Turns Out, Spock Is Kinda Bad at Logic : vimarsana.com

Turns Out, Spock Is Kinda Bad at Logic


In the franchise, Spock makes confident predictions based on his superior Vulcan mind. Galef was curious to see exactly how often these predictions pan out. “I went through all of the Star Trek episodes and movies—all of the transcripts that I could find—and searched for any instance in which Spock is using the words ‘odds,’ ‘probability,’ ‘chance,’ ‘definitely,’ ‘probably,’ etc.,” she says. “I catalogued all instances in which Spock made a prediction and that prediction either came true or didn’t.”
The results, which appear in Galef’s new book
The Scout Mindset, are devastating. Not only does Spock have a terrible track record—events he describes as “impossible” happen 83 percent of the time—but his confidence level is actually anti-correlated with reality. “The more confident he says he is that something will happen—that the ship will crash, or that they will find survivors—the less likely it is to happen, and the less confident he is in something, the more likely it is to happen,” Galef says.

Related Keywords

, Julia Galef , Jeff Bezos , Rationally Speaking , Applied Rationality , Star Trek , Scout Mindset , Geeks Guide To The Galaxy , ஜூலியா காளெப் , நட்சத்திரம் மலையேற்றம் , கீக்ஸ் வழிகாட்டி க்கு தி விண்மீன் ,

© 2025 Vimarsana