Does STTGL's Probability Alteration require claims of "No-Limit Fallacy"?
As the title says.
Is it fair?
I mean, he can pretty much change the probability of ANYTHING.
He can change the probability of his attack destroying the universe, multiple dimensions, just by thinking of it.
Do you think there should be limits to this power?
Unless it's outright stated, or shown, not many other people in anime or otherwise can really beat him, as he can just be like "Lol, thought you could hit me -changes probability of your attack hurting me-".
I don't think it really has limits on the attacks either, like if someone more powerful then him tried to wipe him from existence, he can still change that probability so that the probability of him being wiped from existence is 0.
A 'no limits fallacy' is when something is assumed to have no limits simply because they're not shown.
Something actively shown to not have limits is not a fallacy.
And no, STTGL does not have *no* limits. We've seen prior occasions when the Spiral Energy of the characters has needed an outside boost to make it to the next level (like when they drew upon the spiral energy of all the previous failed spiral rebellions). So, something *sufficiently* larger in scale could beat it before it could scale-up enough- which isn't to say that it couldn't eventually reach any particular scale, but it does need to actually progress through the levels. And it's not like it's the only thing that can alter probability, and some things do have attacks unlikely to be affected by probability alteration.
So what we have here is not a case of no-limits fallacy, but simply something with massively extremely high limits.
Thats because the Anti-Spiral had the ability of Probability Alteration as well.
It's a VERY OP thing to have in your arsenal.
Thats a step above altering reality or time/space.
He's directly changing the probability that you can hurt him, and anyone who doesn't have something to counter that (and there aren't many powers that CAN), is going to be useless against him.
Sure, but that's not no limits, that's 'it's very OP and hard to counter.'
And I wouldn't say it's a 'step above,' in a lot of ways it's more limited. Heck, I'd even classify it as a specific form of reality alteration. The probability of stuff happening is part of the universe.
Sending, say, a wave of unreality probably wouldn't be stopped, because probability is part of reality.
You've mentioned one limit yourself, other probability manipulation.
There's some reality alteration that won't care about probability alteration or will prevent it's use.
Probability alteration is not even comparable to realty warping. If anything, as Q99 said, it is a specific form of reality manipulation. And also, you are COMPLETELY misunderstanding the ability. He can't magically make himself invulnerable to any attack. He can simply increase the chance of something going wrong with an attack. Say someone went to shoot a blast at him, he could alter probability so that the attack would explode in their face, or something like that. He doesn't have reality manipulation. He uses spiral energy, and fights on a galactic scale. That is the ONLY reason that STTGL seems unbeatable compared to so many other series. I could probably count the anime series with galaxy+ busters on both hands.
However, someone with feats greater than STTGL would thereby DEFEAT STTGL. As did the Anti-spiral.
And btw, you realize that for something to be truly infinite, there can exist only one of it, right? As that would mean one infinity to be larger than it, which in itself is a logical paradox. Or did you skip that day in high school?
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"Why is everybody so ****ing stupid?"- Kim Jong Il, Team America.
Consider all positive numbers and all negative numbers. Positive numbers continue upwards into infinite. Negative numbers continue downward into infinite. They co-exist, as do other infinities.
If something is infinite, you can cut it in half- or into a billion different parts- and have all of them be infinite.
There is also mathematical terms for scales of infinity. It gets weird.
I think there's a lot of misunderstanding of infinity because people conflate it with discussions of omnipotence- which is, one, generally theological rather than math, and two, usually defined in terms like 'can't be trumped' and in general a variety of rules people put in to apply to them, which IMO makes most usages of the word of questionable value, because thing A in a universe can be called omnipotent, while thing B from another universe can be much greater in terms of actual feats and demonstrated capabilities but have something that trumps it or a known limit and thus people won't call it omnipotent, even though by all measures it's greater than thing A, and all that.
Anyway, back to infinite, yea, lots of things can be infinite at the same time, and there's plenty of different forms infinite beings can take. Something can be infinite but quite straightforward, or have rather complex abilities, and yadda yadda.
[QUOTE=15512829]Originally posted by SSJGGogeta You're fried.
Probability alteration is not even comparable to realty warping. If anything, as Q99 said, it is a specific form of reality manipulation. And also, you are COMPLETELY misunderstanding the ability. He can't magically make himself invulnerable to any attack. He can simply increase the chance of something going wrong with an attack. Say someone went to shoot a blast at him, he could alter probability so that the attack would explode in their face, or something like that. He doesn't have reality manipulation. He uses spiral energy, and fights on a galactic scale. That is the ONLY reason that STTGL seems unbeatable compared to so many other series. I could probably count the anime series with galaxy+ busters on both hands.
However, someone with feats greater than STTGL would thereby DEFEAT STTGL. As did the Anti-spiral.
And btw, you realize that for something to be truly infinite, there can exist only one of it, right? As that would mean one infinity to be larger than it, which in itself is a logical paradox. Or did you skip that day in high school? [/] Actually, no, thats wrong. In the series, Super Galaxy Dai-Gurren tries to hurt the anti-spiral, which doesn't work. It isn't "changing where it would hit", its changing "how badly it will impact". It also isn't just altering it, its DIRECTLY changing it.
Watch the anti-spiral say "that won't work!" because he knows it wouldn't have
any effect on him (had Simon and his team not picked up the ability themselves).
For example, Beerus uses his strongest attack on them, might destroy the universe, but STTGL would just brush his shoulder off and walk away, turn around for a second and be like "Lol, thought you could hurt me. Come back when you can alter probability." Its one of the only things that can nullify Galactus' ultimate nullifier.
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Just for the record, some infinities can be larger than others.
Also, there are some things that occur that probability can't alter, especially dealing in events that have uncountable infinite variables. There also events in which a *nearly* impossible degree of alterations would be needed to change an outcome in the slightest.
It is impossible to alter the probability of an event that isn't possible in the first place; since you don't know the odds of the fictitious event. There is no way to alter the probability of a dog barking so powerfully it atomizes the Earth . Such a ridiculous event is beyond probability in the 1st place. Since we are speaking on this in a fictional realm, there is no way to know the likelyhood of Saitama's strongest punch being unable to shatter a tree.
Now, if a combatant had the ability to out-right undo events, or make chosen events 100% impossible, that's another power altogether.
Last edited by U need Leonard on Dec 7th, 2015 at 05:59 AM
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It should also be noted,
In cases of probability, the likely event not occurring isn't magic, the likely event turns out not to be the actual outcome for a reason.
If I were bouncing a ball on a hardwood floor, the odds of the ball phasing through the floor are on the level of a trillion to 1. But there is still a reason why the ball *might* phase through the floor, thus the probability exist. If I had a 6 sided die, and all sides had a value of 6, what is the probability of me rolling a 2? Zero, there is no probability. This question is similar to trying to apply probability to an impossible event.
Last edited by U need Leonard on Dec 7th, 2015 at 06:16 AM
It was powerful enough to survive the creation of the universe, and that was TTGL. A few years ago, STTGL was bigger then our universe, and is currently bigger then our observable universe irl.
And some infinities can be limited or pointless Like, if I have the ability to make infinite hammers, and you had, say, the finite abilities to phase through solid matter and project black holes, I'm probably the one screwed in a fight.
When you're talking infinity, it's quite possible to have things with a probability of '1'.
1. The anti-spiral was simply stronger. That is all. A difference in power is all it takes to overcome probability alteration. Which is why the anti-spiral was defeated, in the end.
2. You clearly have no idea what the ultimate nullifier is, because with Galactus wielding it, STTGL would literally cease to exist from a sheer thought.
3. You're literally making every feat about probability alteration that you have up.
Come back when you have an argument, other than, "Probability alteration ftw".
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That is true, too.
As meaningless as 1 would be in such a case, that is true. It all depends on the outcome someone is wants.
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fightI'm not really sure how that affects the probability of an impossible event. In an argument concerning fictional events, something like Probability Control needs actual data to make a case.
What is the probability of him surviving these attacks without probability control? Do you know? How much control over probability does he have? Can he turn a 1 in 6.237623716447 10^347968253898 into a 50/50? Do we know?
This particular power is useful in the context of a plot, but useless without data in an argument. You can't really prove how well it works in a hypothetical scenario involving illogical outcomes.
Last edited by U need Leonard on Dec 9th, 2015 at 09:43 AM
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I forgot to add, not only do we not know STTGL's level of control over probability, we don't know the probability of most fictional events the power is working against. How do we know that a punch from Superman that will destroy the moon isn't a 1/1 scenario; as in, 1 way and 1 outcome or 1 way and no way to fail. STTGL would not be able to effect that, no matter how powerful his probability control is. Superman is pulling off an impossible feat, so the probability can also be impossible to alter. We just don't know.
Now, the power to alter causality can alter Superman's absolute punch, but not probability.
Last edited by U need Leonard on Dec 9th, 2015 at 10:01 AM
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Power has nothing to do with probability control.
An average human who has probability control can alter an event far outside their power set. They could stop a star from exploding and still die by being hit by a car. You're not stopping the star from exploding through sheer might, you are halting the star's death by altering the events and variables that would lead up to that outcome, by using "magic".
With probability, you're not actually preventing anything with awesome power, you're just changing the likelihood. Human's IRL actually have some unexplained degree of probability manipulation through mental avenues. If you view a random-repeating CG set of numbers, the number you actually focus on will appear more often. It's an odd and cool ability, but it's not powerful.
Last edited by U need Leonard on Dec 9th, 2015 at 11:05 AM