pgwenthold
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Sep 19, 2001
- Messages
- 21,821
But what is to be gained from such a top ten list of biblical predictions?
Or a top ten list of predictions devined from the back of my corn flakes packet?
Such a list would have no value other than generating noise.
I don't understand. If this list is a prediction of events that will happen in the future (making it a true prediction), then who cares if it is from the bible or from the back of a corn flakes packet?
This would be a case where the claimnant is saying "I am able to predict future events." After defining what is a successful prediction, the claimnant need also define what the success rate will be. If these are truly specific predictions, including the year, then getting all ten right would easily be eligible for the million, IMO.
OTOH, if this is a list of "predictions that have already come true" then that is different, and uninteresting. You can find a lot of these even in things like nursery rhymes, if you try hard enough. However, the only real test of a predictive model is to predict things that have not yet happened. Statisticians understand this. Given sufficient parameters, I can create a mathematical model to perfectly describe any set of data, even a totally random set. However, the real test for a _predictive_ model is to see what happens with data that are to come. Do they follow the model? If yes, then you have a predictive model. If not, you just have a meaningless mathematical expression.