But there’s a larger issue, an issue that I think matters here: You didn’t realize just how very different that the claims “has high probability of occurring in most worlds” from the claim “a certain thing will happen in every world”. That first claim is much easier to show than the second claim, since you now have to consider every example, or have a clever trick, since any counterexample breaks your claim.
If something is almost certainly false, then it remains entirely possible that it is true—because a tiny probability is still a possibility :)
But, yeah, it was not a good example to illustrate any point I care enough about to defend on this forum.
But there’s a larger issue, an issue that I think matters here: You didn’t realize just how very different that the claims “has high probability of occurring in most worlds” from the claim “a certain thing will happen in every world”. That first claim is much easier to show than the second claim, since you now have to consider every example, or have a clever trick, since any counterexample breaks your claim.
Most!=All is an important distinction here.