TagliatelliMonster
Veteran Member
you need one only assumption, I think: "a higher force that delights in creating variety exists".
A "force" that "delights" implies quite a bit more then just that.
It implies intent, consciousness, intelligence, a realm where this thing resides, etc.
It's quite an assumption. And an undemonstrable / unsupportable / unfalsifiable one at that.
To ascribe anything to such a thing, is indistinguishable from imagination.
Since you have no means to gauge this force, you by definition have no means to establish any kind of causal link between them. Therefor you can not have any proper hypothesis that makes any kind of predictions at all.
Meaning that by definition, all you have here is a mere blind assertion based on literally nothing.
That's why it's parsimonious, in my opinion.
You don't need extra assumptions, I think.
You assume literally everything about your entire case.
You assume the existence of the source, you assume the capabilities of this source, you assume the causal link between said source and observations in reality.
You cannot demonstrate or support any of this.
Because there is nothing there.
Explanatory power is zero.
Verifiability even less.
It's a cop-out, I think.
No. Asking for evidence for claims is anything but a cop-out.
You claim the existence of the entity. You offer no verifiable evidence.
You claim capabilities of this entity. You offer no verifiable evidence.
You claim a causal link between this assumed entity and certain observations in the real world through the entity's assumed capabilities. You offer no evidence.
You don't get to just invent stuff and declare it to be correct or supported or even valid.
Bare claims are infinite in number.
let me rephrase: lasting variety.
Very falsifiable. Theoretically, it could vanish today.
I have no clue what you are on about or how this would falsify your unfalsifiable claim that god-dun-it.
no, it wasn't.
Nobody explained me that:
It's evidence I think.
If there is a person in a house that loves to eat brownies... and if you find the brownies eaten up... it is evidence that that person in fact ate the brownies. It makes sense, it's not silly.
as a comparison to the story that Y might have killed X... was a bs nonsense short story or whatever you called it.
Here's the thing. The part about there being a person in the house that loves to eat brownies? That's additional data. A verifiably existing person with a known, and demonstrable, appetite for brownies.
If you don't know about such a person, then it wouldn't occur to you as a potential cause for the missing cookies.
Now imagine that the owner of the brownies has an a priori belief in a type of poltergeist that steals brownies. And now imagine that the brownies are missing. What will this person think? He'll think a poltergeist is messing with him. Or at least, he'ld consider it a valid option. And if he's alone in the house with no animals or anything, he'll likely even consider it the most "parsimonious" option............
He'ld be wrong, off course.
The guy who suspects the verifiably existing, known brownies loving, roommate? Yes, he'ld be right about that being the most parsimonious option.
Can you see the difference between the roommate hypothesis and the poltergeist hypothesis?
Given that it remains unknown what happened to the brownies... which of these two hypothesis do YOU find most likely and why? The roommate or the poltergeist?