If the ravens in question are in the next universe over, then we’ll never see them, regardless of their number or color.
That having been said, I think I get what you mean to say (sort of?), but it doesn’t seem to me to bear on the point. Consider these scenarios:
Scenario 1: There are a trillion ravens, and all are black.
Scenario 2: There are a trillion ravens, and all but one are black.
In both cases, if I’ve seen a mere thousand black ravens so far, I predict that the next raven I see will be black.
But in one case, “all ravens are black” is true, and in the other, it is false! So I am just not convinced that “what do you predict will be the color of the next raven you see” is even a relevant question, w.r.t. this paradox.
If the ravens in question are in the next universe over, then we’ll never see them, regardless of their number or color.
That having been said, I think I get what you mean to say (sort of?), but it doesn’t seem to me to bear on the point. Consider these scenarios:
Scenario 1: There are a trillion ravens, and all are black.
Scenario 2: There are a trillion ravens, and all but one are black.
In both cases, if I’ve seen a mere thousand black ravens so far, I predict that the next raven I see will be black.
But in one case, “all ravens are black” is true, and in the other, it is false! So I am just not convinced that “what do you predict will be the color of the next raven you see” is even a relevant question, w.r.t. this paradox.