Dave and others,
- Here's what I think. Maybe, this organization will help us to identify our exact disagreements -- which I think would be very useful.
1. According to modern science, we each should have only one finite life to live, at most -- "OOFLam."
2. The "we each" to which I refer is the sense of self that we all, apparently, have.
3. Most scientists would include "at most" because they don't think that any of us ever had to exist.
4. Under that hypothesis, my current existence is EXTREMELY unlikely.
5. But here I am!
6. Given the "right" conditions, the fact that I do currently exist is EXTREMELY strong evidence that OOFLam is wrong.
7. Often, however, all of the alternative possible results/events produced by the particular situation are extremely unlikely -- in such a case, the unlikelihood of the particular event produced is not evidence against the hypothesis.
8. In such a case, in order to be evidence against the hypothesis, the particular event needs to be "set apart" from most of the other possible results in a way that is meaningful to the particular hypothesis. A good example is when a lottery is won by the second cousin of the lottery controller.
9. Consequently, in order for my current existence to be evidence against OOFLam, I need to be set apart in a way meaningful to OOFLam.
10. That is the case.
- I think that we disagree to some extent in regard to #4 (you may not agree with the extent to which I think I am unlikely) and totally in regard to #10 (you figure that I am not meaningfully set apart from most other existing selves.)