The best argument against it is that it isn’t really a unique descriptor such that it can be falsified usefully.
Most posts and comments on LessWrong would work just as well if the authors were frequentist statisticians, old fashioned logical positivists, or even people who couldn’t really do the math. The epistemic viewpoint doesn’t actually hang off of a uniquely Bayesian procedure.
The best argument against it is that it isn’t really a unique descriptor such that it can be falsified usefully.
Most posts and comments on LessWrong would work just as well if the authors were frequentist statisticians, old fashioned logical positivists, or even people who couldn’t really do the math. The epistemic viewpoint doesn’t actually hang off of a uniquely Bayesian procedure.