 Pneumenon
Pneumenon         
          Wayfarer
Wayfarer         
          Banno
Banno         
          Isaac
Isaac         
         Perhaps you can answer: I don't know the probability of the dolphin. This is admissible — Pneumenon
 Banno
Banno         
         You don't know if the coin will land on heads or tails. That makes the probability 50/50. — Isaac
 Isaac
Isaac         
         We don't have to assume 50/50, do we? Couldn't one start at assuming a 100% probability of heads, leaving it to the Bayesian process to level out at 50/50? I'm just wondering what the correct process is. — Banno
Active disbelief is the belief that not-P.
Lack of belief is the absence of a belief that P.
I can be unaware that I lack belief in something. You lack belief in an invisible miniature dolphin swimming in continuous circles around your head right now. You were unaware that you lacked belief until you read that. You are now aware that you do not believe in the invisible miniature dolphin.
What is the probability of the invisible miniature dolphin's existence?
If you answer "0 or negligible," then you actively disbelieve in the dolphin. If you answer "non-negligible and non-0," then you simply lack belief in the dolphin. But, to simply lack belief in it, you must affirm a nonzero, non-negligible probability of its existence. To actively disbelieve in it, then you must affirm that the probability of the dolphin is 0 or negligible.
Perhaps you can answer: I don't know the probability of the dolphin. This is admissible. But, if you answer thus, you admit that you don't know whether or not you disbelieve in the dolphin. So, to avoid active disbelief while maintaining the absence of belief, you must claim ignorance about your own epistemic state. Whence this ignorance? — Pneumenon
 Frank Apisa
Frank Apisa         
          Frank Apisa
Frank Apisa         
          Pneumenon
Pneumenon         
         Not with Bayesian probability it isn't. You don't know if the coin will land on heads or tails. That makes the probability 50/50. — Isaac
The error here is assuming that belief is some identifiable bit of data lodged in the brain somewhere, that of any given object (once described to me) I will create a byte of data corresponding binomially to whether I believe it or no — Isaac
 Isaac
Isaac         
         There are probabilities I don't know. The probability of a coin landing on heads is not exactly 50/50, but I don't know what the exact ratio is. — Pneumenon
The presence of some piece of data in the brain is not implied by asking you either of those things, as far as I can see. — Pneumenon
 Banno
Banno         
         I also there is nothing wrong with "believing" (or blindly guessing) in either direction. — Frank Apisa
 Pneumenon
Pneumenon         
         Apart from a certain intellectual dishonesty... — Banno
 Banno
Banno         
         Is it more important to have true beliefs, or to avoid false ones? — Pneumenon
 Banno
Banno         
          Isaac
Isaac         
         can't accept an epistemology of probability that won't let me say that there are probabilities I don't know. — Pneumenon
 SophistiCat
SophistiCat         
          Frank Apisa
Frank Apisa         
         Banno
7.4k
I also there is nothing wrong with "believing" (or blindly guessing) in either direction.
— Frank Apisa
Apart from a certain intellectual dishonesty... — Banno
 Pneumenon
Pneumenon         
         You already channeled the discussion towards Bayesianism when you identified beliefs with probabilities. — SophistiCat
 bongo fury
bongo fury         
         What is the probability of the invisible miniature dolphin's existence? — Pneumenon
 SophistiCat
SophistiCat         
          Frank Apisa
Frank Apisa         
          Pneumenon
Pneumenon         
         If you did not, then what is this question supposed to mean? — SophistiCat
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