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authorRunxi Yu <harriet@andrewyu.org>2023-08-21 08:21:51 +0100
committerRunxi Yu <harriet@andrewyu.org>2023-08-21 08:21:51 +0100
commit02976526c169f62f7a300b042dd4905890e7e5b5 (patch)
tree9df2581871243f47aeb9f240ea38180eb3ee0183
parent46e6a32055256be22f42914ee4f4808fed79783b (diff)
downloadwww-02976526c169f62f7a300b042dd4905890e7e5b5.tar.gz
null hypothesis
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 		This is my <i>microblog</i>, a place for me to jot down random thoughts that I want to keep, but are too small enough to constitute a real article/post. Reverse chronological order.
 		</p>
 		<hr />
+		<p id="18">
+		The null hypothesis is haunted. It appears in almost any reasoning/proof/etc.
+		Typically, when discussing a policy, the null hypothesis is the status quo; when evaluating a statement, the null hypothesis is the current best understanding (which is often unclear), or is simply a negation of the statement.
+		Where does the burden of proof fall?
+		<a href="https://www.andrewyu.org/microblog/#18">&</a>
+		</p>
+		<hr />
 		<p id="17">
 		I used to not really understand utilitarianism, the lack of a universal standard bugged me. But that was Bentham. Mill’s theory of utilitarianism seems to be more acceptable to me, it seemed to look into the future and cover how individual cases affect a decision entity, be it personal or systematic, in the long term. Generally when applying Millian utilitarianism, I obtain similar results to when I using existing principles. This somewhat reaffirms my hypothesis that these moral principles still arise from a utilitarian analysis of cost and benefit in the long term.
 		<br />