Sy Borg wrote: ↑November 10th, 2024, 8:25 pm The BiV is an INVALID tool regarding skepticism. I have no problem with questioning reality, but if the tool used is simply impossible nonsense, then it's of no use.It's not impossible nonsense. In fact, your basic religious dualist position is exactly that, a mind hooked to something that it isn't. There is zero knowledge of how said mind works, hence no evidence of its plausibility or impossibility. They don't just suppose that it's possible, but suppose that it's actually how it is, except the interface to the physical is strangely unexplained, grounding my justification of rejecting that sort of arrangement.
The Boltzmann Brain is also pointless. Sure, there it technically a non zero chance that a brain could emerge in a vacuum, although that number would be exponentially greater than the total number of atoms in the universe, and is thus simply fiction.[/quote]You seem unaware of the numbers involved. First, you're comparing one number with an infinite one. Sure, in a given space and time, there's a tiny chance of one, but there's not only infinite space, but also infinite time. The mathematics needs to work out the probability of a real brain vs that of the BB existing, and with some theories there are incalculably greater odds of the latter than the former.
For instance, Tegmark's MUH suffers from this. He posits all mathematical structures to exist, but any BB is just as much a mathematical structure as any structure that contains evolved observers, and there are far more of the simpler BB structures than the relatively complex ones where complex physics allows the formation of natural observers.
Point is, it the analysis isn't pointless as you assert it to be. The universe seems to be a very improbable thing, as is argued by the fine tuning argument for it being a deliberate creation. One needs to either accept that argument or come up with an alternative, and so many of the alternatives suffer from the BB problem.
I've tried to make myself more clear, and you said that perhaps you've not done it yourself, but I see no clarification, just repeat denial of something where denial isn't the point.
Another fanciful notion that proves nothing, demonstrates nothing, other than as a fable, like the hare and the tortoise.That's another interesting topic, demonstrating all sorts of interesting problems that need to be solved. Ignoring those problems just shows a lack of interest or lack of ability to confront objections. Waving them away with denials contributes nothing to addressing them.
It would be fab if reality was not as it appears.I personally think that quantum physics has demonstrated that what you call reality isn't the nice neat classical thing that it appears to be. This is one of the few things where science has proven something, and not just theorized it, and even then the proof rests on empirical evidence, brought into question with issues like those being discussed here.
but it is clearly APPROXIMATELY as we perceive it.I'm far more in the 'stranger than we can imagine' camp.