This thread is for asking any questions that might seem obvious, tangential, silly or what-have-you. Don't be shy, everyone has holes in their knowledge, though the fewer and the smaller we can make them, the better.
Please be respectful of other people's admitting ignorance and don't mock them for it, as they're doing a noble thing.
To any future monthly posters of SQ threads, please remember to add the "stupid_questions" tag.
I understand and agree with that. I am just trying to find the term I can use when discussing scientific results. I thought 'scientific fact' was ok cause it includes 'scientific' which implies all the rest. But yes the word 'fact' is misleading. Should we just call it 'scientific result'? What do you recommend?
I can't stress enough how useful that link is to me as a new LW user. My criticisms are quite close to what David Chapman is saying and it is really nice to see how someone representative of LW responds to this.
Discussing in LW is giving me the impression at the moment that I have to learn to talk in a new language. I have to admit that at the moment all the corrections you guys have indicated are an improvement on my previous way of expressing. Very exciting!
But this is a great opportunity to deepen my understanding of the language by practising it. Let me try to reformulate my 'I don't know' in the Bayesian language. So, what I mean by 'I don't know' is that you should use a uniform distribution. For example, you have attached the label of 'Anton-Wilsonism' to me according to what I have currently expressed. I could assume, if you are literally using this way of thinking, that you went through the process of considering a weight for the probability that I am an exact match of what Scott is describing and decided that based on your current evidence I am. This also implies that you have, now or in the past, assigned ratings for all the assumptions and conclusions made in Scott's two paragraphs (there are quite a few) and you are applying all these to my model. So:
It is a trivial, but indicative of an attitude, example that using my approach your action could change from writing (but most importantly thinking):
"The kind of 'I don't know' that you advocate is what Scott calls Anton-Wilsonism."
to
"Is the kind of 'I don't know' you advocate what Scott calls Anton-Wilsonism?"
I just learned (see comments bellow) that "I don't know" is not 50/50 but a uniform distribution. Could you give me a few examples of credence calibration as it happens from your perspective?
Indeed. This is practical. All I am saying is that we shouldn't confuse the fact that we need to decide when we need to decide with the belief that our ratings express truth. I think it perfectly possible to be forced by circumstances into making an action related decision but return the conceptualisation of the underlying assumptions to a uniform distribution for the purpose of further exploration. It is just being aware that you have a belief system, that you need it, but not fully believe in it.
No, I don't think what you are saying is close to what Chapman is arguing. Chapman doesn't argue that we should say "I don't know" instead of pinning probability on statements where we have little knowledge.
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