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by alisonkisk 2024 days ago
I don't understand your claims that these statements are are meaningless. They are commonly uttered and understood.
1 comments

I can understand expressions such as "pretty sure" or "completely sure". I do not understand the expression "to be X% sure". If someone says they're "37% sure" tomorrow will rain, what does that mean exactly?
Can you understand expressions like "more sure of A than B" or "as sure of A as of B"? Then, they are as sure that tomorrow will rain as they are sure that throwing three dice the sum will be 9 or less (37.5%).
It's clear that 37.5% sure is 0.5% more sure than 37% sure. The problem remains how to interpret these numbers.
You're asking about the interpretation of a statement such as "I assign the same probability to events A and B"?

That would mean that both are equally likely as far as that person knows.

No, I'm not asking that.
> If someone says they're "37% sure" tomorrow will rain, what does that mean exactly?

When someone says they're "37% sure" tomorrow will rain they mean that they assign the same probability to "tomorrow will rain" that they do to "if you throw three dice you'll get 9 or less" or "when you threw three dice you got 9 or less". In the second case the event is either true or false already and there is no uncertainty for you, their probability assignment is their best guess with the information they have.

37% of the time that someone says they are 37% sure of a statement X the statement X is true (assuming they're calibrated correctly/etc).