Suppose I win the powerball lottery with a single ticket. The odds of this are 1 in 292,201,338. If I win, isn't it more reasonable to doubt reality than to assume that I actually won the lottery against such enormous odds? — Josh
Just as the existence of a fake reality is generally considered unlikely, it is also unlikely that your trustworthy friend Aleksey would mislead you. Nevertheless, your first instinct might be to believe that Aleksey is mistaken, rather than to believe that you are a Powerball winner, since it is logical for you to favor the least unlikely explanation for the unlikely events that have occurred. — Josh
But Good Luck tends to reinforce the ideology that existed at the time it happened. and subsequently assumed that they must be loved by God Almighty. — Mongrel
Winning the Powerball would be proof that solipsism is wrong.. see what I mean? — Mongrel
Unlikely things happen pretty regularly. Just think of all the events that had to go just so in order for you to be born at all. As a friend of mine explains: 'Just by being born, everybody is a lottery winner.' — Mongrel
Does being extremely lucky justify metaphysical solipsism?
Suppose I win the powerball lottery with a single ticket. The odds of this are 1 in 292,201,338. If I win, isn't it more reasonable to doubt reality than to assume that I actually won the lottery against such enormous odds?
Why do the most successful people not have serious doubts about the existence of other minds? If I am Bill Gates, why wouldn't I find it more reasonable that other minds don't exist than that I have actually succeeded at earning more money than every other person in the U.S.?
Isn't it more reasonable to assume that reality and other people don't exist than to imagine that I actually won the powerball jackpot?
Is there any philosophical work that grapples with this question? I know that solipsism has been discussed in great length by many philosophers, but has this specific question ever been dealt with? If so, I would love to read about it.
Thanks. — Josh
The odds of this are 1 in 292,201,338. If I win, isn't it more reasonable to doubt reality than to assume that I actually won the lottery against such enormous odds? — Josh
The most reasonable thing would be to doubt that odds of that sort imply that one can't win. — Terrapin Station
Is that a hyperbole? Because there is a chance but a slim one. — intrapersona
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