Having in mind that we are measuring bits of evidence tells us that to give percentages, we must establish a baseline prior probability that we would assign without reasons.
Mostly you should be fine, just have heuristics for the anomalies near 0 and 1 - if one belief pushes the probability to .5 and another to .6, then the prior was noticeably far from zero or getting only the second reason won’t be noticeable either.
Having in mind that we are measuring bits of evidence tells us that to give percentages, we must establish a baseline prior probability that we would assign without reasons.
Mostly you should be fine, just have heuristics for the anomalies near 0 and 1 - if one belief pushes the probability to .5 and another to .6, then the prior was noticeably far from zero or getting only the second reason won’t be noticeable either.