In Luke's recent post on what sort of posts we would like to see more of, one suggestion was "Open Thread: Math". This suggestion has been voted up by (at least) 12 people. Since it's going to take me less than 2 minutes to type this post, I figured I might as well just go ahead and post the thread, rather than vote up the suggestion.
So, this is an open thread on mathematics. As things stand, I have no idea what the rules should be (I don't know what the people who voted up the post suggestion expected the rules to be), but I guess the general principle should be that we have maths questions which are vaguely related to LW-type ideas, as there are plenty of more appropriate fora for general mathematical discussion already out there.
Well, x^2 isn't an isometry, so you shouldn't expect it to leave the prior unchanged.
Let me put it this way: if Omega told you ve had a real number x between 0 and 1, and then ve told you that x^1000 was between 3/10 and 4/10, you probably should be more surprised than if ve told you that x^1000 was between 0 and 1/10. Yes, you could pick your prior to have a uniform distribution for x^1000 rather than for x, but that doesn't seem a natural choice in general.
I have also been wondering about when it's appropriate to use a uniform prior.
As an example (I think) of an instance where a uniform prior is not appropriate: NBA stats people calculate points per minute played for all the players. In some cases, bench players have higher points per minutes played than the starters. However, it does not follow that the bench player should be starting (ignoring defensive stats).
This is because bench players tend to enter the game at a time when they will play against the opposing team's bench. So, presuming that the defensi... (read more)