It's truly remarkable that a question which is of no philosophical significance or interest could generate so many responses on a philosophy forum! — Janus
This still looks like you're considering what would happen if we always stick or always switch over a number of repeated games. I'm just talking about playing one game. — Michael
If it's in the middle then there's an expected gain of £2.50 for switching — Michael
If we then play repeated games then I can use the information from each game to switch conditionally, as per this strategy (or in R), to realize the .25 gain over the never-switcher. — Michael
You just telescoped the step of multiplying by the chance of picking that number.
Could put & where you have |. — Srap Tasmaner
If I'm told that one envelope contains twice as much as the other, and if I pick one at random, am I right in saying before I open it that there's a 50% chance that my envelope contains the smaller amount?1 If so, I must also be right in saying after I open it and see the amount that there's a 50% chance that my envelope contains the smaller amount (assuming I don't know how the values are selected). — Michael
Do we need to assume that X is not continuous? If it is, all these probabilities are just 0, aren't they?
*** Urk. Forgetting that at least one of them has to be non-zero. — Srap Tasmaner
Wouldn't that information be useful? — Pierre-Normand
To remove that option, I recast the problem with the envelopes containing IOUs rather than cash, for an amount that is a real number of cents, with an arbitrary but large number of decimal places shown. The amount is only rounded to the nearest cent (or dollar) when the IOU is cashed in. — andrewk
Do we know that both P(X = a) and P(X = a/2) are non-zero? We know that at least one of P(X = a | Y = a) and P(X = a/2 | Y = a) is non-zero, but we do not know that both are. Without Y = a, we wouldn't even know that at least one of P(X = a) and P(X = a/2) are non-zero. Without knowing that both are non-zero, we can't even safely talk about the odds P(X = a):P(X = a/2). — Srap Tasmaner
I’m going to assume that A means your envelope, B means the “other” envelope, and X means the lower value. But A, B, and X mean the abstract concept of the random variable; it is a, b, and x that mean values. So “2X” is meaningless. What I think you mean here is:
E(B∣A=a) = Pr(X=a∣A=a)*(2a) + Pr(X=a/2∣A=a)*(a/2) — JeffJo
Personally, I think in terms of modeling the actual OP the inclusion of distributions or switching strategies is misguided. If our goal is to assess the situation before us then they move outside that scope. However, these models do provide a useful platform to investigate properties that may be applied to other probabilistic aspects. — Jeremiah
And that's because of what I explained here. — Michael
So what am I supposed to do if I don't know how the values are selected? As I said here, if I don't have any reason to believe that X = 5 is more likely than X = 10 then why wouldn't I switch? I think the principle of indifference is entirely appropriate in this circumstance. There's more to gain than there is to lose, and a loss of £5 is an acceptable risk. — Michael
And what you seem to be avoiding with that attitude, is that the expectation formula (v/2)/2 + (2v)/2 is already assuming: — JeffJo
I am not an advocate for that expectation formula, so I don't see why you'd think I am avoiding those objections to it. - andrewk
Maybe I was mixing Andrews up. I apologize. — JeffJo
But suppose you don't do this. Suppose you just select some X at random from {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10}, put it in one envelope, and then put 2X in the other envelope. I select one at random and open it to see £10. Am I right in saying that {£5, £10} and {£10, £20} are equally likely? — Michael
If we don't have this information then we should apply the principle of indifference, which will have us say that {£5, £10} and {£10, £20} are equally likely. — Michael
*** You might have (3) and (4) a little wrong but I can't judge. The McDonnell & Abbott paper makes noises about the player using Cover's strategy having no knowledge of the PDF of X. — Srap Tasmaner
So we cannot talk meaningfully about 'the real value of c' — andrewk
2. Treat Y as known and model X using a Bayesian prior. This leads to a rule under which the player can calculate a value c such that her expected switch gain is positive if Y<c and negative if Y>c. — andrewk
I'm just doing this:
1. We pick an envelope at random
2. There's a 50% chance that my envelope is the X envelope and a 50% chance that my envelope is the 2X envelope.
3. I open my envelope and see £10
4. From 2 and 3, there's a 50% chance that my £10 envelope is the X envelope and a 50% chance that my £10 envelope is the 2X envelope.
5. From 4, there's a 50% chance that the other envelope contains £20 and a 50% chance that the other envelope contains £5.
We seem to agree on 1-3, but you disagree with 4 and/or 5? — Michael
I have numbered the steps from 0 to 4. Which step(s) do you not believe? — andrewk
Why not? I've opened the envelope and seen that I have $10. That's in the rules as specified in the OP. And knowing the rules of the game I know there's a 50% chance that the other envelope contains $5 and a 50% chance that the other envelope contains $20. — Michael
Is there some rule of statistics that says that one or the other is the proper way to assess the best strategy for a single instance of the game (where you know that there's $10 in your envelope)? — Michael
I would have thought that if we want to know the best strategy given the information we have then the repeated games we consider require us to have that same information, and the variations are in the possible unknowns – which is what my example does. — Michael
Interesting. The problem is different. Unlike in the OP, in the Wiki case, the envelope has not been opened before the option to swap. So the player has no new information in the wiki case. I think their analysis in the Simple Case is wrong, because it assumes the existence of an expected value that may not exist, but I think the conclusion that there is no reason to switch may in spite of that error be correct in that case, but not in this one. — andrewk
In the absence of knowing the distribution of X, any calculations based on expected values prior to opening the envelope are meaningless and wrong. — andrewk
Like Baden you're conflating different values of X. — Michael
Given a starting envelope of $10 — Michael
That's exactly what I did here and here. If in each game we see that we have £10 we win more by switching than by not switching. — Michael
It looks like you're assuming the player's utility function is the identity function, which would be unusual and unrealistic. Even if we assume that, the quoted calculation doesn't take account of all the available information. There is new information, which is the known dollar value in the opened envelope. That changes the utility calculation. — andrewk
What should you do? — Jeremiah
//ps// from the Fuchs article:
These views have lately been termed “participatory realism” to emphasize that rather than relinquishing the idea of reality (as they are often accused of), they are saying that reality is more than any third-person perspective can capture. — Wayfarer
So I think that is what so disturbed Einstein about the so-called ‘quantum leap’, uncertainty, non-locality and the other aspects of quantum physics - they all tend to undermine the concept of an ultimately existent object. And that has deep philosophical ramifications: it is why the essay in the OP is about ‘the war over reality”. — Wayfarer
Type-II interpretations do not deny the existence of an objective world but, according to them, quantum theory does not deal directly with intrinsic properties of the observed system, but with the experiences an observer or agent has of the observed system. — Interpretations of quantum theory: A map of madness
What I want to emphasize at the moment is that I cannot see any way in which the program of QBism has ever contradicted what Einstein calls the program of “the real.” — On Participatory Realism - Chris Fuchs
Again - the role of the observer is inextricable; you can't assume 'a view from nowhere'. — Wayfarer
What I think all of this is showing is the role of the observing mind in the establishment of duration. After all, time exists on a scale - if you were a being who lived for a billion years, your sense of duration would be completely different from that of the human. But which is the most accurate? Well, it's a meaningless question; 'accuracy' can only be judged, given a scale. — Wayfarer
objectivity cannot be absolute. — Wayfarer
The climax of all of that was the EPR paradox, which of course was never able to be made subject to experimental analysis in Einstein’s lifetime, but was to become the subject of the famous Alain Aspect experiments which proved once and for all ‘spooky action at a distance’. — Wayfarer
But this undermines that view, because it illustrates the sense in which the observer is inextricably part of the picture. We don't, actually, stand outside of, or apart from, the Universe which we are analysing; so what we're analysing cannot be absolutely objective.
Andrei Linde makes this exact point at 3:16 in this Closer To Truth interview. — Wayfarer
Still some things to puzzle through, but I'm convinced. My sojourn in the land of halferism is at its end. — Srap Tasmaner
I do still disagree about how to interpret this thing though. The failure rate of my tails-guessing Beauties is still 1/2, no matter how much they pat themselves on the back. The argument you give here totally justifies conditioning on being interviewed, so the epistemic issue isn't there; it's in this conflict between the two ways of measuring success. — Srap Tasmaner
If you take a step back, SB looks a bit like a fucked up way of doing two trials of a single experiment. (No worries about the single coin flip -- the trial is asking different subjects for their credence.) But whichever way you split, by toss outcome or by day, it's not two trials: it's one trial each for two different experiments and which experiment is being run is determined by the coin toss, and is thus the source of Beauty's uncertainty. — Srap Tasmaner
I toss fair coin twice. I ask for your credence that the first toss landed heads only on {HH, TH, TT}.
My question is this: do you think this is equivalent to SB? And why or why not? — Srap Tasmaner
Sorry, I'm not getting your experiment, or its equivalence to SB. — Srap Tasmaner
Here's the spontaneous version of guessing-SB:
Suppose I'm going to teach Andy & Michael a little about probability. I'm going to flip a coin a bunch of times, but before each flip, they each guess. When they're right they get an M&M, and when we're done we'll count the M&M's and stuff. Now suppose before one toss, Michael guesses "Heads! Heads heads heads heads heads!!!!" If the coin lands heads, do I give him 1 M&M or 6? — Srap Tasmaner
100 tosses, presumed result of 50 heads and 50 tails, 150 interviews.
If the Beauties all guess tails all the time, they will get 100 right out of their 150 answers.
That looks like a 2/3 success rate, right? But is it?
Out of the 100 tosses, they got 50 of them wrong. Looked at this way, that's a 50% success rate. — Srap Tasmaner
Yeah that one was too easy. — Srap Tasmaner
I have tossed the coin and given you a box.
What are the chances there's a red marble in the box? — Srap Tasmaner
Which in Beauty's case is zilch, isn't it? — Srap Tasmaner
I agree about your double-header example, but don't see the similarity to SB at all. Interviewing here clearly gives you information. — Srap Tasmaner
No. I'm not sure how to formalize this — Srap Tasmaner
Now I think that's wrong. There is no discounting. None of the 1/2's should be reduced to 1/4's. Monday is not 1/2:1/4 either. — Srap Tasmaner
I'm just following the principal principle. If I can figure out what the objective chances are, so can Beauty, and she can set her credences accordingly. — Srap Tasmaner