BenBurch
Gatekeeper of The Left
I've met some cranks in my time, but wow.
...
Though the really touching part is the using "I am street orator" claim as if that's some kind of claim to glory. As opposed to just saying "I'm the dysfunctional personality type who'd invent problems to preach about at street corner"![]()
So, ignore the troll, he'll go away.

I've met some cranks in my time, but wow.
It is easier to be a "humanitarian" than to render your own country its
proper due; it is easier to be a "patriot" than to make your community
a better place to live in; it is easier to be a "civic leader" than to
treat your own family with loving understanding; for the smaller the
focus of attention, the harder the task.
-- Sydney J. Harris
The LHC may teach us magic stuff. On the other hand, I am guessing that someone gets the Nobel for finding the Higgs, but nothing much else comes of it. We risk earth for this?
Also known as the "LALALA Ican't hear you" approach to debate.I am practicing the Comtean “mental health” I described in my last post by writing without reading your recent comments.
No you are another internet crackpot. Congratulations, just you and a million others.I am street orator.
Even though you can't hear the statements? And they involve a field you know nothing about? And you refuse to listen to responses?One of my biggest motivators is a stupid statement that needs to be set right.
HAHAHAHA! Because, obviously, when you are weighing up the physical risks of the most elaborate physics experiment in history, the first group you would go to would be... economists.You guys are a wonderful source of stupid statements. You may know some physics (your knowledge of even that subject is specialized, not balanced) but you are incredibly stupid on everything else. Did anyone here ever take a course in economics?
The LHC may teach us magic stuff. On the other hand, I am guessing that someone gets the Nobel for finding the Higgs, but nothing much else comes of it. We risk earth for this?
Your demonstration of the risk is lacking.
I see you have not been able to reply to critiques and have restorted to just saying people are stupid.

Weren't economists one of the groups of useless people shipped off by the Golgafrinchans?
Since when has that ever worked?So, ignore the troll, he'll go away.
writing without reading your recent comments.
I am street orator.
yes but they have yet to show that the risk is sound.In section 2, we show that
the probability estimates in scientific analysis cannot be equated with the likelihood
of these events occurring. Instead of the probability of the event occurring, scientific
analysis gives the event’s probability conditioned on the given argument being
sound. Though this is the case in all probability estimates, we show how it becomes
crucial when the estimated probabilities are smaller than a certain threshold.
So yes there could be an error, but then the math that accurtaely describes everything would already be wrong in many ways.Furthermore the distinction does not account for mistakes made
unknowingly. In section 3, we therefore propose a three-fold distinction between an
argument’s theory, its model, and its calculations.
Except then all the other things would be in error as well.Even if the argument
looks watertight, the chance that it contains a critical flaw may well be much larger
than one in a billion.
Excuse me, have they retracted the value of G or the mass os the electron, the fine structure constant?One way to estimate the frequency of major flaws in
academic papers is to look at the proportion which are formally retracted after
publication.
In order to account for all possible mistakes in the argument, we look separately at
its theory, its model, and its calculations
So in other words you will GIVE WEIGHT to unsubstantiated theories that contradict the current models that are very accurate?In what follows, we do not restrict the term
‘theory’ to well-established and mathematically elaborate theories like electrodynamics, quantum chromodynamics or relativity theory
My self refute and admit your theories are based in error?
Hence we consider adequate models or theories rather than correct ones.Ah, so the god of the gaps just walks through the door, it doesn't matter what is correct or accurate at all. The you get even crazier.We may assume C to be independent of M and T, as the correctness of a calculation is
independent of whether the theoretical and model assumptions underpinning it
were adequate. Given this independence, P(C|M,T) = P(C), so the above equation
can be simplified:
(3) P(T,M,C) = P(T) P(M|T) P(C).
By incorporating our threefold distinction, it is straightforward to
apply findings on the reliability of theories from philosophy of science — based, for
example, on probabilistic verification methods (e.g. (Reichenbach 1938)) or
falsifications as in (Hempel 1950) or (Popper 1959).
Oh sure when you are trying to be scary, adequacy IE correctness does not matter at all!Estimating the correctness of the calculation independently from the adequacy of the
model and the theory seems important whenever the mathematics involved is nontrivial.
they then go on to shoot themselves in the foot over and over.
What you're proposing is no less absurd than saying, say, "but you haven't taken precautions for the case that you roll one six-sided die and get two sevens." It just can't happen. Probability is a big fat zero.