Lecture 9 Flashcards
1
Q
What is a paradox?
A
- You have good, rational reasons to choose A and B as true
- But A & B cannot be true at the same time
- Statements that refer to themselves have odd properties: are normally meant to refer to things that are true/false
- e.g liars paradox: for the sentence to be true it has to be false, but if the sentence is false makes it true = no resolution to this paradox
- Wanting to resolve a paradox
- Limitations to do mathematical logical things, as there are also statements that refer to themselves
2
Q
What is the resolution of the St Petersburg Paradox?
A
- Money has diminishing marginal utility so expected value is not infinite
- If max payout the bank can cover is all the money in the known universe, the expected value of the situation is less than £100 = £100.00 unrealistic
3
Q
What are some complications of the St Petersburg Paradox?
A
- Diminishing marginal utility of money does not guarantee that the expected value will be finite
- Paradox assumes an implausible premise does not mean conclusion does not follow from premises: paradox might follow logically from premises even if they are implausible
4
Q
What is the Monty Hall Paradox?
A
- There are 3 doors, two with a goat and one with a car, you pick a door, and monty opens one of the other doors to show a goat
- Options are to stick with choice or switch: switching gives you a 66% chance of winning, and only 33% if you stay
- Has a definite resolution: feels like its 50/50 but wrong = one of the assumptions you make is wrong
5
Q
What are Newcomb’s Paradox?
A
- Opaque box and transparent box and devil situation
- Premise is not implausible due to studies in neuroscience where brain knows what person will do before person is consciously aware
- Sure thing principle: regardless of the state of the opaque box at the time = taking two boxes seems to get you more money
- Principle of Maximising EU: taking one box has the highest EU
- These two decision principles seem to apply but predict opposite behaviours
- No resolution: as you are predicting both people: self and predictor
6
Q
What is the Allais Paradox?
A
- Picking amounts of money with different probabilities = but people choose contradicting choices
- If maximising expected value = should pick B and D
- If maximising expected utility = should predict A and then C
- MEU may not be quite right, but works practically mostly
- If Da does not agree with intuitions = worry
7
Q
What is Ellsberg Paradox?
A
- Pick ball from opaque sack with 30 red balls and 60 black or yellow balls
- When choosing between pulling a red or black = people pick red to eliminate outcome uncertainty
- When choosing between R&Y or B&Y, most people choose B&Y = precise probability of occurring
- Amount you win does not matter on yellow as values are equivalent BUT runs into Sure-thing principle
- Ellsberg Paradox leads to ambiguity aversion
- Inconsistent with MEU as usually formulated
- Normative is still determined
8
Q
What is the confirmation Paradox?
A
- Starts with formal logic: if A implies B is true, Not B is not A is also true
- Matches intuition e.g if all swans are white, all not white things are not swans
- In science e.g seeing many white swans supports hypothesis that all swans are white, but logically equivalent to not all white things are not swans
- Logically, you can say a black shoe support the hypothesis ‘all black things are not swans’, which is technically the same as the first premise
9
Q
What are the limits of rationality?
A
Definition of rational behaviour has changed before
10
Q
What is the GRUE paradox?
A
- AN object is grue if it is green and observed before OR if it is blue and not seen before
- Inductive reasoning justifies that all emeralds are grue and green, but these lead to contradictory future outcomes as they cannot be blue and green after a certain time
- Emphasises choice of language in everyday reasoning
11
Q
What are the differences in concepts?
A
- Not all concepts are equally good
- Good ones that can actually predict the future = projectable = correctly project past into accurate predictions about future
- Bad ones cannot be used to predict future = non-projectable = do not correctly project past into accurate predictions of the future
12
Q
What is the Old Problem of Induction?
A
- How to justify the belief that the future will be like the past without being circular
- Admits a practical solution
13
Q
What is the New Problem of Induction?
A
- Empirical consistency of a scientific theory with past data does not guarantee accurate projectability into the future
- There is no consensus on how a projectability detector should work