It seems to me a product of intelligences - a many. Give thought to the phenomenology of the estimating. Everything is dumb, except the intelligences. Each assesses separately and it's unlikely that all will be increasingly wrong. And the mean probably wont be right, but close.or is it all simply a product of intelligence? — Benj96
The phenomenon of many guesses centered on the right answer may be called "The Bell Curve" or The "Wisdom of Crowds". Chaotic randomness has been found to have an intrinsic hidden core of Order. Chaotic systems are unpredictable, but deterministic. Opinions vary on an explanation for the ultimate cause of that emergent order within chaos, but without it our world would have decayed into dust long ago. I call that anti-entropy organizing force "Enformy". And it seems to be a sign of intelligence & intention underlying the laws of Nature. :smile:Why does a quantity of invalid information indicate the whereabouts of valid information? Is there some intelligence to this behaviour of maths and statistics or is it all simply a product of intelligence? — Benj96
Due to probability a player is just as likely to overestimate as to underestimate the quantity in the jar. And due to this the more players that player, even if they are all wrong, the more accurate the calculation of the real answer gets. I find this remarkable. It's as if by understanding a simple rule of maths you can transform a whole lot of wrong into a single piece of right. — Benj96
In case you missed the sidebar, here's a little more detail on the concept of positive Enformy, which is called "Negentropy" by physicists. They probably missed the progressive implications of evolution because they believed it to be totally random & directionless. :smile:Enformy — Gnomon
This is so interesting — Benj96
Does empirical statistical evidence count as rational? This intelligent "fluke" seems to be built-in to the mathematical foundation of Nature. :smile:Nope, the "wisdom of crowds" is false. There is no rational reason to believe that averaging naive guesses increases accuracy, unless by fluke the average of these naive guesses is the right answer. — sime
Does empirical statistical evidence count as rational? This intelligent "fluke" seems to be built-in to the mathematical foundation of Nature. :smile: — Gnomon
Benj96
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Has it been tested?
— Frank Apisa
It has. Numerous times with replicable results — Benj96
And are you also suggesting that because 95% of Americans guess that a GOD exists...that represents "valid information" on the truth of whether or not a GOD actually does exist? — Frank Apisa
Basically there is an intelligence to collectives that is not possessed by any specific individual but is derived from the interaction of their personal guesses/ perceptions. — Benj96
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