Most animals probably don't have a problem with possibilities. Generally, they just accept the world as it is. But hungry predators have to look ahead of here & now, in order to explore the possibilities around the next bend. And humans are basically weak predators, who have to rely on mental powers more than physical tools. So, they extend their grasp & vision with artificial senses, as far as they go. But, they don't stop there, because they have one sense that is ultimately more powerful than fangs & claws : Reasoning Ability. That's the power to go-beyond the Physical-what-is into the Meta-physical-what-might-be.I was wondering whether the trade-off is worth it or even if it's "possible" to simply cease and desist investigating the world of possibilities. — TheMadFool
Contemplating gendankenexperiments (in science, history & fiction) are my metaphysical jam! :smirk: — 180 Proof
Do they? Not in my experience. Not according to theoretical scientists, historians, historical novelists, political / military strategies, long-term forecasters (re: e.g. climate change).What use are gedanken experiments when they obscure rather than clarify? — TheMadFool
Do they? Not in my experience. Not according to theoretical scientists, historians, historical novelists, political / military strategies, long-term forecasters (re: e.g. climate change). — 180 Proof
What about e.g. Mach, Poincare, Planck, Einstein, Bohr, Schrödinger, Pauli, Turing, von Neumann, Feynman, Bohm, Everett, Deutsch, et al? :roll: — 180 Proof
Shut up and calculate! — Nathaniel David Mermin
You're quarreling with some of the most profound scientific successes of at least the last century, Fool. Good luck with that! :rofl: — 180 Proof
That would be a good way to go back to the dark ages of human thought. — Nickolasgaspar
Second more important point, I asked you whether you are confusing "possibilities" with "probabilities". — Nickolasgaspar
First of all you can not remove Theory from Science — Nickolasgaspar
Hypothesis non fingo. — Isaac Newton
I'm afraid Newton didn't understand Galileo or Einstein. Clearly, you don't either. — 180 Proof
probable — Nickolasgaspar
You need to be more specific ...what concept and what odds? — Nickolasgaspar
In the current issue of Philosophy Now magazine, Raymond Tallis explores the notion he calls "post-tensed time". He's referring to our ability to address Possible time, which goes beyond the here & now. He says, "Beasts, unlike humans, live ahistorically, without a sense of extended time". But then he notes, "there is a consensus among physicists, and philosophers who take their metaphysical instructions from scientists, that while tenseless time is real, tensed time is not". By that he means that only "now" is real, so past & future are merely Potential & Historical.No wonder skeptical arguments, skepticism leading the way in our expeditions into possibility space, — TheMadFool
You really don't make any sense.
You said:"The concept seems relevant but when you get down to actually computing/calculating the odds, you realize you can't! I'm happy to be proven wrong of course! "
Probability seems relevant? To what ? To Possibility?
Do you calculate possibility? How ?
I am not sure you fully understand those concepts — Nickolasgaspar
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