I interpreted the story as EY says "20% odds it's mine" and NB says "15% odds it's mine", so the first approximation is to renormalize the odds to add to 100% and split the bill as 20/(20+15)= and 15/(20+15) respectively. Anything more involved requires extra information and progressively involved assumptions. For example, what can you conclude about the calibration level of each one? Did NB actually mean 1/7 when he said 15%? Is EY prone to over/under-estimating the reliability of his memory? And practical questions: how cumbersome would it be to split the $20 given the change available?
So the real exchange probably went something like this: "Here, I'll take the twenty and give you a ten and a dollar bill... Oh, here is a couple of quarters, too". "Keep the quarters, I hate coins." 'Done."
Your concluding question does not seem to be relevant, and the calculation depends heavily on how you assigned p and q to begin with. Was there shared evidence? What other alternatives were considered? I can easily imagine that in some circumstances the combined probability could be lower than both p and q, because both heavily rely on the same piece of evidence and not seeing that the two hypotheses were equivalent weakens the value of this evidence (what else did you miss?).
I fully agree that you could have more information that tells you how to combine the probabilities, but we don't always have that information, and we need to make a decision anyway. Maybe this means the problem does not have a definitive answer, but I am still trying to decide what I would do.
In "Principles of Disagreement," Eliezer Yudkowsky shared the following anecdote:
I have left off the ending to give everyone a chance to think about this problem for themselves. How would you have split the twenty?
In general, EY and NB disagree about who deserves the twenty. EY believes that EY deserves it with probability p, while NB believes that EY deserves it with probability q. They decide to give EY a fraction of the twenty equal to f(p,q). What should the function f be?
In our example, p=1/5 and q=17/20
Please think about this problem a little before reading on, so that we do not miss out on any original solutions that you might have come up with.
I can think of 4 ways to solve this problem. I am attributing answers to the person who first proposed that dollar amount, but my reasoning might not reflect their reasoning.
I am very curious about this question, so if you have any opinions, please comment. I have some opinions on this problem, but to avoid biasing anyone, I will save them for the comments. I am actually more interested in the following question. I believe that the two will have the same answer, but if anyone disagrees, let me know.
I have two hypotheses, A and B. I assign probability p to A and probability q to B. I later find out that A and B are equivalent. I then update to assign the probability g(p,q) to both hypotheses. What should the function g be?