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Originally Posted by Enobarbus
(Post 4466137)
I salute your monumental patience Samurai. Your clarity of thought is astounding. Your articulation is lucid. Some of the stuff you wrote in this thread will help me in my own arguments with some of my friends. Thanks for filling up some of the gaps in my knowledge and understanding. |
Originally Posted by Nav-i-gator
(Post 4466174)
Ahh yes! There lies my perfect agreement with you. "empirical". . . So yes, I agree. Astrology is not a science. At best, it has an empirical basis to believe. |
Originally Posted by wiki In statistics, the 68–95–99.7 rule, also known as the empirical rule, is a shorthand used to remember the percentage of values that lie within a band around the mean in a normal distribution with a width of two, four and six standard deviations, respectively; more accurately, 68.27%, 95.45% and 99.73% of the values lie within one, two and three standard deviations of the mean, respectively. The usefulness of this heuristic depends significantly on the question under consideration. In the social sciences, a result may be considered "significant" if its confidence level is of the order of a two-sigma effect (95%), while in particle physics, there is a convention of a five-sigma effect (99.99994% confidence) being required to qualify as a discovery. |
Originally Posted by gkveda
(Post 4466276)
But, science will have scientific method to explain why it is NOT 100% accurate (Can we call this method to madness :))unlike the astrology where both predictions and justifications are unscientific |
Originally Posted by Samurai
(Post 4466289)
I am glad we agree astrology is not science. But it appears our definitions of empirical is different |
Originally Posted by Nav-i-gator
(Post 4466294)
No, I said, empirical basis to believe. I further said, belief requires much lesser accuracy to, well - believe. It's a "believable science" if predictions came out correct, otherwise, it's destiny (God's will) which triumphs over "science"! |
Originally Posted by ashokrajagopal
(Post 4466307)
It really is a simple thing to discuss, why are we complicating it ? Empirical evidence is solely based on how consistent the results are. Out of 100 predictions, roughly how many can come out true. A star position from a given latitude and longitude is the same for 1000s of kids born at the same time. Unless a considerable number of them have the same character/life/"time", you cant say astrology has anything to do with empirical evidence. Forget 1000s, just think about the 10s of kids born in a hospital a given night. Or even twins. Please note, even a dead clock shows the right time, TWICE a day. Random predictions that work fall in the anecdotal evidence and do not hold value in science. |
Originally Posted by Samurai
(Post 4466289)
As a teen I ended up reading these books |
Originally Posted by Nav-i-gator
(Post 4466355)
On a side note, recently there were a lot of news and articles about how AI is giving more accurate predictions about retinal disease prognosis, cancer prognosis and chances of death due to various diseases than doctors. Guess, Medical science will be joining astrology soon, and both being replaced with AI. |
Originally Posted by Nav-i-gator
(Post 4466355)
Two identical kids (mono-zygotic twins in scientific parlance - where both share exactly same DNA) are also not identical as they grow up. Nor do they share the same life/time/character. Astrology has nothing to do with such specific aspects, nor science. There are many other factors that contribute to it that even science of today cannot predict accurately. |
Astrology was invented/discovered/written long time ago. Some of the methods/calculations/aspects may no longer hold true and hence the predictions may go on more and more off the accuracy to be termed as empirically correct. Consider this - a child born to a family in India is expected to live upto about 70 years, provided it survives the first 5 years (considering the average age of Indian male and discounting the infant mortality rate). This is empirically correct prediction, right? Now there are other factors too, that can affect and lead to failure of this prediction - like eating and drinking habits, pollution, road accidents, smoking habits, so on and so forth. Besides, the same average 70 years age would also change (go higher) by the time the child would reach 70 years of age due to further advancements in medical technology. The prediction that may be fairly accurate based on empirical evidence today, would be wrong in near future. And here we are talking about something that is based on empirical observations prevalent hundreds of years ago. |
On a side note, recently there were a lot of news and articles about how AI is giving more accurate predictions about retinal disease prognosis, cancer prognosis and chances of death due to various diseases than doctors. Guess, Medical science will be joining astrology soon, and both being replaced with AI. |
Originally Posted by Samurai
(Post 4466368)
Since I dabble in this at work, I can tell you that AI is based on empirical evidence and therefore always measured using statistical data. However, AI based medical decisions will be expected to have at least 2 sigma (95%) confidence interval (CI). Since astrology may not even have 1 sigma (68%) CI, you can't equate AI with astrology. |
Originally Posted by ashokrajagopal
(Post 4466378)
What I understand from above is astrology is some sort of technique which is believed to have worked some centuries ago and does not work at all now. The star positions from centuries before which are supposed to be holding some sort of intelligent information is then essentially a belief system with no evidence based backing, correct ? |
Originally Posted by Nav-i-gator
(Post 4466379)
If AI developed using empirical evidence as available today is asked to predict hundreds/thousands of years ahead of today, let's see at what sigma level accuracy it can predict then. My prediction :) it would be less accurate than astrology. |
Originally Posted by AltoLXI
(Post 4466362)
I had forgotten about these books but again bought these books when my son was in seventh standard. The books which I bought were not by Mir publishers. I insisted I want ones which were published by Mir but I was told Mir had shut shop long back.:Frustrati |
Originally Posted by Samurai
(Post 4466391)
No, that's not how it works. When AI makes predictions, it will tell you the CI (accuracy) along with it. Astrologers don't have this handicap. They never say what is the CI for their prediction. |
Originally Posted by Nav-i-gator
(Post 4466403)
If AI says, there is a 19% chance of a patient with 2 stage cancer of dying in next 30 days, with 30% CI, and I say there is a 50% chance that he die the very next day (50% chance that he lives), which one is more accurate? |
Originally Posted by Nav-i-gator
(Post 4466294)
Many of the scientific methods, calculations and equipment were not even invented/discovered when many scientific theories and mathematical concepts were invented. Ancient Indian scriptures (as an example) had quite precise measurements of the distance of sun from Earth (besides knowing as given that Earth rotates around the sun), concept of calculus, Pythagoras theorem, concept of time dilation, big bang, even concepts like multiverse are there in ancient texts - as stories and/or events/verses/shlokas. Those times, people were not using these theories or concepts. But somehow they knew it, and at least retrospectively, we know these are scientifically proven concepts today. |
Originally Posted by AMG Power
(Post 4465691)
A blind man wouldn't "look" - he would feel, grope, bump and bang into things much like scientists do with anything that they cannot prove. :) |
Originally Posted by Nav-i-gator
(Post 4466355)
On a side note, recently there were a lot of news and articles about how AI is giving more accurate predictions about retinal disease prognosis, cancer prognosis and chances of death due to various diseases than doctors. Guess, Medical science will be joining astrology soon, and both being replaced with AI. |
Originally Posted by bhargavd
(Post 4462187)
Just putting a thought out- Astrology is just Big Data. Crores of births, lives and deaths recorded to find similarities, trends and outcomes based on parameters like birth dates, birth times, planetary positions etc, etc. What astrologers tell us are the the probable outcomes. The more in-depth analysis the astrologer does, better the prediction. PS: Not a believer, did Nadishastra along with parents- it blew my 16 year old mind, never went back. Now I take my life as a surprise stupid: |
Originally Posted by bhargavd
(Post 4467892)
I tried to say the same thing in my post, yours is much better clap: |
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