Can you give an example using a moral argument, or anything that would help illustrate how you take things that don’t look like they are Bayes’ law cases and apply it anyway?
The linked page says imperfectly efficient minds give off heat and that this is probabilistic (which is weird b/c the laws of physics govern it and they are not probabilistic but deterministic). Even if I accept this, I don’t quite see the relevance. Are you reductionists? I don’t think that the underlying physical processes tell us everything interesting about the epistemology.
Can you give an example using a moral argument, or anything that would help illustrate how you take things that don’t look like they are Bayes’ law cases and apply it anyway?
The linked page says imperfectly efficient minds give off heat and that this is probabilistic (which is weird b/c the laws of physics govern it and they are not probabilistic but deterministic). Even if I accept this, I don’t quite see the relevance. Are you reductionists? I don’t think that the underlying physical processes tell us everything interesting about the epistemology.