Note: throughout ch(P) = the chance of P; cr(P) = your credence in P;
- Suppose that Law is the proposition which encapsulates the truth about the laws of nature. A miracle is any proposition P such that Law entails that P has a very low chance of being true: that is, ch(P)≤1/2100. Assume the following:
(a) cr(Laws)= 2100/(2100+1). (You have a very high credence in Law.)
(b) Law entails ch(M)=1/2101. (M would indeed be a miracle given that Law is true.)
(c) Suppose you are agnostic about whether M would occur if Law were false. That is: cr(M|¬Law) = 1/2.
(d) The Principal Principle: if Q entails the proposition ch(P)=r then cr(P |Q)=r.
Questions:
- Evaluate: cr(M|Law).
- Evaluate: cr(¬Law).
- Using your answers to (i) and (ii), (b), (c) and the Law of Total Probability, show that:
ch(M) < cr(M) ≤ cr(¬Law).
2 Cr is the hypothesis that ch(heads)=r.
h1 is the proposition that heads comes up on the first toss;
h2 is the proposition that heads comes up on the second toss (etc.)
t1 is the proposition that tails comes up on the first toss;
t2 is the proposition that tails comes up on the second toss (etc.)
ti is equivalent to the negation of hi: ¬hi.
Suppose that if the chance of the coin coming up heads/tails does not change from toss to toss. Since the tosses are independent, they obey the multiplicative rule:
(A) Suppose that ch(heads) = 1/4. Evaluate:
(i) ch(h1∧h2 )
(ii) ch(h1∧h2∧h3 )
(iii) ch(t1∧t2 )
(iv) ch(t1∧t2∧h3)
Repeat (i)-(iv) on the assumption that ch(heads) = 3/4
(B) Use the Principal Principle to calculate the following:
(i) cr(h1∧h2| C1/4)
(ii) cr(h1∧h2 ∧h3| C1/4)
(ii) cr(t1∧t2 | C1/4)
(iv) cr(t1∧t2∧h3| C1/4)
(v) cr(h1∧h2| C3/4)
(vi) cr(h1∧h2 ∧h3| C3/4)
(vii) cr(t1∧t2 | C3/4)
(viii) cr(t1∧t2∧h3| C3/4)
Suppose your prior credences in the chance hypotheses are:
C0 | C1/4 | C1/2 | C3/4 | C1 |
6/20 | 3/20 | 2/20 | 3/20 | 6/20 |
(C) What are your credences in the chance hypotheses after observing:
(i) h1∧h2
(ii) t1∧t2
(D) Use the law of total probability, the above priors, the likelihoods given by the Principal Principle, and the Law of Total Probability to evaluate the following:
(i) cr(h1∧h2)
(ii) cr(h1∧h2∧h3)
(iii) cr(t1∧t2)
(iv) cr(t1∧t2∧h3)
(E) Use the definition of conditional probability and the above results to evaluate:
(i) cr(h3|h1∧h2)
(ii) cr(h3|t1∧t2)