How can the community boost the network's potential and
make subjective choices about its priorities without taking control away from the unequivocal and impartial reign of math?
This because I do not think I am
making a subjective choice by uniformly weighting (neither in Mooloos case or in mine).
Not exact matches
A person's over-emphasizing the
subjective aspect runs the risk of easily
making selfish
choices.
But of course this recombination of Pascal's to
make the wager with behavior and not just cogitating undermines the basis of Mr. Lundberg's accusation: that I favor a
subjective choice of belief over the (presumably more objective?)
But when it comes to more
subjective queries, like, say, the best spot for a holiday retreat, results are often more ambiguous, leading users to
make a rushed
choice due to an overwhelming number of options.
Electronic gradebooks and their inherent operational functions have convinced many educators that subjectivity is a four - letter word, but as Ken O'Connor (2006) reminds us, grading is inherently
subjective since it involves so many unavoidable
choices made by teachers and that the subjectivity of grading is nothing teachers should apologize for.
While it can be a highly
subjective matter (every career has different needs and phases), we'll talk about how to quantify your activity on social media, analyze its impact, and
make the best
choices for the short term and long term.
Many outsiders have attempted to
make readers ashamed of their reading
choices by judging by
subjective measures.
Personal
Choice will therefore examine collecting on two levels: as a
subjective phenomenon based on the connection between the owner and the artwork; and as a social gesture, where the personal commitment of building a private collection
makes a significant contribution to public life now or in the future.
Their experiences of differing diasporas define their entry into fields of
subjective decision
making and other discerning
choices.
The
choice of discount rate is rather
subjective, and a case can certainly be
made that the 1.4 % value used in the Stern Review is reasonable.
You can always of course claim it is a
subjective choice, but with the information at hand no - one can
make a better
choice.
Like good scientists, they examined the sensitivity of their results to many different
subjective choices made during the construction of the HadCRUT dataset.
Probability has been introduced however, so you contend now you have
made for yourself a «
subjective choice».
But as with all decision
making approaches, the a challenge for MCA and methods like it is the
subjective choices that have to be
made about what weights to attach to all the relevant criteria that go into the analysis, including how the adaptation measure being studied impacts poor or vulnerable populations, or how fair it is in the distribution of who pays compared to who benefits.
Choosing to use the Jeffreys» prior is not a tiny bit less
subjective than
making some other
choice.
wikipedia mentions something about maximum ignorance which goes rather my way than
making subjective prior
choices.
Many
subjective choices have to be
made in setting up the procedure.
It's a very useful approach, because formalization
makes it possible that people can tell exactly, what their
subjective input is, and to discuss and argue on the
choice.
We
make the most of the limited information that we have and anyone's
choice of some prior may seem «
subjective» to others as long as there remains unresolvable disagreements among participants.
Once you know what your
subjective priorities are, it's not tough to
make a
choice.