Today's post, "Arbitrary" was originally published on 12 August 2008. A summary (taken from the LW wiki):

 

When we say that something is arbitrary, we are saying that it feels like it should come with a justification, but doesn't.


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I think this is an important problem.

First, I would say that "things" are not arbitrary. I don't think that makes any sense to say "my sock is arbitrary."

Arbitrariness is a property of hypotheses, and in other contexts, decisions. In fact, maybe that's it - decisions may be arbitrary, and usually the kind of decision being referred to as arbitrary is one that privileges a certain hypothesis over others that seem to have just as much validity.

I've been trying to work in Jaynes concept of a transformation group for a problem into the concept. If there is a transformation group for the problem that leaves you with the same problem, but making different selections, then your selection method is arbitrary.

I don't know if I'm getting much better than "without justification". Oh well, time for bed.

[-][anonymous]00

"Enough of this buck-passing tomfoolery!" you may be tempted to cry.

That temptation arises the most for me in this instance: the claim that everything has a cause, and the cause of everything is God, but God doesn't have a cause, but God is part of 'everything.' Tomfoolery indeed.