Probably a little insane, but there is prior work. Saying "hey, let's do this but with ambient decision theory" isn't much of a leap.
I have a more insane idea about under what specific conditions the Born rule isn't an accurate approximation for decision theoretic purposes (which is sort of like a hypothesis about one possible convergent universal instrumental value (a convergent way superintelligence-instantiations with near-arbitrary initial goal systems to collectively optimize the universe (or a decision policy attractor that superintelligence-instantiations will predictably fall into))), but the margin is too small to explain it and it builds on this other INCREDIBLY AWESOME idea of Steve Rayhawk's and I don't want to steal his thunder. (I previously hinted at it as a way to revive the dead even when there's no information about them left in your light cone and not just with stupid tricks like running through all possible programs. Sounds impossible right? Bwa ha ha. [Edit: Actually I'm not sure if it's technically still in your light cone or not. I'd have to think. I don't like thinking.]) Hey Steve, would you mind briefly explaining the reversible computing idea here? Pretty please so I don't have to keep annoying LW by being all seekrit?
I am going to have to do a proper LW sequence demonstrating why Many Worlds is of little or no interest as a serious theory of physics. Reduced to a slogan: Either you specify what parts of the wavefunction correspond to observable reality, and then you fail to comply with relativity and the Born rule, or else you don't specify what parts of the wavefunction correspond to observable reality, and then you fail to have a theory. The Deutsch-Wallace approach of obtaining the Born rule from decision theory rather than from actual frequencies of events in the multiverse IMHO is just a hopeless attempt to get around this dilemma, by redefining probability so it's not about event frequencies.
These are extracts from some Facebook comments I made recently. I don't think they're actually understandable as is—they're definitely not formal and there isn't an actual underlying formalism I'm referring to, just commonly held intuitions. Or at least intuitions commonly held by me. Ahem. But anyway I figure it's worth a shot.
A proposal to
rationalizederive magick and miracles from updateless-like decision theoretic assumptions:(On Google+ I list my occupation as "Theoretical Thaumaturgist". ;P )