A Conversation for The evolutionary function of belief

A853814 - The evolutionary function of belief

Post 181

Spiff


hi PC, smiley - smiley

perhaps just the very broad strokes... otherwise it's difficult to make sense of. smiley - smiley


A853814 - The evolutionary function of belief

Post 182

toxxin - ¡umop apisdn w,I 'aw dlaH

I admit I only just read a very brief summary of Jaynes' book: http://www.bizcharts.com/stoa_del_sol/conscious/conscious3.html
Somebody there gets the size of the corpus callosum wrong, but I wouldn't know whether that's in the original or why it would be relevant.

Ought we really to have to delve into such eccentricities in order to decide whether humans have evolved at all? I believe the Neanderthal's didn't leave any evidence of art. Now if we found something like that suddenly appearing, well, we'd be back to hitchiking the galaxy again; but this time with Pratchett I expect.


A853814 - The evolutionary function of belief

Post 183

Spiff


??


A853814 - The evolutionary function of belief

Post 184

toxxin - ¡umop apisdn w,I 'aw dlaH

Sorry Spiff; you'll have to be a little more specific if you want an answer to that question!


A853814 - The evolutionary function of belief

Post 185

Bed Time

Hi Ben,

Just to change the subject, briefly.

I have no problem whatsoever if yourself, Ste, or anyone else uses the thoughts that I added in any way at all.

This is a really interesting subject, and I am glad that I could have added to the debate in a small way.

Thank's

Bed Time!


A853814 - The evolutionary function of belief

Post 186

Bed Time

Oh,

And Thank You for your welcome!


A853814 - The evolutionary function of belief

Post 187

Gone again



Oh, Toxxin, don't you ever stop? smiley - biggrin As soon as any claim you make is answered or countered, you're off again, questing for even more obtuse and obscure ways to make points that none but you understand. smiley - doh Well, OK, maybe it's just me. smiley - winkeye

Pattern-chaser

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A853814 - The evolutionary function of belief

Post 188

toxxin - ¡umop apisdn w,I 'aw dlaH

Bit of a pain ain't I? smiley - smiley This topic is supposed to be about evolution. All I have been asking is how do we know whether something has evolved/is evolving. If we can't answer that, we can't tell whether Ben's alleged effect exists - even in principle.

Is that obtuse, obscure, hard to understand? It seems to me to be the most basic, simple and relevant question one could ask about evolution. My proffered answers have been scoffed at, so let's have a better suggestion please, anyone.


A853814 - The evolutionary function of belief

Post 189

Gone again

Ahah - the central point again (hooray! smiley - winkeye):

<...how do we know whether something has evolved/is evolving.>

I don't think we *can* know that *with certainty*. We are agreed, I think that a change due to evolution is just a special case of a change. I agree that we can observe a change, but I don't think we can - *with certainty* - know that the cause of the observed change is evolution. We can guess that it is - an educated guess, with a high probability of correctness - but this isn't certainty.

In the real world, I think we must settle for a high probability of correctness. The chase for certainty is a fruitless one, I believe, in all but trivial cases (such as, for example, "1 + 1 = 2", which is defined to be true, and is therefore certain).



I agree that *with certainty* , but see above....

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A853814 - The evolutionary function of belief

Post 190

Spiff


So, Toxxin, are you saying 'Evolution? A likely story!' and thence arguing against a minor theory that takes evolution as it's starting point?

If so, could the problem not easily be solved in this specific case by stating early on that this entry assumes that human beings did indeed evolve from other life forms, as positted by Mr Darwin and others.

i mean, we're not expecting every entry that assumes the validity of evolutionary theory to *prove* that theory...


A853814 - The evolutionary function of belief

Post 191

toxxin - ¡umop apisdn w,I 'aw dlaH

I would be happy to have a test of evolving that had a probability of greater than 50%. Given a large enough sample size, it could turn out to be statistically significant. Failing such a test, we can't tell in even a probabilistic sense whether Ben's alleged effect exists.

I have never sought certainty in areas other than those where necessary truth or falsity are involved.


A853814 - The evolutionary function of belief

Post 192

Spiff


falsity; an interesting and rarely seen word. smiley - smiley

well, by me, anyhoos, smiley - biggrin


A853814 - The evolutionary function of belief

Post 193

toxxin - ¡umop apisdn w,I 'aw dlaH

No Spiff, I'm broadly in agreement with the standard view on evolution. My question is not a theoretical one but an empirical one. 'Are humans evolving now?' is an interesting part of it. I don't question for a yoctosecond that HSS is a product of evolution.


A853814 - The evolutionary function of belief

Post 194

Spiff


ok, smiley - smiley, so it's 'belief as an evolutionary trait' that is the sticking point...


A853814 - The evolutionary function of belief

Post 195

toxxin - ¡umop apisdn w,I 'aw dlaH

To me 'falsehood' implies a deliberate lie, while 'falsity' implies the condition of not being true - with no emotive overtones. Is 'falseness' ever used?


A853814 - The evolutionary function of belief

Post 196

toxxin - ¡umop apisdn w,I 'aw dlaH

Sure is! smiley - smiley I'm stuck right at the start of the question at the heart of this project.


A853814 - The evolutionary function of belief

Post 197

Gone again

Loaded question (to Toxxin): do you subscribe to creationism, in some shape or form? Depending on your answer, I think all is finally becoming clear. Let's see.... smiley - ok

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A853814 - The evolutionary function of belief

Post 198

toxxin - ¡umop apisdn w,I 'aw dlaH

I don't subscribe to any form of creationism unless you count the fact that I'm agnostic about the origin of the universe.

I take back another question. 'Falseness' is used to denote untrustworthiness or even the quality of being ersatz.


A853814 - The evolutionary function of belief

Post 199

Gone again

Hi Toxxin,



Just for a minute, there, I thought I'd understood. smiley - erm Oh well. smiley - zen



So, if I understand correctly (it *has* happened - once or twice smiley - winkeye):

Given that you don't accept evolution as a proven theory - probably with good reason, IMO - there is nothing that will convince you that Ben's proposal is correct, is there?

Don't you think all this has been a little unfair? You have been trying to goad the posters here into providing you with proof of evolution, by your sometimes-less-than-comprehensible objections to Ben's thoughts. smiley - doh Shame on you. smiley - doh

If, as suggested (by Spiff?), Ben includes a rider that Darwinian evolution is assumed correct for the purposes of this entry, will your objections fade away?

Pattern-chaser

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A853814 - The evolutionary function of belief

Post 200

toxxin - ¡umop apisdn w,I 'aw dlaH

I'm sorry, but I don't understand what is supposed to have happened once or twice. I have already said that I'm in broad agreement with the standard view on evolution. See reply to Spiff (#196?). I accept the theory of evolution. That isn't my problem. Where did I say otherwise?

I would accept Ben's proposal if it could be empirically demonstrated to have a greater than 50% probability. Yet again, what test would one use and what evidence would show that the proposal was more probably true than false? Simple question. I'm not being radical or complicated. All I say is standard science and philosophy.

Please, please let's assume Darwininan evolution to be correct. Now how does it apply to Ben's proposal? That is all I'm asking. Still no answer.


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