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Mark's avatar
Jun 4Edited

>First of all, I’m optimistic that there will be some nice way to do the math surrounding probabilistic reasoning involving bigger infinites.

I think this optimism is misguided. Mathematicians have devoted an unfathomable amount of effort over the past century to rigorously formalizing probability theory, and none of it really comes close to working at the level of generality you seem to want and/or need it to work at. In fact, there's a certain sense in which the entire story of the development of probability theory since Kolmogorov is one of mathematicians collectively realizing "hey, we can't naively apply these intuitive probabilistic concepts to situations willy-nilly, but instead need to very tightly delimit the places where they have some hope of working out, and figure out which other places exhibit behavior too pathological for us to say anything meaningful about." For example, all the early 20th century work that went into distinguishing between measurable and non-measurable sets, all the precise and non-trivial conditions sufficient for us to get "disintegration theorems" that let us conditionalize on events of probability zero, all the non-standard analysis research into Loeb measure-based probabilities on which we can incorporate infinitesimals but only in *very* specific and limited ways (see internal vs. external sequences and so forth), etc. There are many others.

None of this is a disproof, of course. Maybe some probabilist will come along tomorrow and present a revolutionary new theory that's vastly more applicable somehow, even to all the exotic, low-structure probability thought experiments that philosophers want to run - and even though there's always been a ton of incentive to do this among thousands of the world's smartest researchers who would be motivated to do exactly this, and none of whom would have needed CERN-level funding to carry it out if were indeed possible. I just think the appropriate emotion here is pessimism rather than optimism.

> It’s already possible with some small infinites—for example, there’s a coherent sense in which there are more odd numbers than primes, in the sense that they have greater density.

There's a bunch of problems with this. First, density isn't really an intrinsic property of a set of objects by itself, even a merely countably infinite set. You also need to impose an ordering. In the case of natural numbers, there is a "natural" ordering by size. It wouldn't be difficult to rearrange these numbers so that the density of primes on this new order goes to 1, or even any other number between 0 and 1, or even be undefined. Now, you can (and many would) argue that the natural order on N should have special epistemic privilege or something over any more gerrymandered-seeming order, and that's fine, but the issue is that in thought experiments, there need not be any obvious/natural order at all. If God just tells you he's created a countably infinite number of epistemic duplicates of you such that X and a countably infinite number of other duplicates such that ~X, how are you going to come up with a density of X based on that? And, more importantly, *we are in fact always in this situation with respect to almost everything*, since there's always a small positive subjective probability that this situation I just named is actual!

The other issue is that densities arguably aren't really probabilities, even presupposing a privileged order. They violate countable additivity - which, OK, maybe you're willing to give up - but more importantly, they frequently fail to be defined for even basic questions. For example, on the natural order, what is the density of positive integers which (in base-10) begin with the digit "1?" The answer is that there isn't one. It keeps going up and down between different numbers (IIRC ~11.1% and ~55.5%) as you increase the maximum cutoff of positive integers you're looking at.

Maybe your answer to this is to just say we simply need to hold our tongues in instances like this where the density approach doesn't turn up a unique, well-defined answer, but my point is that this is almost always going to be the case in real life as opposed to highly artificial toy scenarios in which we stipulate away every source of mathematical inconvenience!

There were more things I wanted to object to, but this comment is probably already too long.

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Bentham's Bulldog's avatar

//Am I crazy, or is this just a blunt appeal to faith? If you're wrong about this argument, then you're not going to get into Heaven. Obviously if you die and wake up in heaven, then it doesn't matter whether hevaen is logically impossible, because you're already there. Yay! //

This was just a poetic way of saying there’s some unknown solution. Don’t reject infinites because a) math needs them b) physics suggests an infinite world c) space is likely infinitely divisible and d) anthropics points to infinite people.

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