find it exists. It will always be raining at the moment the raindrop measures its own existence.
- Sure. But how likely is it that time would happen to be at the point that a particular raindrop fell? The sharpshooter argument should be your only objection in that situation.
- Sure. But how likely is it that time would happen to be at the point that a particular raindrop fell? The sharpshooter argument should be your only objection in that situation.
If it's raining it's always going to be the time that a particular raindrop fell.- Sure. But how likely is it that time would happen to be at the point that a particular raindrop fell? .
It's a fatal objection. No other objections are needed.The sharpshooter argument should be your only objection in that situation
- Sure. But how likely is it that time would happen to be at the point that a particular raindrop fell? The sharpshooter argument should be your only objection in that situation.
It's like you don't even care whether you're right or wrong as long as all attention is on you.
Caveman,
- I am a currently existing human self. My claim is that this event is more likely if human selves are immortal than if each potential self has only one finite life at most. Do you still disagree?
- Sure. But how likely is it that time would happen to be at the point that a particular raindrop fell? The sharpshooter argument should be your only objection in that situation.
By definition, if it's raining, there are clouds producing the rain. So if you see what appears to be rain, but no clouds, then is it actually rain you're experiencing? Or could it be raining but the clouds are too high for you to see? Or are raindrops spontaneously appearing just meters above the ground?LL,
- P(E|I) is not P(E). It's how probable (likely) is E if I is true. It's conditional.
- It's as if we're currently experiencing a rain storm, but we ask, "How likely is it to rain if there are no clouds in the sky?"
I really want to understand what Jabba thinks he is doing when he just says "I claim" because I don't think it means for him what it means for everyone else.