davefoc
Philosopher
I have followed the discussion that has mainly been between JTG and amb since I posted here a couple of weeks ago.
With respect to JTG, who I generally find common ground with on most subjects, I do not see amb's ideas as any sort of manifestation of religion or an indication even that the confirmation biases and biases driven by our desire to believe things that make us happy that lie behind most human religious beliefs are driving amb's thoughts on this matter.
This is a subject for which few hard facts are available. It seems that amb has taken the few known facts, swirled them around with his biases and his analytical abilities and come up with an opinion as to the commonality of intelligence equal to or greater than human in the universe.
That seems to be exactly the same procedure that JTG has used.
The fact that amb and JTG have arrived at different opinions on the matter does not necessarily indicate that one or the other has developed his opinions in a non-objective manner.
There are no facts available that can be used to rule out the possibility that JTG or amb is right. In the end this is a gut feel issue where the significance assigned to the few facts available is going to strongly influence one's views on this subject. The only non-objective view possible would be to fail to recognize the fact that one's opinions on this aren't much better than a wild assed guess and that one could easily be massively incorrect with their ideas about the likelihood of human like intelligence.
One thing that seems very likely to be true is that even if amb is wrong and human like intelligence is much more likely in the galaxy than he suspects, it will still be far too rare for us to find out that he was wrong.
With respect to JTG, who I generally find common ground with on most subjects, I do not see amb's ideas as any sort of manifestation of religion or an indication even that the confirmation biases and biases driven by our desire to believe things that make us happy that lie behind most human religious beliefs are driving amb's thoughts on this matter.
This is a subject for which few hard facts are available. It seems that amb has taken the few known facts, swirled them around with his biases and his analytical abilities and come up with an opinion as to the commonality of intelligence equal to or greater than human in the universe.
That seems to be exactly the same procedure that JTG has used.
The fact that amb and JTG have arrived at different opinions on the matter does not necessarily indicate that one or the other has developed his opinions in a non-objective manner.
There are no facts available that can be used to rule out the possibility that JTG or amb is right. In the end this is a gut feel issue where the significance assigned to the few facts available is going to strongly influence one's views on this subject. The only non-objective view possible would be to fail to recognize the fact that one's opinions on this aren't much better than a wild assed guess and that one could easily be massively incorrect with their ideas about the likelihood of human like intelligence.
One thing that seems very likely to be true is that even if amb is wrong and human like intelligence is much more likely in the galaxy than he suspects, it will still be far too rare for us to find out that he was wrong.