Actually .. arguing with myself now .. Beauty wasn’t asked about a probability, she was asked if she thought heads had been flipped, in the past. So this is clear after all—did she think heads was flipped, or not?
Viewing it this way, I see the isomorphism with the class of anthropic arguments that ask if you can deduce something about the longevity of humans given that you are an early human. (Being a human in a certain century is like awakening on a certain day.) I suppose then my solution should be the same. Waking up is not evidence either way that heads or tails was flipped. Since her subjective experience is the same however the coin is flipped (she wakes up) she cannot update upon awakening that it is more likely that tails was flipped. Not even if flipping tails means she wakes up 10 billion times more than if heads was flipped.
However, I will think longer if there are any significant differences between the two problems. Thoughts?
Actually .. arguing with myself now .. Beauty wasn’t asked about a probability, she was asked if she thought heads had been flipped, in the past. So this is clear after all—did she think heads was flipped, or not?
Viewing it this way, I see the isomorphism with the class of anthropic arguments that ask if you can deduce something about the longevity of humans given that you are an early human. (Being a human in a certain century is like awakening on a certain day.) I suppose then my solution should be the same. Waking up is not evidence either way that heads or tails was flipped. Since her subjective experience is the same however the coin is flipped (she wakes up) she cannot update upon awakening that it is more likely that tails was flipped. Not even if flipping tails means she wakes up 10 billion times more than if heads was flipped.
However, I will think longer if there are any significant differences between the two problems. Thoughts?