To try to put it succintly, it's reasonable to be agnostic about alien contact ten years from now, but not ten minutes from now. — RogueAI
If by agnostic your mean p=0.5 (as you said in your OP), I would disagree that it is reasonable to think that there is a 50 percent chance that we will have alien contact in the next 10 years. — PhilosophyRunner
To try to put it succintly, it's reasonable to be agnostic about alien contact ten years from now, but not ten minutes from now. But I can't see what's driving that intuition. — RogueAI
If I say there's a 20% chance of Trump winning the next elections what exactly do I mean? — Agent Smith
That said the subject we're discussing isn't a simple game of cards, dice, or coins — Agent Smith
So if we had data we could derive more accurate probabilities from them? — Agent Smith
https://www.seti.org/drake-equation-indexAt the time of the meeting, essentially none of the seven factors in the equation was known excepting the first, the production rate of stars. Nonetheless, the attendees bandied about their best guesses for the other terms, concluding that the “freshman” rate was on the order of one. In other words, new transmitting societies appear once a year somewhere in the Milky Way. All that remains is to multiply this by the lifetime of such a broadcasting civilization. — SETI
It has been sixty years since the Drake Equation was conceived. Have we nailed down more of the terms than the single one known in 1961? Sadly, no........There are 100 scientists at the SETI Institute, working on nearly 100 research questions. But each of these topics can be related to one of the terms in the Drake Equation. — SETI
With modern computers, it is now possible for a graduate student or a practicing engineer to acquire a very complex computer code, hundreds of thousands of lines long, worked over by several preceding generations of scientists, with a complexity so great that no single individual actually understands either the underlying physical principles or the behavior of the computer code—or the degree to which it actually represents the phenomenon of interest. These codes are accompanied by manuals explaining how to set them up and how to run them, often with a very long list of "default" parameters. Sometimes they represent the coupling of two or more submodels, each of which appears well understood, but whose interaction can lead to completely unexpected behavior (as when a simple pendulum is hung on the end of another simple pendulum). One hundred years in the future, who will be able to reconstruct the assumptions and details of these calculations? — American Scientist
If we had data we might be able to estimate probabilities rather than dressing up our speculations in mathematic — Cuthbert
How do you explain the fact that someone who understands mathematical probability can win casino games?
Is that baloney?
Why would you be prejudiced against probability? Don't you wanna fix that or are you happy (with yourself)? — Agent Smith
You never actually answered my question on what sort of data I should be collecting to estimate the probabilities in re aliens. You did say data will improve our guess, oui?
but there's more (I think). — Agent Smith
There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, / Than are dreamt of in your philosophy
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