Starting any any value other than 50%/50% would be arbitrary. Its optimal to assign 50%/50% - no bias at all for/against the proposition. — Devans99
Which is completely arbitrary with respect to what's the case without their being any epistemological justification for two options being equally likely. — Terrapin Station
I thought the justification given here was adequate: — Devans99
.is the fact that we know the distribution of answers to unknown boolean questions is definitely not 100/0 or 0/100 — Devans99
Questions that are boolean and that have an underlying boolean sample space — Devans99
'Did the murderer do it?' is a good example. In absence of statistics for how many people in court actually come out guilty, we'd start by assuming it is 50% likely that the accused is guilty and then modify that estimate as we hear the evidence for/against. — Devans99
That alone, is pure evidence that an epistemic is absent, as we are looking for an answer without numbers, without involving statistics — SethRy
But there's no epistemic justification for assuming a 50/50 split on the question of whether someone committed a murder in that case. There would be no justification for assigning any probability to it whatsoever. — Terrapin Station
Say there was blood on his shirt. We might say that makes it 25% likely (on its own) that the accused is guilty. — Devans99
Once you get beyond 1+1=2 nearly everything we know, we know inductively. — Devans99
The creation of the universe isn't, so sometimes deductive argument is needed to create an epistemological conclusion; a conclusion that is not driven by mathematical principle, but by rational reasoning. — SethRy
If you think about what your mind would do in a court case as you are presented with evidence, subconsciously it would perform a similar process: blood on the shirt so that makes him a little more likely guilty, prints on the knife so that makes him a lot more likely and so on. — Devans99
Even if we had a deductive proof demonstrating creation of the universe; would anyone 100% trust it? The first cause argument is meant to be that; it uses only cause and effect as an argument, yet not many people place 100% trust in it. So even in the presence of a deductive proof, there would still be a need for a meta-analysis to combine the evidence from the deductive proof with other available (empirical etc...) evidence. — Devans99
If you had to make an assumption without evidence, would you assume he is definitely guilty, definitely innocent, or somewhere in-between? — Devans99
For other questions like this, though, I'd simply make no assumption whatsoever, because there's insufficient information. There's certainly no way to assign probabilities to something for which we have no information, no frequency data — Terrapin Station
↪Terrapin Station
...is the fact that we know the distribution of answers to unknown boolean questions is definitely not 100/0 or 0/100. We know that boolean questions have distribution spaces for their answers. We know that distributions on average follow the normal distribution. So therefore we know that choosing 50%/50% is statistically the most likely correct thing to do. — Devans99
I, for one, have no problem with starting at 50% - 50%. My problem is with the nonsense that atheists, theists, and "agnostic tending toward deism" add to the problem to get at something other than 50% - 50%. — Frank Apisa
I, for one, have no problem with starting at 50% - 50%. My problem is with the nonsense that atheists, theists, and "agnostic tending toward deism" add to the problem to get at something other than 50% - 50%. — Frank Apisa
For the God question, it's not as if there's no data to go on. 100% it's the case that there's no evidence of a God, not to mention that the very idea of it is absurd/incoherent. — Terrapin Station
100% it's the case that there's no evidence of a God, not to mention that the very idea of it is absurd/incoherent. — Terrapin Station
We can be 100% sure of virtually nothing — Devans99
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