No it doesn't. It requires a definition of determinism that implies prediction-making.That's not true. When you predict that something will happen, and it does, this does not mean that the thing is deterministic. This conclusion would require a further premise which states that something can only be predicted if it's deterministic. — Metaphysician Undercover
Chance and probabilities are ideas in the mind that relate to our lack of knowledge of some system. When we use these terms, we are emphasizing that we don't fully understand the causal relationships, or that the causal relationships are too complex, or there is too much information involved for our minds to make predictions about. This is one purpose that we have given computers - create simulations with massive amounts of information of causal relationships so that we may better predict the behavior of hurricanes.Neither is this true. Minds can predict things which are not deterministic by many different means, like chance, by some system of statistics and probabilities, or through vagueness in terms . I can predict the outcome of a coin toss. If I am right, I've successfully made the prediction. I can also predict that if I flip the coin 100 times half will be heads and half tails. If the score is 51 to 49 I can employ vagueness to claim that it's close enough to count as half and half, therefore my prediction was correct. For a prediction to be correct, it is not required that the thing predicted is deterministic, nor that the thing follows any logical pattern, it only requires a successful strategy by the predictor. — Metaphysician Undercover
No it doesn't. It requires a definition of determinism that implies prediction-making. — Harry Hindu
Predictions can only be made if occurrences that we observe are consistently determined by prior causes. — Harry Hindu
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