On Mon, Sep 7, 2020 at 6:49 PM Stathis Papaioannou <stath...@gmail.com>
wrote:

*> The probability of interest is that one particular John Clark will see a
> prime number, not that some John Clark will see a prime number. A gambler
> who buys a lottery ticket is interested in the probability that one
> particular gambler will buy the winning ticket, not the probability that
> some gambler will buy the winning ticket*
>

BEFORE the duplication "one particular John Clark" and "some John Clark"
are exactly the same person, that is Bruno's Mr.You, that is the person
Bruno makes his bet with. Thus AFTER the duplication the identity of Mr.You
becomes completely ambiguous, there is now no way to tell who he made the
bet with, or how to determine the outcome and figure out who won and who
lost. And that's why Bruno loves personal pronouns so much and refuses to
stop using them, they can be used to sweep logical contradictions and
absurdities under the rug, and that can be very useful if the towering
logical edifice of your theory is built on a foundation of sand. The only
way Bruno can stop using personal pronouns is by means of Bruno's patented
peepee terminology and start talking about *THE* First Person Perspective,
when of course after the duplication there is no such thing as *THE* First
Person Perspective, there is only *A* First Person Perspective.

> *Nothing singles him out, one is picked at random out of the 100,*


But this entire thought experiment Is about what "you" can predict BEFORE
the duplication, Back then nobody can single anybody out because there is
only one John Clark. And this thought experiment is about what "you" can
expect to see, so the gambler must be Mr.You, so the gambler is also
duplicated 100 times.

*> and the question is asked, what is the probability that this particular
> one will see a prime number? *


I can predict today with 100% certainty that tomorrow AFTER the
duplication when
the John Clark in room #11 walks out turns around and looks at the number
on his door he will see a prime number, but that is a very VERY long way
from the original ambiguous question that was asked BEFORE the duplication,
namely "AFTER the duplication what is the probability "you" will see a
prime number?".  And that has no answer because it is not a question, it's
gibberish.

 John K Clark

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