Ok, cool. Probably not high on your list of priorities, but I for one would be interested to see explanation of that case. At the very least it is of philosophical interest—it could be presented as a general problem with Bayesianism, or perhaps even more broadly, with the principle that any logically consistent hypothesis should get non-zero credence.
Ok, cool. Probably not high on your list of priorities, but I for one would be interested to see explanation of that case. At the very least it is of philosophical interest—it could be presented as a general problem with Bayesianism, or perhaps even more broadly, with the principle that any logically consistent hypothesis should get non-zero credence.