Sure.
The OP is based on a misapprehension of how physics deals with causation, and hence the argument fails.
But that will make no difference to its defenders, since the real point of this thread is to engage in mutual preening. — Banno
Sure.
The OP is based on a misapprehension of how physics deals with causation, and hence the argument fails.
But that will make no difference to its defenders, since the real point of this thread is to engage in mutual preening. — Banno
I disagree. — christian2017
Eternal inflation is a very funny joke - eternal is impossible in time - where eternal inflation takes place. Those nuts think infinity is possible - It's all finite. — Devans99
That has absolutely nothing to do with my probability calculation - have you read it? — Devans99
1. Start at 50%/50% for the unknown boolean question ‘is the universe a creation?’
2. Time has a start. 50% probability of a creator due to this gives: 50% + 50% * 25% = 75%
3. Universe is not in equilibrium 25% probability of a creator giving: 75% + 25% * 25% = 81%
4. Causality based arguments. 25% probability of a creator giving: 81% + 19% * 25% = 85%
5. Fine tuning 50% probability of a creator giving: 85% + 15% * 50% = 92%
6. Big Bang 25% probability of a creator giving: 92% + 8% * 25% = 94%
7. Aquinas 3rd argument, etc... — Devans99
1. Start at 50%/50% for the unknown boolean question ‘is the universe a creation?’
2. Time has a start. 50% probability of a creator due to this gives: 50% + 50% * 25% = 75%
3. Universe is not in equilibrium 25% probability of a creator giving: 75% + 25% * 25% = 81%
4. Causality based arguments. 25% probability of a creator giving: 81% + 19% * 25% = 85%
5. Fine tuning 50% probability of a creator giving: 85% + 15% * 50% = 92%
6. Big Bang 25% probability of a creator giving: 92% + 8% * 25% = 94%
7. Aquinas 3rd argument, etc... — Devans99
Indefinite Causal Order in a Quantum Switch (Goswami, Giarmatzi, Kewming, Costa, Branciard, Romero, White; APS; Aug 2018)
(also ... the Casimir effect, virtual particle pairs, quantum fluctuations, radioactive decay, spacetime foam/turbulence, the "pressure" of vacuum energy, Fomin's quantum cosmogenesis (successors), Krauss' relativistic quantum fields, ...) — jorndoe
No. (FYI, the link is the earliest reference in the literature I know of.) — jorndoe
I linked to the Stanford article on supertasks, which clearly explains what they are and how they are not logically impossible. In the face of that your insistence is fractious. — Banno
Well, no. "Every action has a cause" is not one of Newton's laws, nor is it implied by them. — Banno
Neither. This is a loaded question. — Banno
This is a description of your personal psychological state. — Banno
In my thesis, I interpret the baseline nothingness as the normal state of Ontology (BEING), which is also the eternal state of Logos, the Enformer. An act of Creation (Enformation, Causation) causes the neutral state to transition into positive-but-transitory existence (real, actual, Energy), which soon dissipates into (unreal, potential, Entropy). I go further to imagine fast oscillations (lightspeed) as Energy, and slow oscillations as Matter — Gnomon
The Copernican principle, otoh, is something we want to hold on to if we can. — Enai De A Lukal
We know from Godel and related work that any system advanced enough to explain arithmetic must either be incomplete or inconsistent. — Banno
We know you believe time must have a start, that you want time to have had a start. The problem is of course that the evidence and logic of the matter doesn't tell us firmly either way: again, hence scientific models of both varieties remaining viable. — Enai De A Lukal
Supertasks or infinite sequences may strike you as conceptually difficult to imagine or grasp, but if they do not entail a contradiction, then they are not logically impossible. If you claim that something is logically impossible, stating why it is implausible or weird is not sufficient: show us where it involves a contradiction. — Enai De A Lukal
Your hands are full at the moment. I don't want to distract you from better discussions. Au revoir. — TheMadFool
No, I'm not talking about the mere gathering of other people's thoughts. I'm talking about the judgement of them. How do you know they are wrong? Even when obviously intelligent and knowledgeable people, basically the vast majority of the mathematics community, have told you you're wrong, you still consider yourself to be right, so their conclusions, arguments and demonstrations have had no effect on you whatsoever. — Isaac
I have no objection to you doing this, of course, you can do what you like, but I am a) very interested in why you would then consult the very community you've already decided you will reject the wisdom of the moment it doesn't suit, and b) slightly annoyed that you're being so evasive about this, which makes me suspect you're motives are hidden and disingenuous. — Isaac
Can you justify this without personal incredulity? Otherwise you may as well cut out the middleman and say: "I personally can't conceive of a universe without an intelligent creator, therefore the intelligent creator exists, and we call him God". This actually has the benefit of having only one fallacy. — Kenosha Kid
Yes, and it ain't how Bayes intended. Utter nonsense put forward by Stephen Unwin, creationisms most willing idiot. It's an argument ab rectum. — Kenosha Kid
Aside from pulling these probabilities out of thin air, the way you've added them together like this makes no sense at all. — Michael
4) We assess that [3], on it's own, means it is 75% likely he is guilty.
5) That gives 50% guilty + 50% innocent X 75% = 87.5% chance he is guilty after considering one piece of evidence. — Devans99
If 4) means that it is 75% likely he is guilty then it means that it is 25% likely that he is innocent.
If we then use your logic in 5) we have 50% guilty + 50% innocent x 25% = 62.5% chance he is innocent.
So your reasoning leads us to the contradictory conclusion that there is an 87.5% chance that he is guilty and a 62.5% chance that he is innocent.
It should be obvious from this that you're calculating probabilities wrong. — Michael
You have that wrong - if we start at a 50% chance that he's guilty - and assess the first piece of evidence means he's 75% likely to be guilty - then the chances he's innocent must go down, and not up as you have calculated above. — Devans99
Yes, it must, which is why your calculation in 5) is wrong. If the first piece of evidence means he's 75% likely to be guilty then he's 75% likely to be guilty after considering one piece of evidence. The calculation you do in 5) to derive a likelihood of 87.5% makes no sense, as shown by the fact that this calculation entails the contradictory conclusion that he's 37.5% likely to be guilty. — Michael
The first 'piece of evidence' to consider is that 'is he guilty?' is an unknown boolean question. So we should start with the assumption of 50% guilty / 50% innocent to reflect this. IE our evidence is that we are assuming the chances that he is guilty/innocent are normally distributed. This is evidence of a sort and I think it has to be built into the overall calculation.
Then we apply the individual pieces of evidence on top of the starting point. If there is a 50% chance that he is innocent and we have a piece of evidence that says he is 75% likely to be guilty, we reduce the innocent % and increase the guilty %: 50% guilty + 50% innocent X 75% = 87.5% chance he is guilty. — Devans99
This calculation makes no sense. Let's say that the first piece of evidence says that he is 50% likely to be guilty. We don't then say 50% guilty + 50% innocent x 50% = 75% chance he is guilty. We just say that he is 50% likely to be guilty. As above, we can use your logic to say that because the first piece of evidence says that he is 50% likely to be innocent then 50% innocent + 50% guilty x 50% = 75% chance he is innocent.
Your reasoning leads to the contradictory conclusion that there is a 75% chance he is guilty and a 75% chance he is innocent. — Michael
But what happens if 90% of people accused of murder actually turn out to be innocent? — Devans99
10% guilty + 90% innocent X 50% = 55% guilty.
You see I hope how this combines the initial probability distribution we know (that 90% of people accused of murder actually turn out to be innocent), with the first piece of evidence. — Devans99
I've already pointed out that your reasoning leads to contradictory conclusions. That's a mathematical fact that can't be refuted by suggesting a hypothetical situation where innocent people are predominantly found guilty. — Michael
I don't follow you - I see nothing contradictory at all about the method I am using. — Devans99
- Lets assume that the first piece of evidence says 50% guilty
- Lets assume that the second piece of evidence says 25% guilty
- What is the combined likelihood of him being guilty?
My method give 50% guilty + 50% innocent X 25% guilty = 62.5% guilty. — Devans99
- Lets assume that the first piece of evidence says 50% innocent
- Lets assume that the second piece of evidence says 75% innocent
- What is the combined likelihood of him being innocent?
My method give 50% innocent + 50% guilty X 75% innocent = 87.5% innocent.
What method would you suggest I use instead?
Well, there you go; God disappeared all the antimatter. God Certainly Exists — Banno
The origin of the universe is a macro question — Devans99
Finite and unbounded is plainly impossible. I'm not even going to waste my time reading that link. — Devans99
This calculation makes no sense. Let's say that the first piece of evidence says that he is 50% likely to be guilty. We don't then say 50% guilty + 50% innocent x 50% = 75% chance he is guilty. We just say that he is 50% likely to be guilty. As above, we can use your logic to say that because the first piece of evidence says that he is 50% likely to be innocent then 50% innocent + 50% guilty x 50% = 75% chance he is innocent.
Your reasoning leads to the contradictory conclusion that there is a 75% chance he is guilty and a 75% chance he is innocent. — Michael
What you are doing wrong is you are deriving from the fact that 'prints on the knife' indicate that he is 50% guilty that it also implies there is a 50% chance that he is innocent — Devans99
Nope.
Why do you think extrapolation sufficiently far back is increasingly problematic, and why we cannot extrapolate to a singularity (of infinite density and temperature)?
Because once things become sufficiently small, quantumatics become increasingly pronounced, and we have no established unification. — jorndoe
Rejection by title-reading? :D As mentioned earlier, these ideas have been expounded upon to some extent by Hartle and Hawking. — jorndoe
Uh, yes? Guilt and innocence are a dichotomy. If something shows 50% chance of guilt then ipso factor it shows 50% chance of not guilt, i.e. innocence. — Michael
Why do you think extrapolation sufficiently far back is increasingly problematic, and why we cannot extrapolate to a singularity (of infinite density and temperature)?
Because once things become sufficiently small, quantumatics become increasingly pronounced, and we have no established unification. — jorndoe
You are getting confused:
- 'prints on the knife' make it 50% likely he is guilty
- If we assume we have already established that the is a 50% chance he is guilty
- Then there is a 50% chance that he is innocent
- But the 'prints on the knife' evidence in no way increase the chances of him being innocent — Devans99
I'm not saying that the evidence increases the chances of him being innocent. I'm saying that your method entails this. This is why your method doesn't work. The way you add probabilities like this is nonsense. — Michael
If we have no other evidence that a knife that suggests 50% guilt then there's a 50% chance of guilt, and that's it. We don't "add" it to the initial 50/50 assumption based on no evidence to somehow derive a 75% chance of guilty is, again, nonsense. — Michael
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