HansMustermann
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2009
- Messages
- 23,741
I've got a bag of candy here, fruit crosses that come in three flavors. Apple, Peach and Lime.
I've just reached in and pulled out a single piece of candy at random, one of the three.
You have three possible hypotheses:
1) The piece I'm holding is Apple.
2) The piece I'm holding is Peach.
3) The piece I'm holding is Lime.
Now if you had access to information about the ratio of different flavors, wouldn't that affect your evaluation of the likelihood of any of those three claims?
Please, for just one moment, answer this question before launching into your opinion on how you think it may or may not apply to a historical Jesus.
If you actually had that information, including that those are the only choices, and if you then didn't try to use that as some kind of illogical divination to support a completely unrelated question like it's done for Jesus, then yes.
Bearing in mind that that example of yours has zero relevance to what I'm saying.
No, really, I have nothing against probabilities. I do have something against doing probabilities wrong, including just assuming something because it has a non-zero probability.
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