Mojo
Mostly harmless
Jabba,
I have noticed that while your H has morphed from "the scientific model" into "only one life...", your justification for P(E|H) has not.
I alluded to this a few pages back; it was ignored, of course.
Jabba,
I have noticed that while your H has morphed from "the scientific model" into "only one life...", your justification for P(E|H) has not.
I alluded to this a few pages back; it was ignored, of course.
js,Jabba,
I have noticed that while your H has morphed from "the scientific model" into "only one life...", your justification for P(E|H) has not.
You have been using E, your existence, to mean your sense of existence. This is how you were able to claim E has some independence of your body under ~H. Your current H has the same characteristic.
You need to re-figure P(E|H).
I morphed it so as to...
js,
- My H has, indeed, morphed.
- I morphed it so as to make (or, try to make) the conclusion more direct. I morphed H because I believed that I needed more justification for claiming that the scientific model was wrong than I did for claiming that OOFLam was wrong. I didn't think that I needed anymore justification for OOFLam being wrong.
- My H has, indeed, morphed.
- I morphed it so as to make (or, try to make) the conclusion more direct. I morphed H because I believed that I needed more justification for claiming that the scientific model was wrong than I did for claiming that OOFLam was wrong. I didn't think that I needed anymore justification for OOFLam being wrong.
Dave,
- This is our Mount Rainier issue, and -- I think -- the critical issue. That is, is the likelihood of my particular existence an appropriate entry for P(E|H)?...
I'm really asking why you think P(E|H) being a very small number brings H into doubt...
Dave,
- If you accepted my other entries, would you accept that P(E|H) being a very small number brings H into doubt?
Dave,
- I think that if you did accept my other entries -- and, the appropriateness of my particular likelihood of existence being an appropriate entry for P(E|H) in our Bayes formula -- you would understand why P(E|H) being a very small number would bring H into doubt.
- Consequently, it still seems to me that my particular likelihood of existence being an appropriate entry for P(E|H) in our Bayes formula is the critical issue -- and, the real source of your objection/reservation...
LL,Jabba -
First, asking someone a question, getting an answer and then ignoring that answer is exceptionally rude. You just disregarded godless dave's "No" for the reason that ... you didn't like it, I guess?...
It would be a revelation if you addressed any reservation.LL,
- I didn't intend to disregard Dave's "No." I tried to explain why I thought that the reservation I proposed was the source of the reservation he proposed -- and consequently, the reservation we should be addressing.
I tried to explain why I thought that the reservation I proposed was the source of the reservation he proposed -- and consequently, the reservation we should be addressing.
I tried to explain why I thought that the reservation I proposed was the source of the reservation he proposed -- and consequently, the reservation we should be addressing.
js,Jabba,
I have noticed that while your H has morphed from "the scientific model" into "only one life...", your justification for P(E|H) has not.
You have been using E, your existence, to mean your sense of existence. This is how you were able to claim E has some independence of your body under ~H. Your current H has the same characteristic.
You need to re-figure P(E|H).
- My H has, indeed, morphed.
- I morphed it so as to make (or, try to make) the conclusion more direct. I morphed H because I believed that I needed more justification for claiming that the scientific model was wrong than I did for claiming that OOFLam was wrong. I didn't think that I needed anymore justification for OOFLam being wrong.
You now have ~H including only hypotheses under which you are immortal....
It is worse than that. ~H includes all sorts of hypotheses where some of us are immortal and others aren't, where we each may get exactly two lives, etc., etc.
LL,
- I didn't intend to disregard Dave's "No." I tried to explain why I thought that the reservation I proposed was the source of the reservation he proposed -- and consequently, the reservation we should be addressing.
... a clockwork universe where one's chance of existing is 1 ...jsfisher said:It is worse than that. ~H includes all sorts of hypotheses where some of us are immortal and others aren't, where we each may get exactly two lives, etc., etc.
It is worse than that. ~H includes all sorts of hypotheses where some of us are immortal and others aren't, where we each may get exactly two lives, etc., etc.
js,
- My H has, indeed, morphed.
- I morphed it so as to make (or, try to make) the conclusion more direct. I morphed H because I believed that I needed more justification for claiming that the scientific model was wrong than I did for claiming that OOFLam was wrong. I didn't think that I needed anymore justification for OOFLam being wrong.
Mojo,You started with H being a specific hypothesis under which you are mortal and your current existence is possible but unlikely, and this meant that ~H was all other hypotheses including all other hypotheses under which you are mortal. This meant that disproving H couldn't prove that you are immortal. By "morphing" H you have avoided this problem, but substituted another.
You now have ~H including only hypotheses under which you are immortal, but H is now a hypothesis that doesn't really say anything about how likely your existence is, because while it includes scenarios under which your current existence is very unlikely, it also includes scenarios under which your existence is certain, so your argument fails again. If you are going to "morph" H in this way, you also need to "morph" the rest of your argument.
Mojo,
- This is a very curvy road we're traveling. My claim is that you are missing some of the turns...
- In this case, I'd say that you made a turn you shouldn't have. Many of us could be quite mortal. In the following, wherever the word "some" occurs allows for mortality -- it's just that, in my opinion, the prior probabilities of those particular versions of ~H are very small.
1.1. Re P(E|~H):
1.1.1. The probability (“likelihood”) of E given ~H, involves several specific hypothetical possibilities.
1.1.1.1. That only some of us have but one finite life.
1.1.1.2. That we each have numerous finite lives.
1.1.1.3. That only some of us have numerous finite lives.
1.1.1.4. That we each have an infinity of finite lives.
1.1.1.5. That only some of us have an infinity of finite lives.
1.1.1.6. That we each have an infinite life.
1.1.1.7. That only some of us have an infinite life.
1.1.1.8. That time isn’t what we think it is (to be explained).
1.1.1.9. Some other explanation.