Do you deny that the Boltzmann brain thinks it can refer to Obama? I.e. that it has some mental representation of an external world that is indistinguishable from your own except insofar as it does not successfully refer to anything in an external world?
Yes. I don't think the Boltzmann brain has a representation of the external world at all. Whether or not a system state is a representation of something else is not an intrinsic property of the state. It depends on how the state was produced and how it is used. If you disagree, could you articulate what it is you think makes a state representational?
I could use a salt and pepper shaker to represent cars when I'm at a restaurant telling my friend about a collision I recently experienced. Surely you'd agree that the particular arrangement of those shakers I constructed is not intrinsically representational. If they had ended up in that arrangement by chance they wouldn't be representing anything. Why do you think neural arrangements are different?
Claiming that the subjective situations of the human and the Boltzmann brain are evidentially distinguishable is totally bizarre when they themselves can't make the distinction.
I don't think this is what I'm claiming. I'm not sure what you mean by the "subjective situations" of the human and the Boltzmann brain, but I don't think I'm claiming that the subjective situations themselves are evidentially distinguishable. I don't think I can point to some aspect of my phenomenal experience that proves I'm not a Boltzmann brain.
I'm claiming that the evidence available to me goes beyond my phenomenal experience, that one's evidence isn't fully determined by one's "subjective situation". Boltzmann brains and human beings have different evidence. Is this the view you regard as bizarre? It doesn't seem all that different from the view expressed in the Sequences here.
Further, I think if two observers have vastly different sets of evidence, then it is permissibile to place them in separate reference classes when reasoning about certain anthropic problems.
You should to stop assuming that everyone is misunderstanding you.
I don't assume this. I think some people are misunderstanding me. Others have expressed a position which I see as actually opposed to my position, so I'm pretty sure they have understood me. I think they're wrong, though.
Your incorrect prediction about how I would respond to your question is an indication that you have at least partially misunderstood me. I suspect the number of people who have misunderstood me on this thread is explicable by a lack of clarity on my part.
Everyone is giving you the same criticism in different words and your argument is not being upvoted. Update on this information.
I have, but it does not shift my credence enough to convince me I'm wrong. Does the fact that a majority of philosophers express agreement with externalism about mental content lead you to update your position somewhat? If you are unconvinced that I am accurately representing externalism, I encourage you to read the SEP article I linked and make up your own mind.
Yes. I don't think the Boltzmann brain has a representation of the external world at all.
Not "the" external world. "An external world" and when I say external world I don't mean a different, actually existing external world but a symbolic system that purports to represent an external world just as a humans brain contains a symbolic system (or something like that) that actually represents the external world.
...If they had ended up in that arrangement by chance they wouldn't be representing anything. Why do you think neural arrangements
Summary: There are claims that Boltzmann brains pose a significant problem for contemporary cosmology. But this problem relies on assuming that Boltzmann brains would be part of the appropriate reference class for anthropic reasoning. Is there a good reason to accept this assumption?
Nick Bostrom's Self Sampling Assumption (SSA) says that when accounting for indexical information, one should reason as if one were a random sample from the set of all observer's in one's reference class. As an example of the scientific usefulness of anthropic reasoning, Bostrom shows how the SSA rules out a particular cosmological model suggested by Boltzmann. Boltzmann was trying to construct a model that is symmetric under time reversal, but still accounts for the pervasive temporal asymmetry we observe. The idea is that the universe is eternal and, at most times and places, at thermodynamic equilibrium. Occasionally, there will be chance fluctuations away from equilibrium, creating pockets of low entropy. Life can only develop in these low entropy pockets, so it is no surprise that we find ourselves in such a region, even though it is atypical.
The objection to this model is that smaller fluctuations from equilibrium will be more common. In particular, fluctuations that produce disembodied brains floating in a high entropy soup with the exact brain state I am in right now (called Boltzmann brains) would be vastly more common than fluctuations that actually produce me and the world around me. If we reason according to SSA, the Boltzmann model predicts I am one of those brains and all my experiences are spurious. Conditionalizing on the model, the probability that my experiences are not spurious is minute. But my experiences are in fact not spurious (or at least, I must operate under the assumption that they are not if I am to meaningfully engage in scientific inquiry). So the Boltzmann model is heavily disconfirmed. [EDIT: As AlexSchell points out, this is not actually Bostrom's argument. The argument has been made by others. Here, for example.]
Now, no one (not even Boltzmann) actually believed the Boltzmann model, so this might seem like an unproblematic result. Unfortunately, it turns out that our current best cosmological models also predict a preponderance of Boltzmann brains. They predict that the universe is evolving towards an eternally expanding cold de Sitter phase. Once the universe is in this phase, thermal fluctuations of quantum fields will lead to an infinity of Boltzmann brains. So if the argument against the original Boltzmann model is correct, these cosmological models should also be rejected. Some people have drawn this conclusion. For instance, Don Page considers the anthropic argument strong evidence against the claim that the universe will last forever. This seems like the SSA's version of Bostrom's Presumptuous Philosopher objection to the Self Indication Assumption, except here we have a presumptuous physicist. If your intuitions in the Presumptuous Philosopher case lead you to reject SIA, then perhaps the right move in this case is to reject SSA.
But maybe SSA can be salvaged. The rule specifies that one need only consider observers in one's reference class. If Boltzmann brains can be legitimately excluded from the reference class, then the SSA does not threaten cosmology. But Bostrom claims that the reference class must at least contain all observers whose phenomenal state is subjectively indistinguishable from mine. If that's the case, then all Boltzmann brains in brain states sufficiently similar to mine such that there is no phenomenal distinction must be in my reference class, and there's going to be a lot of them.
Why accept this subjective indistinguishability criterion though? I think the intuition behind it is that if two observers are subjectively indistinguishable (it feels the same to be either one), then they are evidentially indistinguishable, i.e. the evidence available to them is the same. If A and B are in the exact same brain state, then, according to this claim, A has no evidence that she is in fact A and not B. And in this case, it is illegitimate for her to exclude B from her anthropic reference class. For all she knows, she might be B!
But the move from subjective indistinguishability to evidential indistinguishability seems to ignore an important point: meanings ain't just in the head. Even if two brains are in the exact same physical state, the contents of their representational states (beliefs, for example) can differ. The contents of these states depend not just on the brain state but also on the brain's environment and causal history. For instance, I have beliefs about Barack Obama. A spontaneously congealed Boltzmann brain in an identical brain state could not have those beliefs. There is no appropriate causal connection between Obama and that brain, so how could its beliefs be about him? And if we have different beliefs, then I can know things the brain doesn't know. Which means I can have evidence the brain doesn't have. Subjective indistinguishability does not entail evidential indistinguishability.
So at least this argument for including all subjectively indistinguishable observers in one's reference class fails. Is there another good reason for this constraint I haven't considered?
Update: There seems to be a common misconception arising in the comments, so I thought I'd address it up here. A number of commenters are equating the Boltzmann brain problem with radical skepticism. The claim is that the problem shows that we can't really know we are not Boltzmann brains. Now this might be a problem some people are interested in. It is not one that I am interested in, nor is it the problem that exercises cosmologists. The Boltzmann brain hypothesis is not just a physically plausible variant of the Matrix hypothesis.
The purported problem for cosmology is that certain cosmological models, in conjunction with the SSA, predict that I am a Boltzmann brain. This is not a problem because it shows that I am in fact a Boltzmann brain. It is a problem because it is an apparent disconfirmation of the cosmological model. I am not actually a Boltzmann brain, I assure you. So if a model says that it is highly probable I am one, then the observation that I am not stands as strong evidence against the model. This argument explicitly relies on the rejection of radical skepticism.
Are we justified in rejecting radical skepticism? I think the answer is obviously yes, but if you are in fact a skeptic then I guess this won't sway you. Still, if you are a skeptic, your response to the Boltzmann brain problem shouldn't be, "Aha, here's support for my skepticism!" It should be "Well, all of the physics on which this problem is based comes from experimental evidence that doesn't actually exist! So I have no reason to take the problem seriously. Let me move on to another imaginary post."