- Would you guys accept the complementary hypothesis to you having but one short life to live, at most, if the complementary hypothesis had a prior probability of 50%?
Mr. Savage:
At the rsik of being told that I am being condescending, would you mind explaining what you are trying to say? I honestly cannot tell.
Please note that if you call "...but one short life to live, at most...", "A" (your 'hypothesis'), then "not-A" (the 'complementary hypothesis') is, "...
not but one short life to live, at most...".
You are going to get a lot of resistance at that point, because you seem to be claiming that "
not-A"
must be "immortality", when "
not-A" could include all sorts of things:
-"...one
long life to live, at most..."
-"...two short lives to live, at most..."
-"...a indeterminate number, but less than ∞, of short lives to live, at most..."
-"...one short life, and one long life, to live, at most..."
...and so on. "
Not-A" is exactly that: just...not "A".
You also have the not-inconsiderable problem of empirical, practical evidence--people are observed to live a life, then die. How are you getting around that?
ETA: ninja'ed by essentially everyone. Sorry.