No, because the universe has a state/law, not a probability distribution over states. A theory/universe/statement is either true or false, a probability distribution over theories is not, though it can be scored for accuracy in various ways. A probability distribution over theories is not a statement about the actual state of the universe.
Similarly, the universal prior is in no way “true”; it’s a distribution, not a statement at all. You shouldn’t even expect it to be “true” since it’s meant to be updated. What is important about it is that it has various nice properties such as eventually learning any computable distribution.
No, because the universe has a state/law, not a probability distribution over states. A theory/universe/statement is either true or false, a probability distribution over theories is not, though it can be scored for accuracy in various ways. A probability distribution over theories is not a statement about the actual state of the universe.
Similarly, the universal prior is in no way “true”; it’s a distribution, not a statement at all. You shouldn’t even expect it to be “true” since it’s meant to be updated. What is important about it is that it has various nice properties such as eventually learning any computable distribution.