That is not true. Of course probabilities can be calculated in advance. Insurance companies do it all the time.
Ricmat,
Insurance companies are a bad analogy because in fact they do have the data required to make estimates of probability. They have statistics on the number of houses, the number of fires which occur, and can therefore work out the probability of X number of fires occurring in a 12 month period. The same for Casinos. They DO have all the required information to make probabilistic estimates. What values do you think they lack?
We, again, have no such data. We do not know how often life arises. So again we lack the starting values required to make a probabilistic estimate.
Also, I have said this twice but you did not ask me to elaborate on it. Your position is suffering horribly from what is called “The two card game fallacy”. I shall elaborate on this now.
If you deal the 52 cards in a deck out in a row, the result is not remarkable. It simply happens as it happens. However if you were to suddenly assume that the result is remarkable, the first thing you will notice is that there is almost no chance of it having occurred. Do the math on this. The chances of even getting the first 5 cards that you did are 1 in 311875200. The cheap calculator built into my phone can not actually get past the probability of the first 15 cards before saying the number is out of memory range. Suffice to say however that if you spent the rest of your life, and the next 1000 generations of your descendants took up the mantel after you died, it is likely the same 52 cards would never be dealt by them again in that exact order.
People who estimate the probability of life occurring are making the SAME error. Exactly the same. They are assuming, wholesale, without any basis, that the cards dealt to make life as WE know it are the only way the cards can be dealt. We… simply… do… not… know… this… to… be… so. Anyone who says we do is lying through an orifice I will leave unnamed.
Take even the most basic and common assumptions we have made about life as an example. We thought life requires oxygen to occur? Uh-uh, false. Even that is not true. We have recently discovered life operating independently of oxygen:
Deep under the Mediterranean Sea, small animals have been discovered that live their entire lives without oxygen and surrounded by ‘poisonous’ sulphides. Researchers writing in the open access journal BMC Biology report the existence of multicellular organisms (new members of the group Loricifera), showing that they are alive, metabolically active, and apparently reproducing in spite of a complete absence of oxygen.
sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/04/100407094450.htm
So the books you cite can make up probability figures out of nowhere all they like but as I said they have 2 glaring problems that make their position wholly false:
- They have to assume the starting variable for life on earth in order to do it.
- They have to assume that life as we know it is the only one possible.
Either one of those alone is enough, but both together is just plain awful. Which is why the positions of these “scientists” tend only to make it to books, and not actual peer reviewed journals. One’s claims do not have to be valid to make it into books.
You talk of pulling an ace out of a standard deck, but this again misses my point. Again you need to know what a “standard deck” is and what it contains to make these claims. For all you know a “standard deck” is ALL aces. If you did not have these starting variables, your probabilities would be guess work. You DO know how many aces are in a deck. You do NOT know how many aces were in the deck that started life on earth off. Until we know how life occurred, we can not know the probability of that event having occurred, even BEFORE we assign it remarkability in retrospect in the “Two Card Game Fallacy”