You aren’t pointing out mistakes, you’re fumbling technicalities on a limited number of points because you can’t find anything substantive wrong with his predictions.
You claim having both the date and the actual prediction wrong is a technicality. With that criteria, a wrong prediction is impossible.
Yes, he did have some accurate predictions. From the Forbes article where the author went through them all and highlighted a few, Kurzweil was about 25% correct.
I don’t see what you’re so confused about here, and you did not disprove his predictions.
He’s not a science fiction author, he writes nonfiction.
He saw the proliferation of technology and predicted the ubiquity of many of those technologies.
He was right about those.
Why do you feel so threatened by accurate predictions?
Someone was going to naysay all the people that said the internet was a fad and see the potential of information technology.
Kurzweil said it loudly first.
Why do you think I am threatened by predictions he got right? Are you ok?
Pointing out mistakes isn’t a threat. It’s the scientific method
.
I’m good.
You aren’t pointing out mistakes, you’re fumbling technicalities on a limited number of points because you can’t find anything substantive wrong with his predictions.
I’m a fan
Getting the abilities and date wrong about a technological prediction isn’t a technicality. It’s simply a wrong prediction.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/alexknapp/2012/03/20/ray-kurzweils-predictions-for-2009-were-mostly-inaccurate/
https://awful.systems/comment/3813653
https://awful.systems/comment/3814271
https://awful.systems/comment/3822346
That’s just the same ignorant technicality that only applies to a couple items on the list.
You’re agreeing with me on both points.
Despite the straw man, no one argued that he predicted everything in 2009.
You claim having both the date and the actual prediction wrong is a technicality. With that criteria, a wrong prediction is impossible.
Yes, he did have some accurate predictions. From the Forbes article where the author went through them all and highlighted a few, Kurzweil was about 25% correct.
No, I don’t, but I understand how pretending I said something I didn’t supports your false rebuttals.
Oh, a curated list with the intent to slander?
Here’s a more complete and correct list showing that his predictions are correct 86% of the time.
https://bigthink.com/articles/why-ray-kurzweils-predictions-are-right-86-of-the-time/
That’s the list that I referenced earlier where Kurzweil rated himself.
That’s cool that he changed his name to Dominic for the article.