Likelihoods, Multiple Universes, and Epistemic Context

Philosophia Christi 7 (2):475 - 481 (2005)
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Abstract

Both advocates and opponents of the fine-tuning argument treat multiple universes with a selection effect as a legitimate hypothesis to explain the life-permitting values of the constants in our universe. I argue that, except where there is specific relevant prior information, the occurrence of multiple instances of a low-likelihood causal process should not be treated as an alternative hypothesis to a higher-likelihood causal process. Since an ’ad hoc’ hypothesis can be invented to give high likelihood to any evidence, we must provide some epistemic rationale other than similar likelihood for comparing two hypotheses

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Agency and the metalottery fallacy.L. McGrew - 2002 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 80 (4):440 – 464.

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