| > assigning probabilities to singular events is only meaningful and admissible at all if there is a good analytic explanation for the respective propensity. Wait a minute, you are making a type error here: probabilities are not propensities. They're degrees of belief. (And even if you disagree in general, this is a Bayesian context you're talking about.) If I put a die on a table and hide it with a cup, you could still estimate your probability distribution about which face is up. My probability distribution would obviously be very different, since I put the die in there myself. (Replace "probability" by "betting ratio" or "degrees of belief" if it makes more sense to you.) > The [probabilism] view does not have very strong foundations. Read the first 2 chapters of Probability Theory: the Logic of Science, by E. T. Jaynes: "Plausible reasoning" and "The quantitative rules". It's very accessible, and you shall see how strong the foundations really are. http://www.med.mcgill.ca/epidemiology/hanley/bios601/Gaussia... |
Some people think that you need to explain why a die can be fair, rather than just assuming it or only looking at it from a frequentist perspective. Of course, die-hard Bayesians don't think so, but that would be begging the question in the context of discussing criticisms of Bayesianism.
> Read the first 2 chapters of Probability Theory: the Logic of Science, by E. T. Jaynes: "Plausible reasoning" and "The quantitative rules". It's very accessible, and you shall see how strong the foundations really are.
I'm an expert on this topic. The only arguments for probabilism are Dutch book arguments, and there is a large number of arguments against these. See for example various articles by Hajek. Alternative representations of graded belief are, among others:
- plausibility theory (Halpern at al.)
- possibility theory (Dubois & Prade)
- Haas-Spohn ranking theory and variants thereof
- various notions of epistemic entrenchment
- Dempster-Shafer belief theory
- almost any quantitative or qualitative representation of belief in belief revision theory not covered by one of the above theories (e.g. belief update by Katsuno & Mendelsohn)
- by a general logical connection, nonmonotonic logics and AAFs can generally represent notions of belief update, such that the underlying qualitative ordering of states is a representation of graded belief
What you probably mean is that the above generalizations (or qualitative theories, in some cases) could be simulated with probabilities, e.g. by using convex sets of probabilities or what Josang is doing in his "subjective logic". That's true, but then we're no longer talking about probabilism in the sense I've used the word.
Of course, you can also try arguing for probabilism like Savage did: Lay out a set of postulates for your subjective plausibility that happen to allow you to proof that this notion of subjective plausibility is in the end probability. Despite the merits of such work, it is in the end a form of cheating (or "reverse engineering"), because you could just as well come up with plausible postulates that yield the weaker axioms of possibility theory.