Maybe so, but the number of people who believe something, of course, has nothing to do with whether it's true or not. And in defense of my point, I believe something like 30% of scientists believe in God, which would constitute "many". And there is research going on in the areas I talked about, and certainly not every scientist doing the research is convinced in a materialistic explanation.
Yes, my wife accurately (or at least talked about) a rare event that then happened twice just hours later.
Not as impressive as the N.M. plates, but another "hit" for my wife.
I see what you're saying here, but it doesn't ring true.
Running into my old therapist, while I happen to be going through an identical crisis, is exceedingly strange, and while there are other "strange" events that could also fit the bill, none would carry the relevance that has, and nothing else strange happened that day.
If you rolled a six-sided die and got 66666666666666666666666666666666's, you would certainly attach meaning to the event, after it happened.
You would, rightly, conclude the die is loaded.
We attach meaning to events after they happen all the time.
Take the fine-tuning problem in physics. The values of the physical constants are what they are. Yet they are so exceedingly coincidental that multiverse theory is invoked to explain it away. This is a perfect example of meaning being attached to an event after it's already happened.
When very strange results are obtained (like a supposedly RNG that spits out 3.14, or someone winning a lottery ten times in a row), explanations have to be offered. The stranger the result, the less likely the "chance" hypothesis is true.
Not at all. If I roll 10 ordinary fair dice and get 3.141592653, I'm going to conclude someone messed with the dice.
I'm sure it does, but let me ask you what you would conclude if everyone in the room (50 people) all had the same birthday? I would not believe it was chance, as the odds of that being true are astronomically low. Would you believe it was chance?
You didn't talk about a belief in God, you professed that many scientists believed in non-materialistic explanations for phenomena such as poltergeists.
I'm glad you modified that statement because you're right, your wife didn't make a prediction, if how you've described events is accurate.
Is it, though? What time-span would such an event need to occur on in order to count as a "hit"?
Indeed. It can be difficult to see these things from the inside.
So you do at least agree, then, that you would have found this significant had it occurred at any point during your current crisis? What period of time are we talking, if that's information you're willing to share? Days, certainly. Maybe weeks.
I would certainly think it unlikely, but I would attach no more significance to it than that. It's just as likely as any other combination.
[emphasis added]New Mexico is several states away from California. Carlsbad, which she also talked about (and I saw a few days later), is about three hours from where I live. Not as impressive as the N.M. plates, but another "hit" for my wife.
There is ONE state - Arizona - between New Mexico and California. I would be surprised NOT to see any New Mexico license plates in California.New Mexico is several states away from California. Carlsbad, which she also talked about (and I saw a few days later), is about three hours from where I live. Not as impressive as the N.M. plates, but another "hit" for my wife.
You can't say you're rolling fair dice but they're not fair. That doesn't make any sense. (And, as someone else pointed out, it's impossible to get anything but a whole number as a result when rolling dice, unless they are very strange dice.)Not at all. If I roll 10 ordinary fair dice and get 3.141592653, I'm going to conclude someone messed with the dice. Don't tell me you would assume they were fair dice after getting a result like that. You wouldn't, would you?
I would believe it could be chance. Things that have astronomically low odds of occurring happen all the time.I'm sure it does, but let me ask you what you would conclude if everyone in the room (50 people) all had the same birthday? I would not believe it was chance, as the odds of that being true are astronomically low. Would you believe it was chance?
LOL! A six-sided die that rolls 6666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666
is loaded. You would have to be an idiot to believe the die was fair after those rolls. What you're not getting is that, while every possible outcome is just as likely, not every possible outcome is just as significant. I'll give you an example:
Suppose we take two six-sided dice and roll them 20 times.
Die 1: 23261325131114314556
Die 2: 66666666666666666666
Is it your claim that we can't conclude anything about die 2? Absurd! Die 2 is obviously loaded for 6's, even thought a bunch of 6's is just as likely as a bunch of 1's, 2's, and so on.
You, yourself, cite them as coincidences then say it's hard to see them as coincidences. So which is it.And a few more coincidences have happened:
<You cite some examples>
I'm having a hard time chalking up what happened to coincidence.
Yes, it would. But I'd like to see a cite for the 30% number.And in defense of my point, I believe something like 30% of scientists believe in God, which would constitute "many".
No it's not. It's just one state away.New Mexico is several states away from California.
True. Ian Stevenson comes to mind. Same with some doctors who have studied NDE's and Deathbed Visions. Ditto some parapsychologists I've read about. I could probably list 100 names, if you pressed me on it, but then we end up quibbling over what "many" means.
If 30% of scientists believe in in God, then right there, you have "many" scientists who aren't materialists, unless they had the very peculiar belief that God is made of matter.
Quibble.
If someone said I should ask for a sign, and I did, and I asked the person, "what kind of signs do you get?", and they talked about car accidents, and I got into two car accidents hours later, I would be equally flabbergasted, although, technically, no prediction was made.
That's like asking "how much money do you have to have to be rich?" The fact that it happened hours after we talked about it is significant. To me, at least.
Right, but I reject your explanation on rational grounds. I don't go around looking for signs. Meeting someone I haven't met for over a decade is always noteworthy, and it just happens to be the person who helped me over this crisis that I'm currently going through? I don't believe it's an example of apophenia. It was a rare event and very meaningful. Such events need to be explained.
One week, so far. If I ran into the guy a month from now, I wouldn't think much of it. But running into him right after leaving the doctor's office, where I "prayed" to God to humor my doc? I'm not religious, but neither am I a strict atheist. If it's a coincidence, it's an extraordinarily unlikely one.
You would have to be an idiot to believe the die was fair after those rolls.
Is it your claim that we can't conclude anything about die 2?
Look, if you think we can't tell which one is loaded, then, please, start a thread on this in the science forum.
At what point in the sequence are you going to draw your conclusion?
If I roll one six, the odds are 1:6 against. I wouldn't consider one six, sans a prediction, to have any particular significance. But the situation doesn't change for the second six either. I've already rolled one, so the odds of rolling a six remain 1:6 and I shouldn't be surprised at the second either.
And so on.
The significance comes from recognizing a pattern and then seeing that "prediction" bear out. But we already suspect we are pattern biased, so we ought to be skeptical when the item under inspection seems to be generating the very pattern we wish to test.
Wouldn't I be nearly as justified making an assumption about the die if the pattern were: 66666166?
The real divergence comes when we depart from things like dice and try to move the method out into our everyday world. For dice, I am controlling all but one variable and I understand everything I feel I need to about dice. But outside of this artificial construct, I am left guessing at a thousand different things, things I do not know about how the world may be. These are the assumptions which pollute the experiment. The same results (a significant coincidence) can have a hundred different meanings to a hundred different people - not so with the dice.
And finally, one critical difference blares out at us - the matter of repeatability. I will gain confidence in my analysis of the dice by repeating the experiment, but these anecdotes about mysterious happenings around us are almost designed to be impossible to repeat. To my mind, this is the greatest flaw in the analogy.
You, yourself, cite them as coincidences then say it's hard to see them as coincidences. So which is it.
Yes, it would. But I'd like to see a cite for the 30% number.
No it's not. It's just one state away.
ETA: Oops, Elizabeth I beat me to the draw on that part.
Fudbucker,
First, I'm very sorry to hear that you have to deal with this rough patch. Second, I'm glad that you are dealing with it and you are using methods that have helped in the past. Third, thank you for being so forthcoming about this. It helps to understand where you are coming from.
Fourth, I think your definition of a coincidence is different from the definition of most of the posters in this thread. You said that if you just saw someone that you hadn't seen for a long time, that would be a coincidence, but because you ran into the therapist who helped you long ago and you ran into him at the exact moment you needed him and after you prayed for intervention, that's more than a coincidence. I think you are mistaken. The first example of you meeting someone that you hadn't seen in a while is just and event or a happenstance. The second example is when the meeting coincides with other events or thoughts. That's what makes it seem special and that's what makes it a coincidence (note that the roots of the words are the same).
There is a website called www.theoddsmustbecrazy.com which collects stories of coincidences. It's a skeptical site run by skeptics. The object is to show that amazing coincidences happen all the time. They are fun and cool, but ultimately they don't seem to mean much after the initial thrill of the reveal.
I would recommend that you submit your stories. I think you are currently in a position that makes you more vulnerable than you usually are to the power of coincidence. I think the stories of the coincidences that happened to a skeptic and how he reacted to them would make fascinating reading on that website.
Think about it.
And good luck with the therapy.
Ward
At the point where P(Loaded dice) rises above agnosticism. Again, this is on a probability continuum, on par with asking "how much money makes a person rich?"
Ask yourself: would you play craps with dice that rolled snake eyes ten times in a row, or would you move on to a different game? I don't think you would, because as the result becomes more improbable, the hypothesis of cheating increases. Just take it to it's logical conclusion: if a pair of dice rolled snake eyes 1,000 times in a row, no one on Earth would consider them fair.
To tie this back to the paranormal (and science in general), surprising results need to be explained. This could be a drug trial where 50% of the patients on an experimental drug go into remission, the values of physical constants that seem remarkably fine-tuned for a universe like ours to exist, or someone getting 75 out of 100 cards right on a Zener ESP test. In all cases, "chance" is a hypothesis, but after awhile, it stops being a "live" hypothesis.
For example: if someone got 100 out of 100 Zener cards right, no one would believe it was chance (well, maybe some here, but they would be wrong). They might believe it was cheating, but the "chance" hypothesis would go right out the door.
(additional, very good illustrations snipped for space)
One should always be skeptical, but a die that rolls six 20 times in a row should not be trusted to be fair. No one would ever bet on it, and I'm surprised I'm having to explain this.
But repeatability isn't everything. Let's say President Obama dreams a huge earthquake is going to strike Lima at 10:15 am, and tries to get the authorities to evacuate the city, and a huge earthquake hits Lima at 10:15 am. You might never be able to repeat something like that, but I'm betting a lot of your beliefs would be changed, if something like that happened. The "chance" hypothesis would be utterly blown out of the water.
For me, "many" would entail a sizeable percentage of scientists.
. Right, it just says a sizeable majority aren't strict materialists. Belief in God is belief in the supernatural, which was really my point.It says nothing about their opinion of poltergeists, etc.
It's actually a very important distinction.
In the OP you said that your wife said that the signs she gets are "mostly" in the form of licence plates, which means that there are other things which could have been taken as a sign.
You also say that she gets messages from licence plates which are from places other than New Mexico, meaning that there are other licence plates which could have been seen as signs.
In fact, your talk of a sticker being a sign establishes that you know there are signs other than New Mexico plates.
You said you saw the sticker 2 days after your wife mentioned the place.
Coincidence is a perfectly good explanation.
Nobody is disputing that. But unlikely things happen all the time. Million to one chances happen 7m times every day, because there are 7b people in the world. Every once in a while, you will be one of those 7m people.
I explicitly set out in the premises that the dice were fair. You can't alter the premises and still speak as if the example is the same.
As the die is fair we certainly cannot conclude that it's not fair.
We can tell that no die is loaded, because the fact that the dice are not loaded was explicitly stated in the premises of the example.