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by jodrellblank
6251 days ago
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I am reminded of something I read in Isaac Asimov's book on astronomy, where he talked about his great idea for how to visualize the size of distant objects and how lamentable it was that people don't use his obviously superior method. I stared at the pages unable to comprehend how he thought the size of a penny held a mile away was easier to visualise than the alternative. Likewise Eliezer's "Intuitive" explanation of Bayesianity - I've read through it twice (lightly) and it's thoroughly not intuitive. I'd need to study it not just read it. Presumably there is some distance from my current mental state vector to any with a comfortable grasp of Bayesian probability, and some explanations will take a quick route and some a less direct one. Hence, I think there are different 'best' explanations for different people depending on what they already know, what they want to know and what they want to touch upon along the way. I'm skeptical that there is one "_the_ best way" to teach probability, or anything else. |
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