Revisions of #4302
Contributors: Dirk Meulenbelt
Bayesian epistemology never said contradictory theories are useful together. It says they can't both be true simultaneously, and they can't. That's why physicists are looking for a unified theory. p(T₁ ∧ T₂) = 0 is the correct answer. It would be a bug if it were anything else."
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Unnecessary quotation mark
Bayesian epistemology never said contradictory theories are useful together. It says they can't both be true simultaneously, and they can't. That's why physicists are looking for a unified theory. p(T₁ ∧ T₂) = 0 is the correct answer. It would be a bug if it were anything else."
Bayesian epistemology never said contradictory theories are useful together. It says they can't both be true simultaneously, and they can't. That's why physicists are looking for a unified theory. p(T₁ ∧ T₂) = 0 is the correct answer. It would be a bug if it were anything else.