Would you care to demonstrate? Preferably starting with explaining how the Solomonoff prior is relevant (note that a major point in theologies of all Abrahamic religions is that God is radically different from everything else (=universe)).
No, I would not care to demonstrate. A proof that a solution exists is not the same thing as a procedure for obtaining a solution. And this isn’t even a formal proof: it’s a rough sketch of how you’d go about constructing one, informally posted in a blog’s comment section as part of a pointless and unpleasant discussion of religion.
If you can’t follow how “It is possible-in-principle to calculate a Solomonoff prior for this hypothesis” relates to “We are dismissive of this hypothesis because it has high complexity and little evidence supporting it.” I honestly can’t help. This is all very technical and I don’t know what you already know, so I have no idea what explanation would be helpful to close that inferential distance. And the comments section of a blog really isn’t the best format. And I’m certainly not the best person to teach about this topic.
Would you care to demonstrate? Preferably starting with explaining how the Solomonoff prior is relevant (note that a major point in theologies of all Abrahamic religions is that God is radically different from everything else (=universe)).
No, I would not care to demonstrate. A proof that a solution exists is not the same thing as a procedure for obtaining a solution. And this isn’t even a formal proof: it’s a rough sketch of how you’d go about constructing one, informally posted in a blog’s comment section as part of a pointless and unpleasant discussion of religion.
If you can’t follow how “It is possible-in-principle to calculate a Solomonoff prior for this hypothesis” relates to “We are dismissive of this hypothesis because it has high complexity and little evidence supporting it.” I honestly can’t help. This is all very technical and I don’t know what you already know, so I have no idea what explanation would be helpful to close that inferential distance. And the comments section of a blog really isn’t the best format. And I’m certainly not the best person to teach about this topic.
Sure, that’s fine.