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- Joined: Sun Jun 09, 2013 10:42 am
J-Pav wrote:I didn't include you in the summary because I don't know if you agree with me, Valen, both or neither. SOM G/F ratios might not reflect actual MLB G/F ratios any more than the stats of 12 imaginary all-star teams reflect the stats of the actual MLB players. But there are probably enough clues in the data to give you a place to start looking.
I made very clear my stance and with whom I agreed in the post below:
l.strether wrote:I don't enjoy agreeing with Valen, who blatantly lied about me on a public forum, but I do...at least on SOM's semiotics. Strat rolls are deterministic algorithms in a probability game effectively functioning as an MLB simulation. It is not an actual simulation of the physical properties of baseball. So the physical dynamics involved in major league baseball are not relevant to SOM simulation. The only thing that is are the actual results SOM's probabilities and algorithms actually simulate. Player names and actual stadiums may add the veneer of Baseball's physical dynamics. But SOM's algorithms and probabilities do not represent those dynamics and are not interested in them.
If any of this is difficult for you, I will gladly assist your understanding.
As to your assertion about "clues" in MLB G/F ratios relevant to SOM's actual probabilities and algorithms, there are none. You again make the error of treating MLB's actual physical phenomena as the source of SOM's semiotics. I can help you with that as well, if you like.
P.s. Call me "Professor" as much as you like. Unlike you, I'm not embarrassed about people knowing my job...