Okay, sure, that makes sense. I guess I have a weird middle range between, say, 45-55% that I just drop the belief from the probability matrix altogether because I am lazy and don’t want to keep track of everything. The impact on my actions is negligible until well beyond this threshold.
An exception would be something in which I have done a lot of studying/research. The information, in this case, is extremely valuable. The belief still sits in the “Undecided” category, but I am not throwing out all that hard work.
Is this sort of thing completely sacrilegious toward the Way of Bayes? Note that 45-55% is just a range I made up on the spot. I don’t actually have such a range defined; it just matches my behavior when translating me into Bayes.
Sort-of agree. The Bayesian formulation of a similar strategy is: Don’t bother remembering an answer to a question when that answer is the same as what you would derive from the ignorance prior. i.e. discard evidence whose likelihood ratio is near 1. However, the prior isn’t always 50%.
Cool. I guess I never thought about what the distinction between active and passive disbelief would be for a Bayesian. It makes perfect sense now that I think about it… and it would have certainly made a whole bunch of discussions in my past a lot easier.
Okay, sure, that makes sense. I guess I have a weird middle range between, say, 45-55% that I just drop the belief from the probability matrix altogether because I am lazy and don’t want to keep track of everything. The impact on my actions is negligible until well beyond this threshold.
An exception would be something in which I have done a lot of studying/research. The information, in this case, is extremely valuable. The belief still sits in the “Undecided” category, but I am not throwing out all that hard work.
Is this sort of thing completely sacrilegious toward the Way of Bayes? Note that 45-55% is just a range I made up on the spot. I don’t actually have such a range defined; it just matches my behavior when translating me into Bayes.
No, that makes sense to me. You have essentially no information about whether a statement is more likely to be true or false at that percentage range.
Sort-of agree. The Bayesian formulation of a similar strategy is: Don’t bother remembering an answer to a question when that answer is the same as what you would derive from the ignorance prior. i.e. discard evidence whose likelihood ratio is near 1. However, the prior isn’t always 50%.
Cool. I guess I never thought about what the distinction between active and passive disbelief would be for a Bayesian. It makes perfect sense now that I think about it… and it would have certainly made a whole bunch of discussions in my past a lot easier.
Pssh. Always learning something new, I guess.