Modesty Argument

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The Modesty Argument was at least partially refuted by Eliezer Yudkowsky in the article: The Modesty Argument

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Overcoming Bias Articles

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References

Footnotes
Overcoming Bias Articles
Less Wrong Articles
Other Resources

See Also

References

Footnotes
Overcoming Bias Articles
Less Wrong Articles
Other Resources

The Modesty Argumentmodesty argument is the claim that when two or more rational agents have common knowledge of a disagreement over the likelihood of an issue of simple fact, they should each adjust their probability estimates in the direction of the others'. This process should continue until the two agents are in full agreement. The name comes from the idea that rational agents should not privilege evidence they have gathered over evidence gathered by others, i.e. agents should be modest about their own estimates.

The Modesty Argument is inspired by Aumann's Agreement Theoremagreement theorem, which shows that genuine Bayesians cannot agree to disagree.

The Modesty Argument is the claim that when two or more rational agents have common knowledge of a disagreement over the likelihood of an issue of simple fact, they should each adjust their probability estimates in the direction of the others'. This process should continue until the two agents are in full agreement. The name comes from the idea that rational agents should not privilege evidence they have gathered over evidence gathered by others, i.e. agents should be modest about their own estimates.

The Modesty Argument is inspired by Aumann's Agreement Theorem, which shows that genuine Bayesians cannot agree to disagree.

References

The Modesty Argument by Eliezer YudkowskyDoes the Modesty Argument Apply to Moral Claims? by Paul GowderModesty in a Disagreeable World by Hal Finney