What are the qualitative lessons we can learn about logic and reasoning from Bayesian epistemology, that is, from taking Bayes' rule as a mathematical model for thought (even if it is considered a simplified formalism that we often can't implement?)
I've seen at least a few of these from @Eliezer Yudkowsky, but I think they're scattered across many essays.
Some things I consider to be examples of what I'm gesturing at here:
Thanks!
Cromwell's rule: you prior probability can never be zero about anything, otherwise it would stay zero in the face of any evidence.
The flip side is that some actually useful hypotheses are inaccessible on a fundamental level, so you can't ever be a True Bayesian. Sorry. This might map to epistemic humility.