Omniscient Omega doesn't entail backwards causality, it only entails omniscience. If Omega can extrapolate how you would choose boxes from complete information about your present, you're not going to fool it no matter how many times you play the game.
I agree if you say that a more accurate statement would have been "omniscient Omega entails either backwards causality or the absence of free will."
I actually assign a rather high probability to free will not existing; however discussing decision theory under that assumption is not interesting at all.
Regardless of the issue of free will (which I don't want to discuss because it is obviously getting us nowhere), if Omega makes its prediction solely based on your past, then your past suddenly becomes an inherent part of the problem. This means that two-boxing-You either has a different past than one-boxing-You and therefore plays a different game, or that Omega makes the same prediction for both versions of you, in which case two-boxing-You wins.
Two-boxing-you is a different you than one-boxing-you. They make different decisions in the same scenario, so something about them must not be the same.
Omega doesn't make its decision solely based on your past, it makes the decision based on all information salient to the question. Omega is an omniscient perfect reasoner. If there's anything that will affect your decision, Omega knows about it.
If you know that Omega will correctly predict your actions, then you can draw a decision tree which crosses off the outcomes "I choose to two box and both box...
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":