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What Evidence Do You Need?
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<blockquote data-quote="AAA" data-source="post: 119223" data-attributes="member: 5790"><p>More thought exercise; ...If you were to somehow incorporate a sentence that reads "Bricks don't lay eggs in the snow storm." into a letter to yourself.</p><p></p><p>A year later, you are covering something with a tarp because there is freezing rain and several inches of snow coming to your neighborhood. You grab a couple of bricks to weigh the tarp down and notice there is an egg of some kind underneath one of them, a turtle or lizard nest left from the summer that didn't hatch or something.</p><p></p><p>It is an obscure and unlikely set of circumstances as a point of reference to let you know it came from yourself. You remember the day and approximate time and circumstances when writing the letter, but from the perspective of your younger self, it didn't make sense until it actually happened. If no one was around to observe the event, and you do not talk about it, you know by deductive reasoning that it had to come from yourself, from your future memory.</p><p></p><p>If someone reads the letter, they have no clue what it means. Someone can run it through the most sophisticated AI programs and decoding software available and they will get nothing.</p><p></p><p>Now consider how or if you can prove it to someone else? If you explained it to them and showed them the letter, the brick, the nest with a brick imprint on the ground and everything necessary to 'get it', would they?</p><p></p><p>You would have to prove that you wrote the letter at a future point in time, and every ambiguous or vague or nonsensical reference having meaning and relevance. From a personal perspective of watching it all happen on a time line you know it is real. But trying to get someone to see it from your perspective enough to satisfy them with proof could be difficult or impossible.</p><p></p><p>Could you also include a reference or metaphor for what the person you were trying to convince was doing that day? From the future you perspective, you remember trying to convince someone, so you know to leave something for them too.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="AAA, post: 119223, member: 5790"] More thought exercise; ...If you were to somehow incorporate a sentence that reads "Bricks don't lay eggs in the snow storm." into a letter to yourself. A year later, you are covering something with a tarp because there is freezing rain and several inches of snow coming to your neighborhood. You grab a couple of bricks to weigh the tarp down and notice there is an egg of some kind underneath one of them, a turtle or lizard nest left from the summer that didn't hatch or something. It is an obscure and unlikely set of circumstances as a point of reference to let you know it came from yourself. You remember the day and approximate time and circumstances when writing the letter, but from the perspective of your younger self, it didn't make sense until it actually happened. If no one was around to observe the event, and you do not talk about it, you know by deductive reasoning that it had to come from yourself, from your future memory. If someone reads the letter, they have no clue what it means. Someone can run it through the most sophisticated AI programs and decoding software available and they will get nothing. Now consider how or if you can prove it to someone else? If you explained it to them and showed them the letter, the brick, the nest with a brick imprint on the ground and everything necessary to 'get it', would they? You would have to prove that you wrote the letter at a future point in time, and every ambiguous or vague or nonsensical reference having meaning and relevance. From a personal perspective of watching it all happen on a time line you know it is real. But trying to get someone to see it from your perspective enough to satisfy them with proof could be difficult or impossible. Could you also include a reference or metaphor for what the person you were trying to convince was doing that day? From the future you perspective, you remember trying to convince someone, so you know to leave something for them too. [/QUOTE]
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