1) A big distraction. Since you were arguing that there had been a serious failure in rationality, giving an irrationally low estimate made me doubt your thought process.
2) Very much- it did seem like you were incredulous that even the less wrong community could possibly come up with such high estimates. Though to be fair, after reading your post, I downgraded my own estimate from 20% to 2%, so the 32% average estimate was still way too high.
3) The possibility that my friend's Rosacea is caused by excessive aspartame ingestion.
3) The possibility that my friend's Rosacea is caused by excessive aspartame ingestion.
I'm assuming you mean the 0.001 option. What makes you so confident? The prior for reasonably active substances with no know relevance, specific trials or perhaps knowing she vigilantly avoids the stuff? I suppose that final category includes relevant legislative interventions, depending on her location. The vile stuff is not banned here yet.
Followup to: The Amanda Knox Test: How an Hour on the Internet Beats a Year in the Courtroom
See also: The Importance of Saying "Oops"
I'm posting this to call attention to the fact that I've now reconsidered the highly confident probability estimates in my post from yesterday on the Knox/Sollecito case. I haven't retracted my arguments; I just now think the level of confidence in them that I specified was too high. I've added the following paragraph to the concluding section:
While object-level comments on the case and on my reasoning about it should probably continue to be confined to that thread, I'd be interested in hearing in comments here what people think about the following: