A good nutshell description of the type of Bayesianism that many LWers think correct is objective Bayesianism with critical rationalism-like underpinnings. Where recursive justification hits bottom is particularly relevant. On my cursory skim, Albert only seems to be addressing "subjective" Bayesianism which allows for any choice of prior.
It seems to think the problem of the priors does in Bayesianism :-(
Popper seems outdated. Rejecting induction completely is not very realistic.
You haven't understood which part is the myth I was talking about or read the source I gave.
You've now given a short statement of the conclusion of an argument Popper made in LScD (but not the argument itself, and also missing too much detail to even understand his point). It is a purely logical argument and unexceptionable. The Gardner passage doesn't address it at all, nor make any argument, but merely asserts.
Please do your homework instead of just googling out of context snippets. You don't know what the Popper legend is, nor what Popper's argument for the quoted conclusion you pasted is.
On the other hand, Popper's idea that there is only falsification and no such thing as confirmation turns out to be incorrect.
There is neither a psychological nor a logical induction. Only the falsity of the theory can be inferred from empirical evidence and this inference is a purely deductive one.
That seems pretty cut and dried - so long as you understand the relationship between confirmation and induction. Popper asserts what Yudkowsky claims he says.
Also, Popper's position is wrong. Few philosophers of science ever bought it ...
I have just rediscovered an article by Max Albert on my hard drive which I never got around to reading that might interest others on Less Wrong. You can find the article here. It is an argument against Bayesianism and for Critical Rationalism (of Karl Popper fame).
Abstract:
Any thoughts?