So "The dog is on the rug," in terms of meaning, is a set of mental states in someone's head. You said that you agree with that. So how do we go from that to the meaning in an individual's head matching a fact, where we're no longer talking about the meaning in the person's head? — Terrapin Station
So once a meaning is created, which is an event in someone's head, then the way that we can extramentally see if a fact matches the proposition is . . . what? — Terrapin Station
How would that work? We'd need to be able to describe/detail the process. — Terrapin Station
The matching would have to be objective. That is, it would have to be a property of extramental things.
How are we supposed to arrive at extramental matching? — Terrapin Station
True to the people who judge it to match. False to people who judge otherwise. (Simplifying so there are no other options.) — Terrapin Station
The reason I agree that there is no objective truth is because of a "technical" issue re truth in analytic philosophy that I described above. (Truth is a property of propositions in analytic phil, propositions are the meanings of statements, and then my view stems from what I think the ontology of meaning is and how I think that the "link" between propositions and other things work--namely, that it's a judgment that a mind has to make.)
I do, however, think that there are objective facts. Most folks on the board seem to use "truth" so that it amounts to the same thing as "fact" (even though a couple different senses of "fact" tend to be conflated here, too). So that leads to some confusion. — Terrapin Station
The argument doesn’t posit this. That’s just a useful way of visualising
— AJJ
Didn't you tell me earlier that this was, in fact, your argument? — Echarmion
The issue with the puzzle is that we're not disembodied souls that are randomly placed in one of any of the human bodies which will ever live. — Michael
In that case your conclusions on the first page:
This shows how unlikely it is that we’ll ever expand out into the galaxy, since it would mean we’re all part of a tiny fraction of all humans, rather than the other huge group. Instead it stands to reason that we’re at the top of graph 2’s curve.
— AJJ
Don't follow from your argument. — Echarmion
I’m saying “I’m going to bet that it’s blue but it’s more likely not blue” - which is true if there are 15 balls and only 5 are blue. — Michael
There's a difference between an answer being the best answer and that answer being more likely right than wrong. The best answer has < 50% chance of being right, so it's wrong to say that we're most likely in the last generation. We're most likely not in the last generation. — Michael
So are you claiming that information concerning the timing of the end of humanity is encoded in a) the fact that humans exist right now and b) the assumption that the living human population will be highest shortly before it's demise? — Echarmion
Generations aren't real. they are more or less arbitrary groupings of people who were born in the same time period. But regardless, the generations are the rooms in the hotel. You want to know which room you're in. — Echarmion
So let's set up a proper thought experiment: The entire human population that will ever have lived is grouped into 100 hotel rooms. Every room represents the same amount of time between humanity's evolution and it's demise, but you don't know how long that is. Every room is an incredibly vast extradimensional space, and it is completely dark, so you don't know how many other people are in your room and you have no way of communicating with them.
Now a voice tells you that you will go to heaven if you can guess which room you're in. You can choose any range of 5 rooms as your guess, as long as you're in any one of them, you win. Which range do you choose? — Echarmion
And if you're asked to pick a generation then, yes, you should say the last generation -- although you're more likely to be wrong than right, and so if you're asked if you're more likely in the last generation than not in the last generation then you should say not in the last generation. — Michael
Mathematical reasoning, being a deductive process, cannot generate information though. — Echarmion
If those are the groups you are given by some outside source. But if no outside source provides you with any groupings, and you're just standing alone in a room, you cannot reason yourself into rooms 3 to 100 by arbitrarily deciding on these groups. Given arbitrary groups, one can make any sequence of rooms the most likely one. No such thought experiment tells you where you actually are though. — Echarmion
It's even worse when, as is the case with future generations, you don't even know how many rooms there are. If you simply know there are n rooms and you are in one of them, there is no way to tell what number your room is. Yet the logic of the "doomsday argument" would have you believe that you can. — Echarmion
I did that here:
1: 100 people (6.7%)
2: 200 people (13.3%)
3: 300 people (20%)
4: 400 people (26.7%)
5: 500 people (33.3%) — Michael
But as you state, this isn't information, but an assumption. But even if we grant the assumption as essentially correct, it does still not contain any information about humanities demise, so the question of where that information comes from remains. — Echarmion
As an analogy, take the hotel room example. You're in a hotel with 100 rooms, but you don't know which room you're in. If someone asks you whether you are in the first ten rooms, your answer should be no. But if someone asks you whether you are in room 2 or in room 50 your answer should not be fifty just because you are more likely not to be in the first 10 rooms. Because for that specific question, the probability of either is 1/100. This probability doesn't change if you arbitrarily divide the hotel rooms into groups. — Echarmion
But we're turning that ignorance into a probability without further information. That is impossible. If we're ignorant about what graph we are on and where we are on that graph, we can't magically turn said ignorance into new information using math — Echarmion
This shows how unlikely it is that we’ll ever expand out into the galaxy, since it would mean we’re all part of a tiny fraction of all humans, rather than the other huge group. Instead it stands to reason that we’re at the top of graph 2’s curve.
— AJJ
But according to that logic, it stands to reason that everyone who has ever lived was at the top of graph 2s curve, but they weren't. How is that possible? — Echarmion