“In practice” doesn’t mean “this is practiced”, it means “given that this is done, what things are, with high probability, associated with it in real-life situations” (or in this case, real-life-+-Yoda situations). “In practice” can apply to rare or unique events.
I really don’t think statements of the form “X is, in practice, correlated with Y” should apply to situations where X has literally never occurred. You might want to say “I expect that X would, in practice, be correlated with Y” instead.
“In practice” doesn’t mean “this is practiced”, it means “given that this is done, what things are, with high probability, associated with it in real-life situations” (or in this case, real-life-+-Yoda situations). “In practice” can apply to rare or unique events.
“In practice” doesn’t mean “this is practiced”, it means “given that this is done, what things are, with high probability, associated with it in real-life situations” (or in this case, real-life-+-Yoda situations). “In practice” can apply to rare or unique events.
I really don’t think statements of the form “X is, in practice, correlated with Y” should apply to situations where X has literally never occurred. You might want to say “I expect that X would, in practice, be correlated with Y” instead.
All events have never occurred if you describe them with enough specificity; I’ve never eaten this exact sandwich on this exact day.
While nobody has eaten Yoda before, there have been instances where people have eaten beings that could talk intelligently.
I share Qiaochu’s reasoning.