Thanks. I could be winning this contest in another universe! I like the way you think big in your essay.

Roger Schlafly,

Thank you for reading my essay and for your kind words. The price seems to have been a 5 rating for you and a 1 rating for me. I am glad that you remain high. I will continue to take what comes as I move on evaluating essays. Good luck.

James

One trouble with the rating system is that you can get a low rating, but have no idea whether someone thinks that you are technically incorrect, or if someone just disagrees with some of your opinions. Ideally the critics wpould explain themselves in the comments.

4 days later

Roger Schlafly,

"One trouble with the rating system is that you can get a low rating, but have no idea whether someone thinks that you are technically incorrect, or if someone just disagrees with some of your opinions. Ideally the critics wpould explain themselves in the comments."

Your essay did not overtly challenge physics theories. It did not offer alternatives. It did not resist theoretical physics. It accepted physics theory. I loved you essay. I say it is a literary masterpiece. One can choose to accept its heralding of theoretical physics as a responsible position. I chose to understand it as a satire. My opinion does not affect the value of your essay. Your essay stands on its own. Your essay lives in the mind of the reader for what they believe. I state again that among all of the essays, it is a literary masterpiece. Whatever the contest outcome is, it cannot add to or detract from your literary accomplishment.

James Putnam

    Thanks very much. I tried to faithfully lay out the facts and arguments for determinism, many-worlds, and related ideas that have become so trendy among big-shot physicists. I do think that it is possible to believe those things, even if I personally find those ideas hard to take seriously. I wasn't so much trying to persuade people of my opinions, but to make the reader think more carefully about the direction modern physics is taking us. In particular we have great thinkers telling us how to steer the future, and a lot of them do not even believe in the future.

    Roger,

    You were recommended by James Putnam, and for some reason, I hadn't read your essay yet.Though subjected to head-jerking shifts in philosophies of time, I was pleased with an essay rich in relevant quotes that skillfully and substantially guides us through philosophies and scholarly discussions of time.

    I'm not sure where I am in time now, but I will never consciously feed a "naive view of time," considering that "the past is definite, the present is now, and the future is uncertain."

    We all want answers on how to steer the future, but it is presumptuous to think we can come up with a plan when climate change deniers now say it's too late, damage done.

    Your essay puts more doubt in our established minds.

    High marks.

    I would like to see your thoughts on mine: http://www.fqxi.org/community/forum/topic/2008

    Jim

      Thanks. Your essay nice explains how some future solutions, like ethanol, are not as good as they appear.

      Hi Roger,

      What an awesome essay. I'm sorry I didn't get to it sooner, as I think my essay and yours intersect some of the same territory. I explore the concept of a future-viewing machine. I am not referring to a mere prediction machine, as some have mistakenly thought, but a machine that could literally see the future. Many juicy logical problems arise when one conceives of such a machine.

      I would like for us to be able to communicate after the contest, as we have very little time left to communicate in this forum. If you choose to contact me, my email address is foreknowledge.machines{AT}{g.m.a.i.l}.{c.o.m}.

      I enjoyed your essay immensely and have rated it highly. All the best!

      Warmly,

      Aaron

      In many cases a revolution of physical perspective leads to unchanged short-term practical implications. For example, discovering that spacetime is curved doesn't affect terrestrial navigation. In the same way, we feel at least that a many-worlds perspective doesn't automatically negate what we know about probability; if you make a choice that helps someone 90% of the time and hurts them 10% of the time, that still seems better than the opposite even if you live in a MWI multiverse.

      Steven Kaas & Steve Rayhawk

        I disagree. Curved spacetime can be ignored because the effects are too small to measure. But MWI rejects the idea that you can help someone 90% of the time. The MWI advocates deny that it even makes sense to talk about 90% of the universes. You might think that you are helping someone 90% of the time, but actually be creating innumerable universes where he is hurt very badly.

        There are some papers where physicists try to makes sense of probabilities in MWI, but they have not been successful so far. MWI is like a religion for people who do not want to accept probabilities.

        a month later

        Hello Roger,

        I posted an article giving some publicity to your piece:

        http://ieet.org/index.php/IEET/more/searle20140705

        All the best!

        Rick Searle

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