Perhaps we’re just using words differently, but I’m not sure I agree with either of these. I would have thought that recognising valid doubts would be useful in making decisions, even when the information necessary to resolve such doubts with certainty may not be available; and in some cases, the gains in terms of improved decision-making may not be worth the cost of investigating and resolving the doubt.
I think I’m using “doubt” as almost coextensive with “uncertainty”, and I’m not entirely sure what else it would mean, but do you mean something else?
“—An unresolved doubt is a null-op.
An uninvestigated doubt might as well not exist.”
Perhaps we’re just using words differently, but I’m not sure I agree with either of these. I would have thought that recognising valid doubts would be useful in making decisions, even when the information necessary to resolve such doubts with certainty may not be available; and in some cases, the gains in terms of improved decision-making may not be worth the cost of investigating and resolving the doubt.
I think I’m using “doubt” as almost coextensive with “uncertainty”, and I’m not entirely sure what else it would mean, but do you mean something else?