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"Introduction to abstract entropy" by Alex Altair

LessWrong (Curated & Popular)

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Defining a Bit

Just because your state contains a switch that could be flipped, does not mean that the switch MUST represent a bit. In all of the above discussion of average entropies, we implicitly treated the states as equally likely. This is not always true, and it's also a problematic premise if there are infinitely many states. If you want to get the average entropy when some states are more likely than others, you can just take a standard expected value. Here S is our entropy. X is the set of possible states small X, and P of X is the probability of each state. But what about in the yes-no questions model? What if, for example, we know that our friend

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