That’s an interesting hypothesis. Let’s see if that works for ![this problem]/(https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bertrand_paradox_(probability)). Would you say Jaynes is the only one who manage to match the logical/mathematical territory? Or would you say he completely misses the point because his frame puts too much weight on « There must be one unique answer that is better than any other answer »? How would you try to reason two bayesians who would take opposite positions on this mathematical question?
Basically, you sort of mentioned it yourself: There is no unique answer to the question, so the question as given underdetermines the answer. There is more than 1 solution, and that’s fine. This means that the question to answer is not one-to-one, so some choices must be made here.
This vocabulary feels misleading, like saying: We can break RSA with a fast algorithm. The catch is that it’s slow for some instances.
This is indeed the problem. I never stated that it must be a reasonable amount of time, and that’s arguably the biggest issue here: Bounded rationality is important, much more important than we realize, because there is limited time and memory/resources to dedicate to problems.
(as a concrete application for permutation testing: if you randomize condition, fine, if you randomize pixels, not fine… because the latter is the general case while the former is the special case)
The point here is I was trying to answer the question of why there’s no universal frame, or at least why logic/mathematics isn’t a useful universal frame, and the results are important here in this context.
I don’t get this sentence.
I didn’t speak well, and I want to either edit or remove this sentence.
Okay, the biggest disagreements with stuff like growth mindset is I believe a lot of your outcomes are due to luck/chance events swinging in your favor. Heavy tails sort of restores some control, since a single action can have large impact, thus even a little control multiplies, but a key claim I’m making is that a lot of your outcomes are due to luck/chance, and the stuff that isn’t luck probably isn’t stuff you control yet, and that we post-hoc a merit/growth based story even when in reality luck did a lot of the work.
The point here is I was trying to answer the question of why there’s no universal frame, or at least why logic/mathematics isn’t a useful universal frame, and the results are important here in this context.
Great point!
There is no unique answer to the question, so the question as given underdetermines the answer.
That’s how I feel about most interesting questions.
Bounded rationality is important, much more important than we realize
Do you feel IP=PSPACE relevant on this?
a key claim I’m making is that a lot of your outcomes are due to luck/chance, and the stuff that isn’t luck probably isn’t stuff you control yet, and that we post-hoc a merit/growth based story
Sure And there’s some luck and things I don’t control in who I had children with. Should I feel less grateful because someone else could have done the same?
Sure And there’s some luck and things I don’t control in who I had children with. Should I feel less grateful because someone else could have done the same?
No. It has a lot of other implications, just not this one.
Do you feel IP=PSPACE relevant on this?
Yes, but in general computational complexity/bounded computation matter a lot more than people think.
That’s how I feel about most interesting questions.
Basically, you sort of mentioned it yourself: There is no unique answer to the question, so the question as given underdetermines the answer. There is more than 1 solution, and that’s fine. This means that the question to answer is not one-to-one, so some choices must be made here.
This is indeed the problem. I never stated that it must be a reasonable amount of time, and that’s arguably the biggest issue here: Bounded rationality is important, much more important than we realize, because there is limited time and memory/resources to dedicate to problems.
The point here is I was trying to answer the question of why there’s no universal frame, or at least why logic/mathematics isn’t a useful universal frame, and the results are important here in this context.
I didn’t speak well, and I want to either edit or remove this sentence.
Okay, the biggest disagreements with stuff like growth mindset is I believe a lot of your outcomes are due to luck/chance events swinging in your favor. Heavy tails sort of restores some control, since a single action can have large impact, thus even a little control multiplies, but a key claim I’m making is that a lot of your outcomes are due to luck/chance, and the stuff that isn’t luck probably isn’t stuff you control yet, and that we post-hoc a merit/growth based story even when in reality luck did a lot of the work.
Great point!
That’s how I feel about most interesting questions.
Do you feel IP=PSPACE relevant on this?
Sure And there’s some luck and things I don’t control in who I had children with. Should I feel less grateful because someone else could have done the same?
No. It has a lot of other implications, just not this one.
Yes, but in general computational complexity/bounded computation matter a lot more than people think.
I definitely sympthatize with this view.