The post would be much better if a definition of "possible world" was given. When giving definitions, perhaps to define what does "real" precisely mean would be beneficial.
More or less, I interpret "reality" as all things which can be observed. "Possible", in my language", is something which I can imagine and which doesn't contradict facts that I already know. This is somewhat subjective definition, but possibility obviously depends subjective knowledge. I have flipped a coin. Before I have looked at the result, it was possible that it came up heads. After I have looked at it, it's clear that it came up tails, heads are impossible.
Needless to say, people rarely imagine whole worlds. Rather, they use the word "possible" when speculating about unknow parts of this world. Which may be confusing, since our intuitive understanding of the word doesn't match its use.
Even if defined somehow objectively (as e.g. possible world is any world isomorphic to a formal system with properties X), it seems almost obvious that real world(s) and possible worlds are different categories. If not, there is no need to have distinct names for them.
So before creating theories about what probability means, I suggest we unite the language. These things have been discussed here already several times, but I don't think there is a consensus in interpretation of "possible", "real", "world", "arbitrary". And, after all, I am not sure whether "probability" even should be interpreted using these terms. It almost feels like "probability" is a more fundamental term than "possible" or "arbitrary".
I must admit that I am biased against "possible worlds" and similar phrases, because they tend to appear mostly in theological and philosophical discussions, whose rather empty conclusions are dissatisfactory. I am afraid of lack of guidelines strong enough to keep thinking in limits of rationality.
In Probability Space & Aumann Agreement, I wrote that probabilities can be thought of as weights that we assign to possible world-histories. But what are these weights supposed to mean? Here I’ll give a few interpretations that I've considered and held at one point or another, and their problems. (Note that in the previous post, I implicitly used the first interpretation in the following list, since that seems to be the mainstream view.)
As you can see, I think the main problem with all of these interpretations is arbitrariness. The unconditioned probability mass function is supposed to represent my beliefs before I have observed anything in the world, so it must represent a state of total ignorance. But there seems to be no way to specify such a function without introducing some information, which anyone could infer by looking at the function.
For example, suppose we use a universal distribution, where we believe that the world-history is the output of a universal Turing machine given a uniformly random input tape. But then the distribution contains the information of which UTM we used. Where did that information come from?
One could argue that we do have some information even before we observe anything, because we're products of evolution, which would have built some useful information into our genes. But to the extent that we can trust the prior specified by our genes, it must be that evolution approximates a Bayesian updating process, and our prior distribution approximates the posterior distribution of such a process. The "prior of evolution" still has to represent a state of total ignorance.
These considerations lead me to lean toward the last interpretation, which is the most tolerant of arbitrariness. This interpretation also fits well with the idea that expected utility maximization with Bayesian updating is just an approximation of UDT that works in most situations. I and others have already motivated UDT by considering situations where Bayesian updating doesn't work, but it seems to me that even if we set those aside, there is still reason to consider a UDT-like interpretation of probability where the weights on possible worlds represent how much we care about those worlds.