Anecdata: people who win large lotteries often express verbal disbelief, and ask others to confirm that they are not hallucinating. In fact, some even express disbelief while sitting in the mansion they bought with their winnings!
Right, but they don’t update to that from a single data point (looking at the winning numbers and their ticket once), they seek out additional data until they have enough subjective evidence to update to the very, very, unlikely event (and they are able to do this because the event actually happened). Probably hundreds of people think they won any given lottery at first, but when they double-check, they discover that they did not.
Anecdata: people who win large lotteries often express verbal disbelief, and ask others to confirm that they are not hallucinating. In fact, some even express disbelief while sitting in the mansion they bought with their winnings!
And yet, despite saying “Inconceivable!” they did collect their winnings and buy the mansion.
Right, but they don’t update to that from a single data point (looking at the winning numbers and their ticket once), they seek out additional data until they have enough subjective evidence to update to the very, very, unlikely event (and they are able to do this because the event actually happened). Probably hundreds of people think they won any given lottery at first, but when they double-check, they discover that they did not.