Why aren’t the filters during the rise of intelligent life and during intelligent life surviving long enough to settle the islands?
The entire point of the analogy, as far as I can tell, is to move to a domain where our intuition works better. We don’t have strong intuition about time frames and probabilities involving the rise of intelligent life. We do have intuition about tribes exploring and colonizing islands. We don’t have strong intuition about how long it takes for intelligent life to reach the point where they can settle islands. We do have intuition about the likelihood of natural disasters wiping out island tribes.
It’s a matter of time scales and probabilities. Robin Hanson’s filter involves astronomical time scales and difficult to measure probabilities. James presents an example with human time scales and probabilities that are relatively easy to measure. The point is not to capture the physical acts (colonizing the stars), but to capture the anthropic reasoning and conclusions.
We do have intuition about tribes exploring and colonizing islands. … We do have intuition about the likelihood of natural disasters wiping out island tribes.
I don’t. I have no idea what the success rates of prehistoric humans settling large islands was.
I don’t have specifics either, but I do have some intuition. I know about volcanic islands. I know about volcanic eruptions in recent history. I know about past cities destroyed by volcanoes. I have some idea about how far into the ocean tribal-level technology can take you. I have some idea as to how fast people tend to spread out and explore in general.
We’re not trying to narrow our confidence intervals on a cosmic filter by equating it to an island filter. Rather, using anthropic reasoning seems sketchy, so we seek out other problems using anthropic reasoning to see if the anthropic principle holds up. It’s the anthropic principle itself we’re analyzing here, hence the title of the post, “An empirical test of anthropic principle.”
Where to place the filter for a proper analogy doesn’t seem as clear cut to me.
Why aren’t the filters during the rise of intelligent life and during intelligent life surviving long enough to settle the islands?
The entire point of the analogy, as far as I can tell, is to move to a domain where our intuition works better. We don’t have strong intuition about time frames and probabilities involving the rise of intelligent life. We do have intuition about tribes exploring and colonizing islands. We don’t have strong intuition about how long it takes for intelligent life to reach the point where they can settle islands. We do have intuition about the likelihood of natural disasters wiping out island tribes.
It’s a matter of time scales and probabilities. Robin Hanson’s filter involves astronomical time scales and difficult to measure probabilities. James presents an example with human time scales and probabilities that are relatively easy to measure. The point is not to capture the physical acts (colonizing the stars), but to capture the anthropic reasoning and conclusions.
I don’t. I have no idea what the success rates of prehistoric humans settling large islands was.
I don’t have specifics either, but I do have some intuition. I know about volcanic islands. I know about volcanic eruptions in recent history. I know about past cities destroyed by volcanoes. I have some idea about how far into the ocean tribal-level technology can take you. I have some idea as to how fast people tend to spread out and explore in general.
I prefer to leave my confidence intervals very wide (+/-100%) than to inappropriately reduce the problem to one where “our intuition works better.”
I guess I don’t like anthropic reasoning in general.
We’re not trying to narrow our confidence intervals on a cosmic filter by equating it to an island filter. Rather, using anthropic reasoning seems sketchy, so we seek out other problems using anthropic reasoning to see if the anthropic principle holds up. It’s the anthropic principle itself we’re analyzing here, hence the title of the post, “An empirical test of anthropic principle.”
Yes, that is exactly what I want to do.