Sleeping Beauty, Doomsday, etc. — SophistiCat
Though debates about these frequently seem just as intractable as those around theism. Answers to these problems rely so heavily on your basic epistemological stance that it's hard to make a convincing case to someone who doesn't have the same background. — Echarmion
One of my hobbies (or obsessions) is to debate theists on their Fine Tuning Argument for God — Relativist
Awhile back, someone on this forum posted a link to this paper: The Fine Tuning Argument. The author (Klaas Landsman) argues that the existence of life is not a good reason to infer either a designer OR a multiverse. — Relativist
Who says life can't adopt as many different forms as existent universes? Maybe life can exist in many possible universes. The "laws" of physics are based on models of our universe, not every possible universe. — Enrique
small changes in the parameters of physics produce catastrophic changes in the evolved universe. In particular the complexity of the evolved universe, and hence its ability to support life, would be undermined by small changes in the universal constants... Thus, parameter sensitivity is the claim that the target in parameter space which is compatible with a complex universe is small in some sense. — RAW Bradford, The inevitability of fine tuning in a complex universe, 2011
This seems similar to the "luck" of our improbable existence that is the result of the (presumed) low probability fact that the structure of the universe happens to be life permitting.
Thoughts? — Relativist
Sure, the denominator of the probability is still finite - but it's so large that it makes it surprising that any actual person is alive. On the other hand, it's imminently reasonable that SOME people exist. This is the tension. It's erroneous to apply this to individuals to "prove" they shouldn't be expected to exist, because we should expect SOME people to exist.
In terms of the FTA, life (or intelligent life) is one sort of existent, but there infinitely many sorts of existent. So IMO the analogy holds.
I'm wondering if this can be described mathematically. — Relativist
Not actually true: https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/annual-flu-reports — I like sushi
The deliberate element was what threw me off as how can one do something deliberate if they are not given a second choice? That is, having patience isn't something you can practice because nature forces you to wait, you have no other options. However, it is the reaction and the emotions you feel in moments where great patience is asked of you. — Lecimetiere
We could say that John is lucky in some sense, but not in any analyzable sense. Therefore no meaningful conclusions can be drawn from it. This seems similar to the "luck" of our improbable existence that is the result of the (presumed) low probability fact that the structure of the universe happens to be life permitting. — Relativist
You could say Finland is prepared. While its neighbors are scrambling, the country is sitting on an enviable stockpile of medical supplies dating to the 1950s. It includes personal protective equipment like face masks, but also oils, grains and agricultural tools.
Finland is now tapping into this supply for the first time since World War II, positioning the country strongly to confront the coronavirus. — The New York Times
Either way, if so, why claim to be retreating to syntax? — bongo fury
Trouble is, a unicorn can be the first but not the second. — bongo fury
Furthermore, It is objective because it is rooted in our human nature as intelligent social creatures. Mankind forms and lives in societies - and these societies require morality as spoken of above. — iam1me
Based upon all this I would argue there is, in fact, Objective Morality — iam1me
How does it implies the existence of anything? Premise 2 simply says that for any x, if x should be done, then x can be done. It doesn't even imply that there is something that should be done, nor that there is something that can be done. It is simply a universally quantified conditional sentence, without existential implications. — Nicholas Ferreira
I got it from "Proof of Free Will", by Michael Huemer. — Nicholas Ferreira
But fewer people would care about the paper if it didn't suggest (with plausible deniability in that typical academic way) that it has something to say about time irreversibility of physical/natural trajectories as opposed to time irreversibility of numerical algorithms representing them. — fdrake
The main idea of our experiment is the following. Each triple system has a certain escape time, which is the time it takes for the triple to break up into a permanent and unbound binary-single configuration. Given a numerical accuracy, , there is also a tracking time, which is the time that the numerical solution is still close to the physical trajectory that is connected to the initial condition. If the tracking time is shorter than the escape time, then the numerical solution has diverged from the physical solution, and as a consequence, it has become time irreversible.
Explain what you mean by "which is, in a technical sense, reversible". Please provide a reference. — jgill
"In mathematics, a dynamical system is time-reversible if the forward evolution is one-to-one" — jgill
There could be a thread on the concept of time-reversibility. There seems to be a slight conflation here between forward and backward dynamics. — jgill
Infinity is something else. Somewhere, in the number pi, are all the phrases you have uttered during your life and, moreover, in the same order in which they were uttered. A little further on, there are all the books that disappeared because of the burning of the Library of Alexandria. In another place, there are all the speeches that Demosthenes gave and that he never wrote, but with the letters inverted, as in a mirror. Yes, the conception of what is infinite is too vast for me to grasp well in finite examples. — Borraz
I'm not clear about this. I've always assumed (and I could be very mistaken) that "time reversibility" is just a quirk arising when describing a physical process using mathematics. The two are not the same.
"And they have shown that the problem is not with the simulations after all."
Well, they're doing computer simulations in an environment of exceptional chaotic behavior. So I don't know what to think about reversing the actions. — jgill
As a concrete application of our result, we consider three black holes, each of a million solar masses, and initially separated from each other by roughly one parsec. Such a configuration is not uncommon among supermassive black holes in the concordance model of cosmology and hierarchical galaxy formation... [W]e estimate that the closest approach between any two black holes is on average between 10-2.5 and 10-2 parsec, during which the Newtonian approximation still holds. A parsec equals 1051 Planck lengths. Hence... we estimate that up to 5 percent of triples with zero angular momentum are irreversible up to the Planck length, thus rendering them fundamentally unpredictable. — Boekholt et al.
Treated separately by who? Stephen Hawkings nor my Physics Professor ever said that there were not absolute points in space. — christian2017
I'm currently reading Einstein's book called "Relativity". It will probably take me 2 years to read that book. — christian2017
Also in the paragraphs where he accuses the Jews for their demonic power of hatred towards the Russians in particular and Humanity in general? Do you enjoy these paragraphs? Also in the poems in which he manifests a doglike submission to the divine presence of the Tsar? — David Mo
Can aesthetic pleasure silence moral outrage? — David Mo
I found Blindness by José Saramago to be the most terrifying thing I have ever read.
Its perfect logic sticks to everything I wonder about. — Valentinus
The problem is different for me: How can a rational man enjoy the writings of a fanatical believer in God and the Czar, such as Dostoevsky? Can aesthetic pleasure be separated from ideological fanaticism? — David Mo
Because the OP does not specify an axiomatic system but describes the problem essentially in Euclidean geometry. — boethius
Note the outer corner points seem to generate a line as n increases, but is the eventual line entirely composed of a countable set of points? How can this be? — jgill
maybe we're interested in investigating the corners and want to deal with what happens when, trying to take the limit of shrinkifying the stair lengths, essentially every point becomes non-differentiable (that the object is "only corners", or at least all the rational points are defined as corners or some kind of scheme like this; may or may not be of interest to people here). — boethius
This is exactly what I explain in the sentence you reference. If in some time frame of interest (such as "until now"), the data fits an exponential growth curve, scientists will say "it is growing exponentially". — boethius
Does this satisfy your doubts that the scientific community describes things as growing exponentially if, in some time frame their interested in, the phenomena does grow exponentially? — boethius