People want to believe in doomsday hypotheses?This seems so obvious to me, so I'm not sure why so many people believe in the doomsday hypothesis - am I missing something? — Fuzzball Baggins
Up to a point demography is very accurate: that is when you make estimates going two three decades from now. This is obvious as the population that makes babies is already around.The problem with this hypothesis to my mind, is that human beings are not probable. We are wildly improbable. — karl stone
The problem with this hypothesis to my mind, is that human beings are not probable. We are wildly improbable.
— karl stone
Up to a point demography is very accurate: that is when you make estimates going two three decades from now. This is obvious as the population that makes babies is already around.
The false "inescapability" of the Malthusian predictions is a case study of the dangers of simple logic and simple mathematical models when modeling extremely complicated issues. Extrapolation goes only so far. — ssu
The biggest problem, and this creeps up all the time, in all sorts of guises, is that people are using phrases like "likelihood" in situations where all it really amounts to is "making shit up based on your psychological biases." — Terrapin Station
Say what? What likelihood that I believe exists? — Terrapin Station
"that people are using phrases like "likelihood" in situations where all it really amounts to is "making shit up based on your psychological biases." — Terrapin Station
Well, even if Malthus obviously contributed a lot, there was going on a revolution in agriculture in England, so he could have perhaps seen something down the road. Yet the scientific and technological advances starting from the 1930's surely wasn't apparent back then. Just how much productivity can grow is extremely difficult to predict.but Malthus could not have foreseen the development of agricultural science and technologies that allowed us to transcend his gloomy logic trap. — karl stone
"that people are using phrases like "likelihood" in situations where all it really amounts to is "making shit up based on your psychological biases." — Janus
I mean you can't know what people's psychological motivations are — Janus
But that's not a likelihood statement. — Terrapin Station
What I know is that all they can be doing is making shit up based on their psychological biases in making likelihood statements of this sort. There's nothing else to be had. There's nothing else they can be doing. — Terrapin Station
You don't come right out and say that it is likely that when "people use phrases like "likelihood" in certain situations "all it really amounts to is making shit up based on your psychological biases." But since you can't know that, then it appears likely that what your statement "really amounts to is making shit up based on your psychological biases." — Janus
So you don't know you are wrong, but it's not likely (according to you replete with all your psychological biases), right? — Janus
Again, I know that I'm not wrong. — Terrapin Station
Is it possible that I'm wrong? Sure. — Terrapin Station
So you don't know you are wrong, but it's not likely (according to you replete with all your psychological biases), right? — Janus
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