Jabba
Philosopher
- Joined
- Feb 23, 2012
- Messages
- 5,613
-From Chp V, #3198, Jay is in red:
Fatal flaw 3: You don't know what the parts of a statistical inference are, how to formulate them, or what they do in an inference.
Quote:
It is evidence similar to “opportunity” in a murder trial in that it can be totally meaningless if other conditions are not met.
This is the concept of circumstantial evidence that you introduced as part of your Shroud thread. We conducted an entirely separate thread to investigate the nature of circumstantial evidence, in which your theory of it was entirely refuted. And further, as we discussed in relation to your rigged-lottery example, you don't understand the fundamental difference between possibility and evidence.
- I'll skip this one, as evidence for flaw is just claimed -- it is not provided.
Fatal flaw 3: You don't know what the parts of a statistical inference are, how to formulate them, or what they do in an inference.
Quote:
It is evidence similar to “opportunity” in a murder trial in that it can be totally meaningless if other conditions are not met.
This is the concept of circumstantial evidence that you introduced as part of your Shroud thread. We conducted an entirely separate thread to investigate the nature of circumstantial evidence, in which your theory of it was entirely refuted. And further, as we discussed in relation to your rigged-lottery example, you don't understand the fundamental difference between possibility and evidence.
- I'll skip this one, as evidence for flaw is just claimed -- it is not provided.
