Technological impossibility ‘proofs’ are always flawed...
That wasn’t my intention. Over the past year I asked the proponents of FOOM to be more specific by mentioning some concrete requirements for FOOM to be feasible (also what evidence led them to make that prediction in the first place). But all they ever do is saying that I am not entitled to that particular proof, as if I am even asking for a proof. And so I went to see what requirements would have to be met to allow FOOM to be possible in the first place.
If someone predicts that the world is going to end, I’ll ask that person to be more specific. If that person refuses to be more specific, but continues to claim that the world will end anyway, then in order to better estimate the probability of the prediction I have to think about ways how the world could end, I’ll have to think about some specific requirements (circumstances) that would cause the world to end, e.g. giant alien death rays. If that person then says that all my examples of how the world could end are flawed, well then that doesn’t increase my probability estimation of him being right. To claim that there are no requirements for the world to end doesn’t make it more likely. You can’t substract details from a story by refusing to be specific.
What I said was more like “someone who claims to prove that such a belief is far-fetched is probably grounding their ‘proof’ on unwarranted assumptions.”
I never claimed to prove that such a belief is far-fetched, at most I made an antiprediction. I believe that such a belief is far-fetched.
The arguments of FOOM believers are flawed. Point out those flaws.
I did by showing that FOOM is a lot of handwaving, a label for some extraordinary assertions. Only its vagueness makes it look like the result of disjunctive reasoning. If you had to substantiate it, it would become apparent that it actually assumes a lot to be true of which we have no idea one way or the other.
...several people have found flaws in your arguments.
I don’t think so. Mostly they just said that I am wrong, but how do they know that?
That wasn’t my intention. Over the past year I asked the proponents of FOOM to be more specific by mentioning some concrete requirements for FOOM to be feasible (also what evidence led them to make that prediction in the first place). But all they ever do is saying that I am not entitled to that particular proof, as if I am even asking for a proof. And so I went to see what requirements would have to be met to allow FOOM to be possible in the first place.
If someone predicts that the world is going to end, I’ll ask that person to be more specific. If that person refuses to be more specific, but continues to claim that the world will end anyway, then in order to better estimate the probability of the prediction I have to think about ways how the world could end, I’ll have to think about some specific requirements (circumstances) that would cause the world to end, e.g. giant alien death rays. If that person then says that all my examples of how the world could end are flawed, well then that doesn’t increase my probability estimation of him being right. To claim that there are no requirements for the world to end doesn’t make it more likely. You can’t substract details from a story by refusing to be specific.
I never claimed to prove that such a belief is far-fetched, at most I made an antiprediction. I believe that such a belief is far-fetched.
I did by showing that FOOM is a lot of handwaving, a label for some extraordinary assertions. Only its vagueness makes it look like the result of disjunctive reasoning. If you had to substantiate it, it would become apparent that it actually assumes a lot to be true of which we have no idea one way or the other.
I don’t think so. Mostly they just said that I am wrong, but how do they know that?