Too clever by halving

Abstract

We offer two arguments against the halving repose to Sleeping Beauty. First, we show that halving violates the Epistemological Sure-Thing Principle, which we argue is a necessary constraint on any reasonable probability assignment. The constraint is that if hypothetically on C you assign to A the same probability you assign to A hypothetical on not-C, you must assign that probability to A simpliciter. Epistemically, it's a sure thing for you that A has this probability. Second, we show that halving violates solid statistical reasoning (or draws absurdly irrelevant distinctions).

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2023-04-18

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Author Profiles

Tim Button
University College London
Daniel Rothschild
University College London
Levi Spectre
Open University of Israel

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