I haven’t been saying this is probably the last generation — AJJ
This shows how unlikely it is that we’ll ever expand out into the galaxy, since it would mean we’re all part of a tiny fraction of all humans, rather than the other huge group. Instead it stands to reason that we’re at the top of graph 2’s curve. — AJJ
P(T1) = 1/15
P(T2) = 2/15
P(T3) = 1/5
P(T4) = 4/15
P(T5) = 1/3
So, if we have to bet on a time then betting on T5 gives us the best odds. This is where I agree with AJJ. However, given that P(T1-T4) = 2/3, it's most likely not T5. This is where I disagree with AJJ.
And, as I said before, there's no circular reasoning here, and it's the same reasoning as used in the case of which time period we're living in (it's just "people being born at time" rather than "balls being given out at time"). — Michael
I’m not sure it raises the chances of being a Boltzmann brain, since for that to be likely the universe would need to have had a much longer past that it’s commonly (to my knowledge) said to have had.
And it seems to me it’s not actually possible for you (anyone) to have been anyone else, since obviously you’d not be you then. I don’t see why you being you makes it likely that everyone else is a zombie, rather than everyone else just being the particular conscious person they are. — AJJ
But it seems to me that it should make a difference that it's possible that not all balls are in the game. The chance that there is one red ball is 100% (as we have been given a ball, so it must be at least T1). The chance that orange balls are in the game must be less than 100%, since it could still be T2. Similarly, the chance that there are yellow balls in the game must be less than 100%. Doesn't the probability that each "stage" of the game has already happened decrease linearly? — Echarmion
I don't know which room I am in, but I am more likely to be in room 1-4 than in room 5. — Echarmion
If you agree with AJJ's take on the basic probabilities, then do you also agree that we can somehow deduce the timing of humanity's demise based on just the information outlined in the thought experiment? — Echarmion
No. — Michael
I agree with that if there are more people in rooms 1 - 4 than there are in 5. — Michael
I don’t think either is OK, since we can’t be anyone else. The thought experiment involves abstracting yourself from history then putting yourself back in randomly. We find that the last generation is the most likely one for us to wind up in, so that’s what makes sense for us to think, even though it’s not unlikely we’re somewhere else. — AJJ
Ok, so this is how I think the probabilities look when we don't know what "stage" we are in. Since we don't have information on the length of the stages, we should assume we are equally likely to be in each one.
T1: 1/5
R: 1/1 -> 1/5 — Echarmion
Denoting by N the total number of humans who were ever or will ever be born, the Copernican principle suggests that any one human is equally likely (along with the other N − 1 humans) to find themselves at any position n of the total population N, so humans assume that our fractional position f = n/N is uniformly distributed on the interval [0, 1] prior to learning our absolute position.
f is uniformly distributed on (0, 1) even after learning of the absolute position n. That is, for example, there is a 95% chance that f is in the interval (0.05, 1), that is f > 0.05. In other words, we could assume that we could be 95% certain that we would be within the last 95% of all the humans ever to be born. If we know our absolute position n, this implies an upper bound for N obtained by rearranging n/N > 0.05 to give N < 20n.
If Leslie's figure is used, then 60 billion humans have been born so far, so it can be estimated that there is a 95% chance that the total number of humans N will be less than 20 × 60 billion = 1.2 trillion. Assuming that the world population stabilizes at 10 billion and a life expectancy of 80 years, it can be estimated that the remaining 1140 billion humans will be born in 9120 years.
The a posteriori observation that extinction level events are rare could be offered as evidence that the DA's predictions are implausible; typically, extinctions of a dominant species happens less often than once in a million years. Therefore, it is argued that human extinction is unlikely within the next ten millennia. (Another probabilistic argument, drawing a different conclusion than the DA.)
In Bayesian terms, this response to the DA says that our knowledge of history (or ability to prevent disaster) produces a prior marginal for N with a minimum value in the trillions. If N is distributed uniformly from 1012 to 1013, for example, then the probability of N < 1,200 billion inferred from n = 60 billion will be extremely small. This is an equally impeccable Bayesian calculation, rejecting the Copernican principle on the grounds that we must be 'special observers' since there is no likely mechanism for humanity to go extinct within the next hundred thousand years.
Well it’s how the argument I’ve been making goes. — AJJ
This shows how unlikely it is that we’ll ever expand out into the galaxy, since it would mean we’re all part of a tiny fraction of all humans, rather than the other huge group. Instead it stands to reason that we’re at the top of graph 2’s curve. — AJJ
That's wrong. When the experimenter is deciding who to give the red ball to at T1 there's only a 1/15 chance that he picks me. Therefore there's a 1/15 chance that when he gives me a ball it's red, and so a 1/15 chance that when he gives me a ball it's T1. — Michael
The Doomsday argument is an interesting one to consider: — Michael
Uh, what do you mean "who to give the ball"? It was never mentioned that the balls are distributed among 15 people. This is all based on the assumption that you get one ball out of a pool of 15 balls.
Given that whether or not the other 14 balls are lying in a box somewhere or in the hands of 14 other people is irrelevant from the perspective of the "player", I also don't see how you arrive at different probabilities here. If it's T1 and you have a ball, the ball must be red. It's not possible for it to be T1 and the red ball being in some other person's hands, because you have a ball. — Echarmion
While the argument is mathematically different, it's the same kind of statistical analysis. So the same criticism would apply: how could we generate information (in the form of a probability) about the end of humanity based on the input information? — Echarmion
That's not quite how the argument goes. If we exited history and then randomly re-entered it, we might indeed be justified in reasoning we'd enter somewhere nearer the end of humanity. But the argument had been whether or not probability theory tells us there is an increased probability we are close to the end right now. — Echarmion
Well it’s how the argument I’ve been making goes. — AJJ
In memory of the discussion we had a while back on the Sleeping Beauty problem, say you're going to be put to sleep. A scientist will select one of the coloured balls at random. If it's red then you'll be woken on Monday; if it's orange you'll be woken on Tuesday; and so on.
Before you're put to sleep you're asked about the probability that you will be woken on Monday. That probability is 1/15. You're put to sleep and then woken up on your randomly selected day. What's the probability that it's Monday? It's still the same 1/15 it was before you were put to sleep. — Michael
It's described in the argument:
"If Leslie's figure is used, then 60 billion humans have been born so far, so it can be estimated that there is a 95% chance that the total number of humans N will be less than 20 × 60 billion = 1.2 trillion. Assuming that the world population stabilizes at 10 billion and a life expectancy of 80 years, it can be estimated that the remaining 1140 billion humans will be born in 9120 years" — Michael
The Doomsday argument is an interesting one to consider:
Denoting by N the total number of humans who were ever or will ever be born, the Copernican principle suggests that any one human is equally likely (along with the other N − 1 humans) to find themselves at any position n of the total population N, so humans assume that our fractional position f = n/N is uniformly distributed on the interval [0, 1] prior to learning our absolute position.
f is uniformly distributed on (0, 1) even after learning of the absolute position n. That is, for example, there is a 95% chance that f is in the interval (0.05, 1), that is f > 0.05. In other words, we could assume that we could be 95% certain that we would be within the last 95% of all the humans ever to be born. If we know our absolute position n, this implies an upper bound for N obtained by rearranging n/N > 0.05 to give N < 20n.
If Leslie's figure is used, then 60 billion humans have been born so far, so it can be estimated that there is a 95% chance that the total number of humans N will be less than 20 × 60 billion = 1.2 trillion. Assuming that the world population stabilizes at 10 billion and a life expectancy of 80 years, it can be estimated that the remaining 1140 billion humans will be born in 9120 years. — Michael
Simply put, the fact that we're more likely to pick 2019 from graph 2 than from graph 1 is countered by the fact that an extinction level event in the near future isn't very likely.
Sometimes physical possibility trumps a mathematical puzzle. — Michael
Well, for Presentism and neo-Kantianism, the probability of living now is one :)
From the standard realist perspective, averaging over all possible futures that are consistent with current cosmological information makes the probability of living at this moment of time vanishingly small, i.e. under-determined but convergent towards zero. — sime
What I want to illustrate is that, if the pool of balls is not fixed in advance, the probabilities can change quite drastically. In such a case, merely assuming to have drawn from the largest group is mistaken. This is the case for the argument made in this thread. There is no "experimenter" that knows the sequence in advance and has assigned you a slot in the history of humankind. You simply know you "drew" a slot, but not whether or not the pool is limited. In that situation, you need further information. — Echarmion
Still, the mathematical puzzle is interesting. I think it's worth the discussion. The physical facts do not apply to the puzzle itself — Mind Dough
In that case your conclusions on the first page:
This shows how unlikely it is that we’ll ever expand out into the galaxy, since it would mean we’re all part of a tiny fraction of all humans, rather than the other huge group. Instead it stands to reason that we’re at the top of graph 2’s curve.
— AJJ
Don't follow from your argument. — Echarmion
If you’re plucked out of a history that ends with us having colonised the galaxy and put back in randomly, it’s highly unlikely you’ll wind up in this tiny segment of the total population. It’s therefore unlikely that (space colonisation) is going to happen. — AJJ
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