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Popper seems outdated.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.
Thank you for that detailed reply. I just have a few comments:
"data" could be any observable property of the world
Yes but using it to refer to a person's ideas, without clarification, would be bizarre and many readers wouldn't catch on.
in statistical decision theory, the details of the decision process that implements the mapping aren't the focus because we're going to try to go straight to the optimal mapping in a mathematical fashion
Straight to the final, perfect truth? lol... That's extremely unPopperian. We don't expect progress to just end like that. We don't expect you get so far and then there...
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?