Is "Person 2"'s claim have a slightly higher probability of being correct due to the number of eye witnesses they claim are available? I'm just talking about the claim on its own, without doing further investigation like questioning the witnesses or any other analysis. — coolguy8472
Person 1 Claim: "I won the lottery, my friend saw the ticket and can confirm"
Person 2 Claim: "I won the lottery, 10 people were saw the ticket and can confirm" — coolguy8472
First, the only way we could establish that the number of witnesses testifying to something implies that it has a greater probability of being the case would be if we had a large set of data showing, for multiple scenarios, that there is some correlation to how many witnesses there are relative to whether something turned out to be the case, where the latter was checked via independent means. — Terrapin Station
Even with the frequentist data, however, there would still be a number of problems to overcome. That's because there are so many different variables that can come into play. Making a probability claim on this sort of frequentist data implies that we're parsing the witnesses as ideal--no sort of bias, no sort of hidden agenda, no perceptual problems, ideally intelligent and rational, etc., and it also implies that we're assuming they have a more or less ideal access to information. Otherwise there would be no way to establish that the correlation is implicational, and that's what you'd be looking for here. — Terrapin Station
Person 1 Claim: "I won the lottery, my friend saw the ticket and can confirm"
Person 2 Claim: "I won the lottery, 10 people were saw the ticket and can confirm" — coolguy8472
What got me thinking about it was accessing biblical accounts of miracles that claim many eyewitnesses and wondering if the claim of more eyewitnesses adds any credibility to the claim or not. — coolguy8472
There no difference, because in both cases it is just a claim that YOU are making. If it's a lie, it's just a somewhat bigger lie to claim 10 people have confirmed.
On the other hand, if 10 people actually tell me they saw your winning ticket, that increases the epistemic probability to me that you actually won. — Relativist
That was my non-supernatural example. What got me thinking about it was accessing biblical accounts of miracles that claim many eyewitnesses and wondering if the claim of more eyewitnesses adds any credibility to the claim or not. — coolguy8472
That's even worse, because the author of Matthew was not even an eyewitness. He's just passing along hearsay.Just cause Matthew says so and so many people saw miracle X, doesn't mean they did. — NKBJ
While fdrake has already provided a fairly in-depth post on the value of multiple accounts, for most everyday examples it seems fairly self-evident that multiple witnesses increase the probability of the event having occurred. It's unlikely that multiple people hallucinate similar observations. — Echarmion
Basically you're restating the common belief that witnesses matter re probability of something being the case. I'm aware of the belief. I addressed. You didn't address anything I said. You're just restating the status quo. — Terrapin Station
Your argument is that we'd need a large set of data. — Echarmion
showing, for multiple scenarios, that there is some correlation to how many witnesses there are relative to whether something turned out to be the case, where the latter was checked via independent means. — Terrapin Station
Is "Person 2"'s claim have a slightly higher probability of being correct due to the number of eye witnesses they claim are available? — coolguy8472
conversely someone is more likely to have actually won the lottery and not be mistaken if more people look at the ticket can confirm it. — coolguy8472
But it seems to me that if someone were trying to be dishonest, they would choose to be as convincing as possible making P(Person 2 did not win the lottery | Person 2 is not being truthful) > P(Person 1 did not win the lottery | Person 1 is not being truthful) for the same reason why someone who bluffs in poker might bet more if it's their goal to deceive others. — coolguy8472
Not in the least. The sole arbiter is the issuing authority of the lottery, whether a country or a state or a church group. No number of non-arbiters, no matter how large, can confirm a win. If a thousand people see your winning ticket, the lottery authority can always claim machine error. Here is a real life case. https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2017/12/28/574070736/how-the-glitch-stole-christmas-s-c-lottery-says-error-caused-winning-tickets — fishfry
Unless of course the ticket is fake or otherwise invalid. No amount of witnesses will modify that probability. — Echarmion
But it's harder to find 10 people willing to lie for you than it's to find 2, so even if they were willing to forge more evidence, the evidence still increases the probability of them being truthful. You can always construct reasons to not consider any single piece of evidence convincing, but it's still evidence and you still need to take it into account. — Echarmion
Except we don't know if the 10 people exists when considering the probability. They could just being saying there are 10 people that can verify and are making it up. That's the part I'm tripped up on the most: determining the likelihood that someone is being untruthful then the probability that they would make a claim like "1 other person can verify" versus "10 other people can verify" if their goal is to be as convincing as possible. — coolguy8472
Oh, the scenario was supposed to be just a claim? Well in that case the answer is that a statement alleging more witnesses is less likely to be true, by virtue of alleging extra facts. For a reasonable number of witnesses, the probability of the statements is roughly identical and only depends on the likelihood the person is lying in the first place. — Echarmion
Even with the frequentist data, however, there would still be a number of problems to overcome. That's because there are so many different variables that can come into play. Making a probability claim on this sort of frequentist data implies that we're parsing the witnesses as ideal--no sort of bias, no sort of hidden agenda, no perceptual problems, ideally intelligent and rational, etc., and it also implies that we're assuming they have a more or less ideal access to information. Otherwise there would be no way to establish that the correlation is implicational, and that's what you'd be looking for here. — Terrapin Station
I would have thought the more witnesses with consistent answers adds credibility. Assuming honesty and the existence of the witnesses in order for them to be mistaken every witness has to be wrong. The likelihood of all witnesses being wrong approaches 0 with the more witnesses you have. — coolguy8472
Do people correctly apply more likelihood of the event being true when introducing more facts like that? Whether the person expects to be fact checked, how disprovable the facts are, and how intelligent the person is all pay a factor too. — coolguy8472
A naked claim is more likely than one with added details (such as alleged additional witnesses) because every detail is also an additional claim. — Echarmion
In the P("I own a car") > P("I own a red car") sense yeah.
More detail can increase the likelihood too like:
P("I own a red car given that I own something that's red, it makes noise, and has lights on it") > P("I own a red car")
But the original scenario is different than that example because we're dealing with claims and not "givens". — coolguy8472
But the original scenario is different than that example because we're dealing with claims and not "givens". But I'm thinking often times we can see that a statement is more likely to be true when it's claimed versus when it's not claimed if we can determine that it's more likely to not be fabricated. Maybe an example of that would be if I forgot what day of the week it was and asked someone then they told me "Wednesday", then that should raise the probability of it being "Wednesday" from 1 in 7 to something pretty close to 100% even though all that's changed is the introduction of someone else claiming it's Wednesday. — coolguy8472
My guess is that that in a lottery where the odds are 1 in a billion:
P(Person 1 won the lottery given they claimed "I won the lottery, my friend saw the ticket and can confirm") = 1%
P(Person 2 won the lottery given they claimed "I won the lottery, my friend saw the ticket and can confirm") = 1.01% — coolguy8472
But none of that should detract from the fact that g together with h are synonymous with empirical knowledge + empirical assumptions ; for whatever we are ignorant about can play no role in our predictions or calculations. — sime
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.