| The problem is that they don't have a clear method of calculation and a clear meaning of what a minute means. For example, let's made up some criteria: 1 minute = 99% probability of human extinction in 10 years 2 minutes = 98% probability of human extinction in 10 years 3 minutes = 97% probability of human extinction in 10 years I'm not sure what 2 hours means. Probably the scale should not be more complex than (100-p) * min/% Or perhaps it's better to define 1 minute = 90% probability of human extinction in 100 years Or 1 minute = 50% probability of human extinction in 1 year It's not clear what 1 minute before doomsday officially means. Moreover, let's say that they define that 1 minute is x% chance of humanity destruction in y years. How are they calculating it? Do they have any model? How did they calibrate the model? How did they test the model? Is it reliable? It's a made up number, without any scientific base. It's only an opinion of a bunch of people that happened to work as scientific, not a scientific measurement. |
You have to start somewhere, and having a group of people who specifically decide to take into account what they consider useful criteria and deliberate about it is a step forward. I think it's clear it could be better if it were more rigorous. It wouldn't surprise me if there are people out there working to do just that. It's not useless just because it's attempting to quantify a complex system in a more subjective manner when it's not clear better alternatives are available. You're right that it's an opinion of scientists, and not a scientific measurement. They're experts in their fields and their opinion does mean something. You're free to weight that how you want, of course.