KatjaGrace comments on Your existence is informative - Less Wrong
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If it was solved in a way that made it obvious for, say, the Sleeping Beauty problem, would that then be the right way to do it?
I think you're just making up utility functions here - is a real utility function (that is, a function of the state of the world) ever calculated in the paper, other than the use of the individual utility function? And we're talking about regular ol' utility functions, why are ADT's decisions necessarily invariant under changing time-like uncertainty (normal sleeping beauty problem) to space-like uncertainty (sleeping beauty problem with duplicates)?
I would tentatively agree. To some extent the problem is one of choosing what it means for a distribution to be correct. I think that this is what Stuart's ADT does (though I don't think it's a full solution to this).
You would also still need to account for acausal influence. Just picking a satisfactory probability distribution doesn't ensure that you will one box on Newcomb's problem, for example.
Is this quote what you had in mind? It seems like calculating a utility function to me, but I'm not sure what you mean by "other than the use of the individual utility function".
That is from page 7 of the paper.
They're not necessarily invariant under such changes. All the examples in the paper were, but that's because they all used rather simple utility functions.
Hm, yes, you're right about that.
Anyhow, I'm done here - I think you've gotten enough repetitions of my claim that if you're not using probabilities, you're not doing expected utility :) (okay, that was an oversimplification)