April 07, 2011 


The Mathematics of Dreams from My Father Authorship


By  <http://www.americanthinker.com/andre_lofthus/> Andre Lofthus

Thomas Bayes, an 18th century minister in England, discovered a theory of
"conditional probability" in his attempt to use mathematical equations to
prove or disprove the existence of God.  Bayes' Theorem was published after
his death by a colleague.  It allows the computation of the probability of
an event that we cannot prove with exact certitude from our observations of
one or more related events that are provable.  This theory can be applied to
the question of authorship of Dreams from My Father using the observations
included in Jack Cashill's well documented book Deconstructing Obama.  

 

Along with many subjective observations from Mr. Cashill about stylistic
inconsistencies between Dreams and three known written works of Obama,
together with the stylistic consistencies between Dreams and William Ayers'
book Fugitive Days, there is discussion by Mr. Cashill of a quantitative
observation made by a Mr. Southwest of 759 similarities between Dreams and
Fugitive Days.  Of these 759 similarities, Mr. Cashill categorizes 180 as
"striking similarities."  One example set forth in his book Deconstructing
Obama is a quotation from Carl Sandburg's poem "Chicago" which correctly
reads "Hog Butcher for the World," and is incorrectly quoted in both Dreams
and Fugitive Days as "hog butcher to the world."  The similarity here is not
only the exact same misquotation, but of all the poems to quote, of all the
authors to quote, of all the lines to quote, why this author, why this poem,
why this line? 

 

Mr. Cashill's assessment of the number of similarities that exist between
one of his books and Fugitive Days provides all the data needed to apply
Bayes' Theorem to quantify both the probability that Obama is the true
author of Dreams and the probability that Ayers is the true author of
Dreams. 

 

The quantitative assessments by Mr. Cashill on the number of similarities
between one of his books, Sucker Punch, a memoir dealing extensively with
race much like Dreams, and Fugitive Days provides the data needed to
approximate the unknown probability distribution of similarities between two
books written by different authors on much the same subject.  Mr. Cashill
found only six definite similarities, with a maximum of sixteen possible or
definite similarities.  Because of the multi-dimensional aspect of
identifying similarities of any kind between two books, it makes sense to
apply the Central Limit Theorem and assume this unknown probability
distribution is of Gaussian form.  Assume based on the data provided a most
probable mean value of six, and a standard deviation of 10 for the
distribution of similarities between two books on similar topics by
different authors.

 

Bayes' Theorem for a problem where the probabilities of two mutually
exclusive, non-overlapping events (lets call them A1 and A2) are to be
computed assuming an event B is shown below (see
http://stattrek.com/Lesson1/Bayes.aspx):

 

Event A1= Obama is the author of Dreams

 

Event A2= Ayers is the author of Dreams

 

Event B=Discovery of 180 striking similarities between Dreams and Fugitive
Days

 

Z=P(A1)*P(B|A1)+P(A2)*P(B|A2)

 

P(A1|B)=P(A1)*P(B|A1)/Z

 

P(A2|B)=P(A2)*P(B|A2)/Z

 

P(A1|B) is to be read as the probability of event A1 given the event B.
Similarly P(B|A1) is to be read as the probability of event B given event
A1.  The same for P(A2|B) and P(B|A2).  P(A1) and P(A2) are the a priori
probabilities of events A1 and A2 when event B is not even a glint on the
horizon.  When Dreams was published, the assumed probability of Obama as
author was 100%.  After all, the publisher listed Obama as author.  How
could it not be?  But remember, other people have published books listing
themselves as the author, and much later it was discovered that someone else
had written the books for them.  A famous case in point involving a former
President would be Profiles in Courage.  It was somewhat surprising to me
initially, but made sense when I had completed the analysis, that one can
assume any value for P(A1), or P(A2) for that matter, and Bayes' Theorem
will produce the exact same result for the conditional probability of events
A1 and A2 in this case.

 

The conditional probabilities of event B given events A1 or A2 are computed
using the probability distribution described above for the number of
similarities between two books on a similar subject by different authors.
The probability of event B happening if event A1 is assumed, that is if you
assume that Obama actually is the author of Dreams, is small.  Very small.
Using my 40 year old copy of Abramowitz and Stegun, it is one divided by ten
to the power of fifty using only the "striking similarities" quoted by Mr.
Cashill as event B.  To give you a feel of the size of ten to the power of
fifty, that is comparable to an estimate of the number of atoms in the
universe.  If you use all 759 similarities observed by Mr. Southwest, the
probability is one divided by ten to the power of approximately twelve
hundred.  Both are ridiculously small numbers.  Both are zero to 50
significant digits or more.  

 

The results of my analysis using Bayes' Theorem for the conditional
probabilities of events A1 and A2 are as follows:

 

P(A1|B)= 0.00% There is zero probability that Obama is the author of Dreams

 

P(A2|B)=100% There is 100% probability that Ayers is the author of Dreams

 

An assumption implicit in the analysis so far is that William Ayers is the
one true author of Fugitive Days.  Mathematically the symmetry of the
similarities discovered by Mr. Southwest could be applied to question the
authorship of Fugitive much as it has been applied to question the
authorship of Dreams.  And the result of applying Bayes' Theorem would
predict, if one assumes Obama wrote Dreams, then it is virtually certain
that he wrote Fugitive.  What the mathematics is really proving is both
Dreams and Fugitive are written by the same author with a probability of
100% out to many significant figures.  That author is Ayers, Obama, or some
third person yet unnamed.  

 

In the absence of additional quantitative data looking for similarities
between written works by these authors, I have to leave it to the experts in
writing like Mr. Cashill to determine authorship based on motive,
opportunity, and demonstrated writing ability.  His book Deconstructing
Obama makes a strong case that Ayers had the motive, opportunity, and
demonstrated writing ability to write Dreams, and that Obama's writing
ability is not up to the task of writing either book. 


Page Printed from:
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at April 08, 2011 - 10:20:00 PM CDT 

 



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