Hand claims that: "Extremely improbable events are commonplace." That sounds like a contradiction. But in reality it is not, because the two things are not even related.
Something is not improbable on its own. It is some person, or group of persons, that considers it to be improbable. And on the other side we find events that are commonplace. These are empirical observations of reality. Not some person's idea.
A statistician might believe he can understand reality through data. I don't think he can.
(2018-01-22, 01:02 PM)Bucky Wrote: Arguments like the "law of very big numbers" and similar as mentioned in the OP. Those are great blanket statements to shut up ESP proponents, though in essence they are extremely vague and generic.
And yes I agree with you, often times self proclaimed skeptics lack intellectual honesty, as a seen dozen of times in the history of Skeptiko's podcasts.
Cheers
As I like to say, the Law of Large Numbers is the skeptics equivalent to the God of the Gaps.
Here's a great talk by Robert Anton Wilson. Listen at around 14m 30s when he talks about the skeptics at CSICOP repeating their mantra, "It was only a coincidence, It was only a coincidence, It was only a coincidence".
I do not make any clear distinction between mind and God. God is what mind becomes when it has passed beyond the scale of our comprehension.
Freeman Dyson
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