Chunderer,
So it comes down to universal Darwinism and meme tics then.
No. All that’s being said is that ideas and beliefs often survive for reason entirely other than their content.
We know that ideas survive even though they are not correct.
Finally you’re getting it!
Ideas are therefore not subject to survivor bias since they do not become extinct.. The revival of paganism should have taught you that.
And bang, straight into yet another
non sequitur. Of course ideas can become “extinct” – ie, forgotten about. Who can say what ideas were lost - perhaps forever – in the fire at the great library at Alexandria? No-one’s suggesting that
all ideas will survive by chance and happenstance – many will not. It’s simply an observable fact though that many
do survive for reasons unrelated to their content – because an emperor makes a faith the state religion for example.
Again explain why people on this board are simultaneously peddling two contradictory ideas that resurrectionism succeeds and resurrectionism also fails.
Again you’ve had it explained to you several times now but you just ignore the explanation. Why do some people win the heads and tails game and some do not? Some resurrection stories get lucky, some do not – that’s the point. The content of the story isn’t the thing that ensures its success – often other factors entirely will do it and the fact that the story entaiis a resurrection is incidental.
Good grief!
If anything you are the Constantine of survival bias theory.
Oh dear. Survivor bias already exists as an observable phenomenon. It needs no help from me to make it so.
Some of us still think that because it is popular doesn't make it right.
So you’ve removed the
argumetum ad populum from the range of logical fallacies on which you rely then? Better late then never I guess.
Finally…
“Finally”? Any chance of a “firstly” first?
…the article on survival bias mentions some systems and contexts but strangely religion seems to be missing..........I suspect another category error on your part.
First, what article?
Second, survivor bias is an observable phenomenon – whether its object is businesses, technologies, religions or anything else is irrelevant.
Thirdly, as I painstakingly explained to you several times there is no category error when the claimed
process – personal “intuition” for example – is the
same, regardless of the object of that intuition. Either you think that intuition is a reliable guide to objective truths or you don’t. You’d be barmy to do so given the total absence of a verification method to support it (you know, the question you endlessly run away from), but there it is. If you cling to it nonetheless, you have no choice but to accept that anyone
else’s intuition about anything else must also be a reliable guide to objective truths.
You really are terribly confused.
Really.