ok; I think we might be going somewhere. When we measure the acceleration of the rock towards the earth, aren't we not measuring, at the same time, the acceleration of the earth towards the rock? How could you know the difference? — Gampa Dee
ok; so, what would be this equation? — Gampa Dee
It’s not the same because she isn’t given a randomly selected waking after 52 weeks. She’s given either one waking or two, determined by a coin toss.
The manner in which the experiment is conducted matters. — Michael
This is an ambiguous claim. It is true that if you randomly select a seeing from the set of all possible seeings then it is twice as likely to be a tails-seeing, but the experiment doesn't work by randomly selecting a seeing from the set of all possible seeings and then "giving" it to Sleepy Beauty. It works by tossing a coin, and then either she sees it once or she sees it twice. — Michael
No. That I get to see something twice doesn't mean that I'm twice as likely to see it. It just means I get to see it twice. — Michael
Indeed, not only would their expected value (EV) be positive, but it would be positive because the majority of their individual bets would be winning bets. Michael, it seems, disagrees with the idea of individuating bets in this way. However, this resistance appears to stem from an unwillingness to assign probabilities to the possible involvement of epistemic agents in specific kinds of events. Instead, like sime, Michael prefers to attribute probabilities to the propensities of objects being realized as seen from a detached, God's-eye-view perspective. — Pierre-Normand
I think using frequencies over multiple games to argue for the probability in a single game is a non sequitur. — Michael
Will you bet that the coin landed heads 100 times in a row? I wouldn't. My credence is that it almost certainly didn't land heads 100 times in a row, and that this is almost certainly my first and only interview. — Michael
That a correct prediction of tails is twice as frequent isn't that a correct prediction of tails is twice as probable – at least according to Bayesian probability. — Michael
The latter is obvious but not what is asked about when asked her credence that the coin landed tails. — Michael
But honestly, all this talk of successes is irrelevant anyway. As I said before, these are two different things:
1. Sleeping Beauty's credence that the coin tossed on Sunday for the current, one-off, experiment landed heads
2. Sleeping Beauty's most profitable strategy for guessing if being asked to guess on heads or tails over multiple games
It's simply a non sequitur to argue that if "a guess of 'tails' wins 2/3 times" is the answer to the second then "1/3" is the answer to the first. — Michael
1. — Michael
I think the reasoning that leads you to this conclusion is clearly wrong, given that it’s an absurd conclusion. — Michael
My observation is that in a debate, if the strong claim—the claim that (A) wants to prevail—fails, then retreating to a more defensible position is a tactic still to make the strong claim prevail. I think it’s fair to call this a fallacy. — Jamal
We find MACS’ ultimate source by answering “Why do cultural moral norms exist?”
As I have been saying, cultural moral norms exist because they were selected for by their ability to solve cooperation problems. Domination norms which exploit outgroups are creating cooperation problems for the outgroup – the opposite of MACS’ function and therefore automatically excluded (pruned) from the start. — Mark S
What may not be obvious is that these principles innately exclude domination moral norms – no sneaky separate pruning required. Domination moral norms are excluded because their goals of exploiting outgroups are excluded. Exploiting outgroups creates cooperation problems for the outgroup and are therefore immoral (even while solving cooperation problems for the ingroup). — Mark S
I'm afraid I don't understand where the paradox is in 4D hypercubes. Let's simplify for a moment to better visualize the problem. A 2D square has 1D boundaries (lines) in 4 different locations, meeting at the edges. This is the same relationship that a 3D cube has with its 2D sides, and that a 4D hypercube has with its 3D sides.Since a hypercube, being 4D, has 3D boundaries, it occupies four distant 3D locations, i.e., the same object in four places simultaneously. This type of spatial expansion, i.e., spatial dimension, deals a fatal blow to logical consistency at the level of 3D spatial expansion. At the level of 4D spatial expansion, logical consistency, i.e., one object being in two places at once is natural not fatal. — ucarr