The subject in my implementation is always asked. — JeffJo
1. Two coins will be arranged randomly out of your sight. By this I mean that the faces showing on (C1,C2) are equally likely to be any of these four combinations: HH, HT, TH, and TT.
2. Once the combination is set, A light will be turned on.
3. At the same time, a computer will examine the coins to determine if both are showing Heads. If so, it releases a sleep gas into the room that will render you unconscious within 10 seconds, wiping your memory of the past hour. Your sleeping body will be moved to a recovery room where you will be wakened and given further details as explained below.
4. But if either coin is showing tails, a lab assistant will come into the room and ask you a probability question. After answering it, the same gas will be released, your sleeping body will be moved the same way, and you will be given the same "further details."
The lab assistant only asks your credence if the coin combination isn't HH. — Michael
But the difference Elga introduced was unnecessary. So don't do it; do this instead:
Tell SB all the details listed here.
Put SB to sleep.
Flip two coins. Call them C1 and C2.
Procedure start:
If both coins are showing Heads, skip to Procedure End.
Wake SB.
Ask SB "to what degree do you believe that coin C1 is currently showing Heads?"
After she answers, put her back to sleep with amnesia.
Procedure End.
Turn coin C2 over, to show its opposite side.
Repeat the procedure.
Wake SB to end the experiment.
When SB is awake, she knows that she is in the middle of the procedure listed in steps 4 thru 9. Regardless of which pass thru these steps it is, she knows that in step 5 of this pass, there were four equally-likely combinations for what (C1,C2) were showing: {(H,H),(H,T),(T,H),(T,T)}. This is the "prior" sample space. — JeffJo
And in the original, on Tuesday after Heads, you are also not asked for a credence. — JeffJo
0What matters is the probability that you will be asked for your credence at least once during the experiment. — Michael
I did forget to say that coin C2 is turned over, but that was said before. What I outlined in 3 posts above is identical to the SB problem. What I said in that post you dissected applies to one pass only, and the intent was to have two passes where, if there was no question in the first, there would be in the second.Now, let the "further details" be that, if this is the first pass thru experiment, the exact same procedure will be repeated. Otherwise, the experiment is ended. Whether or not you were asked the question once before is irrelevant, since you have no memory of it. The arrangement of the two coins can be correlated to the arrangement in the first pass, or not, for the same reason. — JeffJo
What I said in that post you dissected applies to one pass only, and the intent was to have two passes where, if there was no question in the first, there would be in the second. — JeffJo
So if the coin combination is HH then the participant will be asked their credence during the second pass? If so then you are wrong when you said "she also knows that the fact that she is awake eliminates (H,H) as a possibility." — Michael
My implementation of the SB problem, the one I have been describing, is:
But the difference Elga introduced was unnecessary. So don't do it; do this instead:
Tell SB all the details listed here.
Put SB to sleep.
Flip two coins. Call them C1 and C2.
Procedure start:
If both coins are showing Heads, skip to Procedure End.
Wake SB.
Ask SB "to what degree do you believe that coin C1 is currently showing Heads?"
After she answers, put her back to sleep with amnesia.
Procedure End.
Turn coin C2 over, to show its opposite side.
Repeat the procedure.
Wake SB to end the experiment. — JeffJo
perhaps because Tunisians walk in hidden pairs. When you meet a member of a Tunisian pair for the first time, their sibling ensures they are the next one you meet. — Pierre-Normand
Turn coin C2 over, to show its opposite side — JeffJo
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
Credences … can be thought of as ratios — Pierre-Normand
They shouldn’t. One’s credence is the degree to which one believes a thing to be true. Often one’s credence is determined by the ratios but this is not necessary, as shown in this case.
If A iff B and if one is 50% sure that A is true then one is 50% sure that B is true. That just has to follow. — Michael
You know 50% is a ratio, right? — Srap Tasmaner
No, you seem to understand the process finally, but your counterargument completely misses the point of the argument.OK, I understand your argument now, — Michael
in your experiment the prior probability P(HH) = 1/4 is ruled out when woken — Michael
This does not implement the original problem. She is wakened, and asked, zero tomes or one time.1. Sleeping Beauty is given amnesia and asked her credence that the coin will or did land heads
2. The coin is tossed
3. If the coin lands heads then she is sent home
4. If the coin lands tails then she is given amnesia, asked her credence that the coin will or did land heads, and sent home — Michael
The Sleeping Beauty problem:
Some researchers are going to put you to sleep. During the two days that your sleep will last, they will briefly wake you up either once or twice, depending on the toss of a fair coin (Heads: once; Tails: twice). After each waking, they will put you to back to sleep with a drug that makes you forget that waking. When you are first awakened, to what degree ought you believe that the outcome of the coin toss is
Heads?
She’s asked once in step 1 and then, optionally, again in step 4. — Michael
No prior probability is ruled out when asked. — Michael
No it's not. She doesn't know that she's being asked a second time. She can't rule out heads. — Michael
Pr(Heads) = Pr(Heads&First Time) + Pr(Heads&Second Time) — JeffJo
You know 50% is a ratio, right? — Srap Tasmaner
Pierre-Normand is saying that P(X) refers to the ratio of Xs to non-Xs in some given reference class.
I'm saying that P(X) refers to the degree to which I believe X to be true. — Michael
Pierre-Normand is saying that P(X) refers to the ratio of Xs to non-Xs in some given reference class.
I'm saying that P(X) refers to the degree to which I believe X to be true.
If P(X) refers to the degree to which I believe X to be true, and if I believe that A iff B, then P(A) = P(B). — Michael
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
The prior P(Heads & Second Time) = 0 as established by the rules of the experiment. She will never be asked a second time if the coin lands heads. So there's nothing for her to later rule out when she's asked her credence. — Michael
Q1: Do you agree, or disagree, that the procedure I have outlined (with two coins, turning coin C2 over, but asking only for credence in coin C1) correctly implements this?Some researchers are going to put you to sleep. During the two days that your sleep will last, they will briefly wake you up either once or twice, depending on the toss of a fair coin (Heads: once; Tails: twice). After each waking, they will put you to back to sleep with a drug that makes you forget that waking. When you are first awakened, to what degree ought you believe that the outcome of the coin toss is Heads?
1. Shopping Beauty is given amnesia and asked her credence that the coin will or did land heads
2. The coin is tossed
3. If the coin lands heads then she is given amnesia and taken shopping.
4. If the coin lands tails then she is given amnesia, asked her credence that the coin will or did land heads, and sent home. — JeffJo
Tell me if you remember reading this before: In any experiment, measures of probability define a solution, not the experiment itself. The more you repeat this non sequitur (that your preferred solution can't be applied to my version of the experiment), the more obvious it becomes that you recognize that my experiment is correct.In your experiment the prior probability P(HH) = 1/4 becomes P(HH) = 0 when she’s asked her credence. But there is no prior P(X) = 1/4 that becomes P(X) = 0 when she’s asked her credence in my simplified form of the experiment.
Hence your experiment is not equivalent and your solution doesn’t apply. — Michael
That 1/4 chance that she would have been taken shopping. — JeffJo
But I am.I’m not asking about your shopping example. — Michael
I’m asking about this example:
1. Sleeping Beauty is given amnesia and (A or B) asked her credence that the coin will or did land heads
2. The coin is tossed
3. If the coin lands heads (C) then she is sent home
4. If the coin lands tails then she is given amnesia, (D) asked her credence that the coin will or did land heads, and sent home
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
What it means for one's credence to be 1/2 rather than 1/3 is a secondary matter. — Michael
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