On the first read I was annoyed at the post for criticizing futurists for being too certain in their predictions, while it also throws out and refuses to grade any prediction that expressed uncertainty, on the grounds that saying something “may” happen is unfalsifiable.
On reflection these two things seem mostly unrelated, and for the purpose of establishing a track record “may” predictions do seem strictly worse than either predicting confidently (which allows scoring % of predictions right), or predicting with a probability (which none of these futurists did, but allows creating a calibration curve).
On the first read I was annoyed at the post for criticizing futurists for being too certain in their predictions, while it also throws out and refuses to grade any prediction that expressed uncertainty, on the grounds that saying something “may” happen is unfalsifiable.
On reflection these two things seem mostly unrelated, and for the purpose of establishing a track record “may” predictions do seem strictly worse than either predicting confidently (which allows scoring % of predictions right), or predicting with a probability (which none of these futurists did, but allows creating a calibration curve).