Part of Devans schtick is playing with statistical ideas. But he does it wrong. And he has presented the exact same arguments even years ago on this site and its predecessor site, all refuted multiple times by multiple people, with no apparent effect on Devans. He is essentially intellectually dishonest, which means just plain dishonest.ANYONE reading this thread quickly realizes — Frank Apisa
No. If we are considering a question with a 90% / 10% initial distribution of probabilities then we can't just ignore that distribution and start at 50%. — Devans99
Contrast that to the 'is he guilty?' question, where we start with a 1 in 2 (50%) chance of guilt/innocence. — Devans99
No. If we are considering a question with a 90% / 10% initial distribution of probabilities then we can't just ignore that distribution and start at 50%. — Devans99
He is essentially intellectually dishonest, which means just plain dishonest. — tim wood
That's precisely the point. You cannot just say "Since we do not know if it is this guy, the probabilities are 50/50". And yet that is exactly how you proceeded. — Kenosha Kid
We have no data on the distribution of the answer space for 'was the universe a creation?' - so assuming it is normally distributed (50%/50%) is correct. — Devans99
We roll a 10-sided dice. If it rolls a 1 or a 2 I will place a red ball in a box.
Before you check the box you consider that the initial probability that the dice rolls a 1 is 10%.
You check the box and find a red ball. You know from this that there's a 50% chance that the dice rolled a 1 and a 50% chance that the dice rolled a 2.
Do you then add the initial 10% to this second 50% using your method to come up with some new likelihood that it rolled a 1? Or do you just accept that it's 50%? — Michael
So that is inventing the "fact" that it is binary. That is mathematically invalid. — Kenosha Kid
This does not really seem related to my calculation. My calculation is for combining separate pieces of non-overlapping evidence that support a particular conclusion into a single, combined probability estimate. — Devans99
Assume the initial distribution is 50% guilty/ 50% innocent, and the first piece of evidence is 50% likely that he is guilty:
1) 50% guilty + 50% innocent x 50% = 75% chance he is guilty — Devans99
Quantumatics and relativity are established (already posted an example). — jorndoe
In my example the initial distribution is 90% the dice roll is > 1 and 10% the dice roll = 1 and the first piece of evidence (the red ball) is 50% likely that the dice roll = 1, so using your reasoning above there's either 10% + 90% x 50% = 55% probability that dice roll = 1 or 90% + 10% x 50% = 95% probability that dice roll = 1 (which one is it exactly? Do I multiply the 50% by the 10% chance of 1 or the 90% chance of not 1)? — Michael
Its a binary question — Devans99
Its really not related - the first piece of evidence - the probability of 10% because it is a 10-sided die, is replaced completely by the second piece of evidence - the probability of 50% because of the red ball - so we have a probability of 50% that it was a one.
My method is for combining separate, unrelated pieces of evidence into a single probability estimate. — Devans99
Saying "the probability of God creating the universe is 50/50" is identical to saying: "there are precisely two ways the universe can have been created". Not knowing the possible means of the universe being created is not leave to invent the non-fact that there were precisely two. It sounds like this has been explained to you before. — Kenosha Kid
I assigned an initial probability estimate of 50% / 50% to the question 'is the universe a creation?'. — Devans99
Let me ask you, what initial probability estimate would you yourself assign to this question? — Devans99
So why doesn't the first piece of evidence (the finger prints on the knife) replace the initial, uninformed probability of 50% guilt based on lack of any evidence one way or the other? — Michael
And do you even know what it means to say that the evidence suggests a 50% chance of guilt? It means that it is equally likely that there is an innocent explanation as there is for a guilty explanation, and as such cannot be used to either prove guilt or to prove innocence. — Michael
'prints on the knife' implies a 50% chance someone is guilty. The fact that there are 'prints on the knife' does not imply a 50% chance of innocence.
Think what you are saying - there are prints on the knife so we can increase the probability estimate he is innocent - that's clearly wrong.
The fact that there are 'prints on the knife' does not imply a 50% chance of innocence. — Devans99
1) There is an initial estimate of 50%/50% based on the fact that people at trials are 50% likely to be guilty.
2) Then the initial estimate is adjusted to reflect the first piece of evidence.
3) Then that estimate is adjusted to reflect the first piece of evidence
Me personally? Zero, since only possible causes should be included and God has not been shown to be even possible. — Kenosha Kid
Thats just bonkers - spacetime cannot have existed forever - so how exactly do you have it a 'not a creation'? — Devans99
Tell me what you think it means for evidence to imply a 50% chance that someone is guilty. — Michael
Thank God you're not a juror. This is crazy. — Michael
I didn't say it doesn't have a creation, I said it wasn't created by an intelligent deity. — Kenosha Kid
So [1] by itself implies a 50% chance he is the killer. And [2] separately implies a 25% chance he is the killer. The question is how do you combine these into a single probability estimate?
It is clear the combined probability estimate must be higher than the 50% alone we have for the first piece of evidence. I can see no other way of doing the calculation than:
50% guilty + 50% innocent X 25% = 62.5% guilty. — Devans99
I don't believe in random so that just leaves the creation of spacetime as a deliberate act. — Devans99
Devans, then, is just a waste of time. — tim wood
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