News Tron coaster coming to the Magic Kingdom

SteveAZee

Premium Member
That leads to epistemological nihilism... that we can know nothing.

Speculation is just that, mere speculation. It's truth quotient can be anywhere from 0% to 100%.

When we have facts that are actual facts to back up speculation, the truth quotient goes up.

And if we have facts that contradict mere speculation, then the truth quotient of that speculation goes way down.

When we have witnesses, that is 'insiders', who can vouch for things outside the public view, the truth quotient gets very high.

Just because we're not 100% sure of something doesn't mean it's equal to mere speculation. Having about a 80%-99% surety from an insider is very different from mere speculation which can be completely false.

Also, many who speculate love to do so in a way that makes it seem that their guess is almost certainly true (over 90%!) when it can be completely false. Speculators need to frame their guesses as guesses than as proclamations.

Also... over the past several years, there's a low tolerance among many, including myself, regarding fact-free speculation. We call that "conspiracy theories" and "science denial" and "ideological propaganda." So, when someone spouts off that their guess is most probably 'the truth'... I ain't gonna let that be. Show your work.
Way back in college, I studied AI (called different things now). When designing a system to gather and use information, that data was tagged with the source of the information and, over time, each source was given a probability of that information being true as time passed and more information was gathered. That way, future information could be weighed based on the reliability of the source.

I thought this was cool, but have learned since then that the A in AI was accurate since people don't really think this way.

Having done enough reading and observing, people tag information based on how the source makes them feel, not how historically accurate the source is. The more compelling (at an emotional level) the source is, the higher the accuracy tag is, regardless of the actual history of the source being accurate or not.

I bring this up because, until I realized that this is how humans process information (more through an emotional filter than a logical filter) I was really frustrated with my fellow humans... especially since people's bonds with their emotions are much tighter than with logic and facts.. and therefore new information doesn't really change people's opinions much.
 

MisterPenguin

President of Animal Kingdom
Premium Member
Way back in college, I studied AI (called different things now). When designing a system to gather and use information, that data was tagged with the source of the information and, over time, each source was given a probability of that information being true as time passed and more information was gathered. That way, future information could be weighed based on the reliability of the source.

I thought this was cool, but have learned since then that the A in AI was accurate since people don't really think this way.

Having done enough reading and observing, people tag information based on how the source makes them feel, not how historically accurate the source is. The more compelling (at an emotional level) the source is, the higher the accuracy tag is, regardless of the actual history of the source being accurate or not.

I bring this up because, until I realized that this is how humans process information (more through an emotional filter than a logical filter) I was really frustrated with my fellow humans... especially since people's bonds with their emotions are much tighter than with logic and facts.. and therefore new information doesn't really change people's opinions much.
That's why my assessment of data and opinions are far superior... I don't have any emotions.
 

Movielover

Well-Known Member
I had thought someone mentioned this as kind of like a wishful thinking “Flynn’s Arcade” type of thing?
It's the same thing as an exit tunnel from Star Tours to Galaxy's Edge at DHS. Or if you want a really ridiculous example, the people over at Micechat who serious wanted a tunnel built leading from their Star Tours to their Galaxy Edge... underneath the entire Disneyland park.

It's just not practical. You need to have a wider entrance and exit. Look at Diagon Ally over at Universal and the way they had to cheat the entrance next to The Leaky Cauldron. Or at the upcoming Epic Universe. Each land has a portal building but paths on either side to help spread out the guest entering and exiting each land.
 

AJT607

Active Member
Does anyone know for AP previews for Guardians/Remy if passholders were able to bring a guest to the preview? We are out of state passholders and I've never had a trip planned during preview dates, but it is increasingly looking like we might be there for the Tron previews. My sister is joining us for this trip and is just a ticketed guest, so I'm wondering if we will be able to bring her with us, or if we will need to plan to potentially do the preview without her.
 

DCBaker

Premium Member
Does anyone know for AP previews for Guardians/Remy if passholders were able to bring a guest to the preview? We are out of state passholders and I've never had a trip planned during preview dates, but it is increasingly looking like we might be there for the Tron previews. My sister is joining us for this trip and is just a ticketed guest, so I'm wondering if we will be able to bring her with us, or if we will need to plan to potentially do the preview without her.

For AP previews, all guests would need to be Annual Passholders.
 

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