02-13-2024, 07:55 PM | #37081 |
Award-Winning Participant
Posts: 7,355
Karma: 68329346
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: NJ, USA
Device: Kindle
|
Why do people, particularly novelists, insist upon saying "you can't prove a negative?"
That's ridiculous. Of course you can. Sometimes easily. Sometimes you can't, but for that matter, sometimes you can't prove a positive either. In a completely unrelated peeve, but one that occurred in the same, otherwise very enjoyable novel: Writers, don't have the guy check the safety on his Chief's Special .38 revolver. With very rare and extraordinary exceptions, revolvers don't have safeties like that. It completely destroys the otherwise believable story world I was enjoying, and 10 more seconds of research when you picked what kind of gun to include would have shown you that. |
02-13-2024, 08:10 PM | #37082 | |
want to learn what I want
Posts: 1,258
Karma: 6426810
Join Date: Sep 2020
Device: Calibre E-book viewer
|
Quote:
|
|
02-14-2024, 09:33 PM | #37083 | ||
Bookmaker & Cat Slave
Posts: 11,494
Karma: 158448243
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Phoenix, AZ
Device: K2, iPad, KFire, PPW, Voyage, NookColor. 2 Droid, Oasis, Boox Note2
|
Quote:
But, let's say you get sick at that same restaurant and you end up, 8 hours later, in the ER. How can the restaurant PROVE that they didn't have shellfish or stock that was made with shellfish, in the meal you ate? It's one thing to say "we didn't..." and even if the entire kitchen swears that they didn't use that fish stock...that's not proof. That's testimony. Not the same thing. Quote:
Hitch |
||
02-15-2024, 09:03 AM | #37084 | ||
Award-Winning Participant
Posts: 7,355
Karma: 68329346
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: NJ, USA
Device: Kindle
|
Quote:
My 17 year old daughter didn't kill JFK. I'll bring in historians, medical doctors and physicists to prove JFK died in 1963, she wasn't born then, and time travel isn't possible, so she couldn't have done it . QED. Slightly more relevant to the situations I'm referring to: My client didn't shoot the victim. The victim was shot at noon by a thin, short white person, as shown on the security footage and corroborated by the three cops who witnessed it. My client is a 7 foot tall 400 pound black person who at noon was in chains, in this court room, in your presence, your honor, and so could not have done it. QED. From there, we just get in to various levels of near-certainty, still well beyond any reasonable doubt. For many, many, many things, for something to have happened, some other things must have also happened or not happened. If X had happened, it would have precluded Y. We can prove Y, so we've disproved X. Like Sherlock Holmes observed, a person can't pass through a room without taking or leaving something. Show enough evidence, or lack thereof, of enough of those somethings and you meet any burden of proof. The kid didn't eat the cookie. The cookie still there, intact. So it can't can't have been eaten, by him or anyone. QED In your shelffish example, restaurant security footage shows everything the victim touched, ate or drank, and lab tests show no trace of shellfish on any of it or anywhere in our vegan restaurant. Is that enough proof? ETA: "You can't prove a negative?" Really? Prove it. Ha! Logical paradox, sucka! (Ooh... I like that. I'll need to use that line in a story sometime.) Quote:
Last edited by ApK; 02-15-2024 at 09:53 AM. |
||
02-16-2024, 01:54 AM | #37085 | ||||||||
Bookmaker & Cat Slave
Posts: 11,494
Karma: 158448243
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Phoenix, AZ
Device: K2, iPad, KFire, PPW, Voyage, NookColor. 2 Droid, Oasis, Boox Note2
|
Quote:
Quote:
The point is..."proof" means just that. EVIDENCE that can absolutely show that the question under consideration cannot have happened. When you solve the matter by coming up with the alternate scenario, you have not proven a negative--you have proven a positive, that this other perpetrator DID perform the deed. When people talk about not being able to prove a negative, it's not in some cute scenario in which the reality is easily disputed; it's when the only avenue is doing just that--proving that X did not occur. Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
"Proof" is indisputable evidence that something is true (or not, let's say for the sake of argument); "evidence" is just something that leads you to believe that something is, or is not, true. They are not the same thing. Everything you've said in this post--is evidence. NOT proof. Sorry if you think this is hair-splitting, but it's not. You're trying to take apart a logic argument by conflating the two. Ask yourself how this is proven, if/when the kitchen doesn't have a single camera in sight. What happens then? What's the evidence, or the proof, then? Quote:
Quote:
Hitch |
||||||||
02-16-2024, 07:14 AM | #37086 | ||
Award-Winning Participant
Posts: 7,355
Karma: 68329346
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: NJ, USA
Device: Kindle
|
Quote:
Quote:
In any court...or laboratory, for that matter...that I can imagine, proof of a MUTUALLY EXCLUSIVE alternative like I've given IS PROOF that the other thing didn't happen. Indirect evidence leading to logical inference and deduction is simply HOW IT IS DONE when the thing itself is not directly observable, whether positive OR negative. And the cases where this "You can't prove a negative" comes up is not in cases of two logicians arguing an abstraction. It's in matters of court cases, or sometimes in science related stuff, depending on genre, and so proof is never "absolute." It's "beyond a reasonable doubt" or "to a high degree of certainty." What they, and you, apparently, are really saying when they say "you can't prove a negative" is either: "You can't prove a negative...if you define proof as my arbitrarily chosen standard of proof, which will always be just a bit higher than whatever you achieve." (I think that's the "Real Scotsman" fallacy) or "You can't prove a negative...if you don't have any evidence." Well, duh. You can't prove a positive without any evidence, either. This reminds me of another peeve of mine: "Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence." Actually, it often is. It may not be very strong evidence, and it's almost certainly not PROOF, but it often is evidence indeed. Again, this is typically how science is done when stuff isn't directly observable. If X happens, then we should be able to observe Y. We don't see Y. That doesn't PROVE X didn't happen. We may just have failed to detect Y. But it sure is evidence that X didn't happen, and we're going to continue experimenting to see if we find more evidence. Last edited by ApK; 02-16-2024 at 09:47 AM. |
||
02-16-2024, 08:15 PM | #37087 |
Bibliophagist
Posts: 40,516
Karma: 156983616
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Vancouver
Device: Kobo Sage, Libra Colour, Lenovo M8 FHD, Paperwhite 4, Tolino epos
|
Last time I looked, quite a few items had been proved by logic and not by evidence.
|
02-17-2024, 09:03 AM | #37088 | |
Bookmaker & Cat Slave
Posts: 11,494
Karma: 158448243
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Phoenix, AZ
Device: K2, iPad, KFire, PPW, Voyage, NookColor. 2 Droid, Oasis, Boox Note2
|
Quote:
Yes, absolutely. No argument means that whatever was proven, was an impossibility in the reverse. That's logic for ya. For example, one of ApK's examples, how his daughter that was not yet born thus could not have been Kennedy's assassin. Okay, fine. You could try to argue that that's "proving" the impossible, but it's not--you've proven the inverse. She didn't exist until Year X and thus, while she could have done X things during her lifetime, she could not do things outside of it. Right? Back later to yammer about the difference between evidence and proof. Hitch |
|
02-17-2024, 01:54 PM | #37089 |
Wizard
Posts: 2,071
Karma: 15107670
Join Date: May 2017
Device: Sage, Scribe, Boox Note 2 Plus, iPad Pros and Samsungs S6,S7,S8
|
I won my credit card dispute over my B&N purchase but B&N banned me from shopping online with a credit card. paypal works. makes me mad for this was a one time incident and i spent a fortune at B&N in the past.
|
02-18-2024, 10:57 AM | #37090 | |
Somewhat clueless
Posts: 744
Karma: 9545975
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: UK
Device: Kindle Oasis, iPhone 6 Plus
|
Quote:
Consider the assertion: "there are no two integers such that one divided by the other yields the square root of two". Clearly a negative assertion, but trivially provable. Whenever I've had this argument with anyone, it quickly reduces to a weaker assertion: "there's a subset of negative assertions which are unprovable". No argument there, but it's not what the original claim states. |
|
02-18-2024, 11:11 AM | #37091 |
Somewhat clueless
Posts: 744
Karma: 9545975
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: UK
Device: Kindle Oasis, iPhone 6 Plus
|
|
02-18-2024, 05:19 PM | #37092 |
Award-Winning Participant
Posts: 7,355
Karma: 68329346
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: NJ, USA
Device: Kindle
|
Thank you. JB. Nice to know at least one other person both has a grasp of the obvious truth equal to my own, and also recognizes my brilliance.
Btw, it was a John Lescroart novel that brought up both of the peeves in my post, and this one just came up again today in the next novel in the series, and this time, they kind of lampshaded the issue. The ME ruled a death "homicide/suicide equivocal." Could be either, no medical way to say for certain. The cops asked wasn't there someway he could rule out suicide? He said "I can't prove it wasn't suicide. As you like to say, Abe, 'you can't prove a negative.' You'd be better off proving it was a homicide." Arg! They are mutually exclusive alternatives, so if you prove one happened, then you have proved the other didn't. I'm just not seeing why the characters, and presumably the author, and also Hitch, don't see it this way. And again, this is the more or less practical real world stuff where it comes up and bugs me, but it would seem to be also false in pure math and logic, as JB mentioned. Prove 6 is not prime. 2x3=6. QED. I am missing the source of disagreement. Is this a problem with semantics or definitions, or what? Last edited by ApK; 02-18-2024 at 05:23 PM. |
02-22-2024, 08:11 PM | #37093 |
Custom User Title
Posts: 9,543
Karma: 64960981
Join Date: Oct 2018
Location: Canada
Device: Kobo Libra H2O, formerly Aura HD
|
My knees are exceedingly super-achy today. There's a weather advisory for an incoming rainstorm. Living barometer.
|
02-22-2024, 08:36 PM | #37094 |
Now what?
Posts: 60,992
Karma: 135181808
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Durham, NC
Device: Every Kindle Ever Made & To Be Made!
|
I too have a weather knee, and now weather shoulders .... exceedingly accurate
|
02-23-2024, 04:26 AM | #37095 |
0000000000101010
Posts: 5,710
Karma: 11482159
Join Date: Mar 2023
Location: An island off the coast of Ireland
Device: PB632 [HD3]
|
Similar ting for me. I've noticed if there's weather my joints hurt.
|
Tags |
creepy crawlers!, dell computers, monteverdi, thread that never ends, tubery, unutterable silliness |
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
I just have to vent... | lacymarie7575 | Sony Reader | 5 | 08-18-2010 08:59 PM |
I need to vent! Booksonboard! Ugh! | Mrgauth | News | 25 | 12-17-2009 10:26 AM |
Why, Oh Why! [RANT] | Vesper | Lounge | 19 | 06-19-2008 12:50 PM |
Am I allowed to vent here? | sborsody | Which one should I buy? | 25 | 06-12-2007 02:30 PM |