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by YeGoblynQueenne
2406 days ago
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>> Do you have an alternate method to suggest? What's the calculation you would use? Note that "I'm seeing this with my own eyes" should only give you so much change, because you might have accidentally taken a whole bunch of hallucinogens. I don't understand. How would it happen that I've accidentally taken a whole bunch of hallucinogens? I never go near that kind of stuff. >> Not for that reason. But you have to factor in the chance that you got confused, or your brain is failing to make new memories and it's actually 2022, or you just woke up from a really detailed dream about the wrong president. I don't see how that would happen either. Why would my brain fail to make new memories? Why are you saying that this might be the case? I think this is just enhancing the deep unreality of what you are proposing. If we need to assume that I'm in some kind of weird mental state that I have no reason to be in for your whole proposition to make sense then I really don't see the point of it, other than perhaps an interesting theoretical game. |
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You never ever have a dream that seems real for a few moments?
And failing to make new memories would be a specific but possible injury.
We're supposed to be working with very low probabilities here. That's the whole point of the thought experiment. If you're going to round anything below one-in-a-million to exactly zero then that's your prerogative, and it works in everyday life, but it's objectively wrong; it would falsely reject the idea of lightning strikes and winning the lottery.
> I think this is just enhancing the deep unreality of what you are proposing.
You didn't even reply to the part about removing all the silly stuff and cutting it down to just "guy offers to sign a document for lots of money"...