Rather high. I noticed that the average LW poster is not very well versed in mathematical logic in general and game theory in particular; for example about 80-90% of the posts in this thread are nonsensical, resulting in a large amount of insane strategies in this tournament where most people didn't think farther than whether to defect only on the very last or on the two last turns, without doing any frickin' math.
I understand Newcomb very well. When I posted my original question, I had the hypothesis that people here didn't understand CDT. It turned out that they understood CDT, but not the distinction between actual Newcomb (Omega) and weak Newcomb (empirical evidence), and didn't realize that the first problem couldn't exist in causal space, a.k.a reality, and that the second problem is simple calculus based on priors, and if people disagree on whether to one-box or two-box in weak Newcomb, that is a result of different priors, and not of different algorithms.
The claim that actual Newcomb or something suitably close cannot exist in reality is very strong. I wonder how you propose to think about research by Haynes et al. (pdf), which suggests that yes/no decisions may be predicted from brain states as long as 7-10 seconds before the decision is made and with accuracy ranging from 54% to 59% depending on the brain region used (assuming I'm reading their Supplementary Figure 6 correctly). In Newcomb's problem, the predictor doesn't need to do much better than chance in order for two-boxing to have lower expectat...
I have read lots of LW posts on this topic, and everyone seems to take this for granted without giving a proper explanation. So if anyone could explain this to me, I would appreciate that.
This is a simple question that is in need of a simple answer. Please don't link to pages and pages of theorycrafting. Thank you.
Edit: Since posting this, I have come to the conclusion that CDT doesn't actually play Newcomb. Here's a disagreement with that statement:
And here's my response:
Edit 2: Clarification regarding backwards causality, which seems to confuse people:
Edit 3: Further clarification on the possible problems that could be considered Newcomb:
Edit 4: Excerpt from Nozick's "Newcomb's Problem and Two Principles of Choice":