On each day in the range 1 to N, the prior probability that she will be woken on that day AND the coin landed on Heads is 1/N. — JeffJo
Your claim that "The next enclosure is the toucan enclosure iff I first turned right at the fork (P = 1/2) and then passed the tiger enclosure," is an assumption that can't be put forward without begging the question against the Thirder. You need to substantiate, rather than presuppose, that when you're nearing an enclosure, there's a 1/2 chance the path you're on is a T-path. — Pierre-Normand
1. Conditionally on its being a first encounter on a path segment, P(Tiger) = P(Hippo)
2. Conditionally on Leonard being on a T-path segment, P(Tiger) = P(Toucan)
3. The three possible outcomes are exhaustive and mutually exclusive
4. Therefore, P(Tiger) = P(Hippo) = P(Toucan) = 1/3 — Pierre-Normand
I just need you to agree that it is equivalent to your procedure first. — JeffJo
Something is indeed is ruled out when she wakes. — JeffJo
Now, let's look at a particular moment of Leonard's visit. As he walks, before reaching a new enclosure, he might reason this way: "Since each fork in the path gives an equal chance of leading to a T-path or an H-path, there is a 50% chance that the next enclosure I'll see will have a hippo." Thus, when he approaches an enclosure, he might conclude there is a 25% chance of it being a tiger enclosure, and a 25% chance of it being a toucan enclosure.
Is this reasoning accurate? — Pierre-Normand
From the episodic perspective, Sleeping Beauty knows that conditionally on her present awakening being the first, it is equally probable that it is a H-awakening (and that the coin will land heads) or that it is a T-first-awakening (and that the coin will land tails). She also knows that in the event the coin will land (or has landed) tails, it is equiprobable that she is experiencing a T-first-awakening or a T-second awakening. Since the three possible outcomes are exclusive from her episodic perspective, their probabilities must sum up to 1 and since P(H-awakening) = P(T-first-awakening) and P(T-first-awakening) = P(T-second awakening), all three possible outcomes must have probability 1/3. — Pierre-Normand
And again, you keep using circular logic. You deny that events with non-zero prior probability are "ruled out" in your solution. So you claim that my solution, which does "rule out," must be wrong. This is a fallacy; your presumption that you are right is your only defense. You have never argued for why you think they aren't events. — JeffJo
It's precisely because they mean different things that I've provided detailed arguments for deducing 1 from 2 (alongside with other premises). However, the truth of 2 certainly is relevant to the deduction of 1. Nobody would be a Thirder in a scenario where coins lading tails would generate as many awakenings as coins landing heads. — Pierre-Normand
This overlooks the issue that your credence can change over time when your epistemic perspective changes. — Pierre-Normand
4 and 5 aren't true by definition; rather, they are definitions. — Pierre-Normand
When I previously addressed this inference of yours, I conceded that it is generally valid, but I also pointed out that it involved a possible conflation of two meanings of the predicate P(). The problem I identified wasn't with the validity of the inference (within the context of probability calculus), but rather with the conflation that could occur when the expression P(A) appears twice in your demonstration. — Pierre-Normand
What makes you "pretty sure" that A is true is the expectation that A is much more likely to occur than not-A. As such, this probabilistic judgment is implicitly comparative. It is therefore dependent on how you individuate and count not only A events but also not-A events. As I've argued elsewhere, a shift in epistemic perspective can alter the way you count not-Heads events (i.e., Tails events), transforming them from non-exclusive to exclusive. For example, when you move from considering possible world timelines to specific awakening episodes, what were concurrent alternatives (not-H events) become exclusive possibilities. This change in perspective modifies the content of your comparative judgment "H is much more likely to occur than not-H," and consequently affects your credence. — Pierre-Normand
Your propositions P1 through P4 and C1 though C4 above frequently shift between those two perspectives, which vitiates the validity of some inferences. — Pierre-Normand
Therefore, when shifting to the episodic perspective, it would be a mistake is to divide the probability of the T-timeline (1/2) between the two T-awakenings, suggesting each has a probability of 1/4. This line of thinking presumes these awakenings to be exclusive events within the T-timeline — Pierre-Normand
I agree, with a caveat. The specific details of whether she is woken at a specific point ("day") in the experiment do matter. You can test this in Elga's solution. If she is told that the current day is Tuesday, then she knows Pr(Heads) must decrease to 0. If she is told that it is not Tuesday, the Law of Total Probability actually requires it to go up. It goes from 1/3 to 1/2 in the Thirder soluton, and from 1/2 to 2/3 in the Halfer solution. This is quite relevant, even if you think it is wrong AND CAN PROVIDE A VALID REASON
But it isn't the day name that matters, it is the details associated with that day name. And since these details are different on different "days," we can track them by naming the "days."
Now, you could argue about why those details might matter; but so far you have refused to. You have just asserted they don't (in spite of evidence like I just presented). But naming them cannot affect the correct answer, no matter how those details affect it. SO THERE IS NO REASON TO NOT NAME THE "DAYS." And even the possibility that they might have an effect makes them relevant.
In other words, you are proffering the red herring here. You are insisting that we must ignore a piece of potential information, because you think it has no affect. If so, there is no harm in including it. — JeffJo
This procedure creates what, in your words, are "the only things that matters." She has either one, or two, interviews and does not know if another will/did happen. The only thing that is different, is that your possible two interviews occur under different circumstances; one is mandatory, and one is optional. What we disagree about is whether the part that is missing - the non-interview when the option is not taken - matters.
Here they occur under identical circumstances. That is, either steps 2.1 thru 2.4, or steps 3.1 thru 3.4. And those circumstances can be used to answer the question. I did "name" the details by calling them state S1 or S2, but since they are identical to SB she can call them state S.
There are three possible combinations of the two coins in state S, and they are equally likely. Her credence in state S=(H,T) is 1/3.
This has nothing to do with what may or may not get "ruled out" in a solution to your version of the experiment. That difference is the red herring in the "most frequent" presentation of the problem. This is a self-contained experiment with a trivial answer.
But it's an answer you don't like. So you will either ignore it, or repeat the non sequitur that it includes the "ruling out of a 1/4 probability" that we are debating about above, which is circular logic. — JeffJo
The answer follows trivially from what I have said before - have you read it? — JeffJo
While in each case the biconditionals "I am now in an H-awakening iff I am now (and will be) in an H-run" or (on Wednesday) "I was in an H-awakening iff I am now in an H-run" hold, the probabilities don't necessarily match due to the two-to-one mapping between T-awakenings and T-runs. — Pierre-Normand
But the time period after the coin is flipped still exists, and the coin can be Heads during that time. — JeffJo
Since I now know that I will soon rationally infer that this note was written during an H-awakening with probability 1/3 (on the basis of no new information), I can already infer this right now. — Pierre-Normand
Making n large makes Sleeping Beauty's epistemic situation on Wednesday, when she receives a note, nearly identical to her situation when she wrote the note, since the Bayesian updating she can perform on the basis of the note being unique is negligible. — Pierre-Normand
Note that when Sleeping Beauty doesn't receive a note on Wednesday, her credence P(H) = 1/2 doesn't merely differ in value from her credence P(H) = 1/3 during awakenings; the predicates P() also have different meanings. During awakenings, P(H) refers to the odds that her current awakening episode is occurring during a coin toss that landed heads. On Wednesday, P(H) refers to the odds that the experimental run she is exiting from was an H-run. While in each case the biconditionals "I am now in an H-awakening iff I am now (and will be) in an H-run" or (on Wednesday) "I was in an H-awakening iff I am now in an H-run" hold, the probabilities don't necessarily match due to the two-to-one mapping between T-awakenings and T-runs. — Pierre-Normand
the prior probability for any event is based set of all possibilities that could occur — JeffJo
And that is important here, because you are insisting that a two-day collection of events (I'll call your two passes Monday and Tuesday since only the order matters to anything). You are calling Monday+Tails and Tuesday+Tails the same event. But to SB, who can only observe one at a time, they are distinct events that each have half the prior probability that you assign to the combination. — JeffJo
When I will read again the note that I am currently writing, on Wednesday, I will be able to rationally infer that it is twice as likely that this note was written by me on the occasion of a T-awakening. — Pierre-Normand
That was only in the specific case where n = 2. As n grows larger, P(H) tends towards 1/3. — Pierre-Normand
As the occasions to write a note become rarer (e.g. 1/n with n >> 1), the frequency of those overlapping notes become negligible (n times as many single notes are received as double notes) and Sleeping Beauty's epistemic state (i.e. the value of her credence) approaches asymptotically her epistemic state as she was writing the note. And, as I had suggested in my previous post, this is because when she receives a single note on Wednesday, Sleeping Beauty comes to be causally and epistemically related to the coin result in the exact same manner as she was when she originally wrote the note. — Pierre-Normand
Suppose we update the protocol so that on rare occasions, which present themselves with equal probability on each awakening episode, Sleeping Beauty is able to write down a note saying "I have now been awakened and interviewed." She can retain this note and read it again on Wednesday. Upon rereading the note on Wednesday, she can reason that it is twice as likely that such a note was produced if the coin landed tails since she would have been twice as likely to write it during such an experimental run. — Pierre-Normand
You are asking if it has occurred when you know it hasn't — JeffJo
"Prior" refers to before information revealed — JeffJo
Before being put to sleep, your credence in H was 1/2. I’ve just argued that when you are awakened on Monday, that credence ought to change to 1/3. This belief change is unusual. It is not the result of your receiving new information
The prior probabilities, for an awakened SB, are 1/4 for each. — JeffJo
There is no theory of when prior probabilities are established. But if there were, it would be fom the start, not before the start. — JeffJo
But this is the entire controversy behind the Sleeping Beauty Problem. One that I have shown can be trivially removed. And that is why you ignore it. — JeffJo
And the prior probability that the current waking, is a step-1 waking, is 1/2. — JeffJo
Your question "what is your credence the coin will/did land on Heads" is asking SB to distinguish between the cases where your coin will/did land on Heads, and will/did land on Tails. So cases A and B, which depend on the same distinction, must be distinct outcomes to SB. — JeffJo
And the reason for the shopping example is pointing out that the four parts that I highlighted and labeled A, B, C, and D each have a prior of 1/4. — JeffJo
That 1/4 chance that she would have been taken shopping. — JeffJo
there is a "prior P(X) = 1/4 that becomes P(X) = 0 when she’s asked her credence" in your experiment. — JeffJo
Consider an alternative experiment setup where Sleeping Beauty awakens less often rather than more often when the coin lands tails. For instance, we could eliminate Tuesday awakenings altogether and ensure that Sleeping Beauty awakens once on Monday when the coin lands heads, and only half the time when it lands tails (by tossing a second coin, say). — Pierre-Normand
Pr(Heads) = Pr(Heads&First Time) + Pr(Heads&Second Time) — JeffJo
When she is asked the second time, the "prior probability" of heads is ruled out. — JeffJo
This does not implement the original problem. She is wakened, and asked, zero tomes or one time. — JeffJo
You know 50% is a ratio, right? — Srap Tasmaner
The conclusion doesn't follow because, while the biconditional expressed in P3 is true, this biconditional does not guarantee a one-to-one correspondence between the set of T-interviews and the set of T-runs (or "T-interview sets"). Instead, the correspondence is two-to-one, as each T-run includes two T-interviews. — Pierre-Normand
Credences … can be thought of as ratios — Pierre-Normand
