I was making a point about human thought processes, not human desires. I agree that it’s unlikely that the greatest epistemic rationalist would want to have a relationship with a YEC, but if s/he did want to, s/he could.
If I were otherwise unattached, I would totally have a relationship with a YEC, if she was from a world which had actually been created 6000 years ago. Otherwise no.
Unless you have actually tracked down and interviewed the greatest epistemic rationalist on earth, how do you know? Maybe (s)he is very tolerant of such things. (When does intolerance win on a personal scale?)
Because I have experience with good rationalists, and the kind of people they have relationships with, and I am a bayesian so I can assign degrees of belief to propositions that I haven’t tested directly. In this case, it seems reasonable that similar people have similar relationship-behaviors, and so my existing knowledge is relevant.
Rather like “how do you know that the fastest dog in the world can’t outrun a formula one car?”—I know this with high certainty because I believe that similar animals behave in similar ways.
false in general, false as a statistical statement too.
The greatest epistemic rationalist on Earth is still made out of meat.
I was making a point about human thought processes, not human desires. I agree that it’s unlikely that the greatest epistemic rationalist would want to have a relationship with a YEC, but if s/he did want to, s/he could.
If I were otherwise unattached, I would totally have a relationship with a YEC, if she was from a world which had actually been created 6000 years ago. Otherwise no.
What if she was just from a world where lots of evidence pointed to it having been created 6,000 years ago, but it was really created last Thursday?
Is she hot?
...okay, that was a bit out of character, but I think that at that point in the thread I basically had no choice but to say that.
have you ever been in a long-term relationship?
Downvoted as thoroughly unhelpful.
Downvoted as uselessly vague.
If it is false they could not. What would prevent them?
Unless you have actually tracked down and interviewed the greatest epistemic rationalist on earth, how do you know? Maybe (s)he is very tolerant of such things. (When does intolerance win on a personal scale?)
This sounds like scientism.
Because I have experience with good rationalists, and the kind of people they have relationships with, and I am a bayesian so I can assign degrees of belief to propositions that I haven’t tested directly. In this case, it seems reasonable that similar people have similar relationship-behaviors, and so my existing knowledge is relevant.
Rather like “how do you know that the fastest dog in the world can’t outrun a formula one car?”—I know this with high certainty because I believe that similar animals behave in similar ways.