Consequently, insofar as decision theory is about determining which decision is rational, on this account CDT reasons correctly in Newcomb’s problem.
I think this is only correct if you accept the CDT view of what a decision actually is - i.e. that decisions are made at a particular point in space-time and can be made one way or the other independently of what happens in the rest of the world.
If you instead define decisions as occurring at some point in algorithms-we-haven't-yet-computed space, I think you'll end up with something TDT-like in either case - whether you focus on making the rational decision or being the rational agent.
Yes, though this is just a FAQ section dealing with the "standard" view on how decision theory and winning interact and the reason that proponents of CDT hold their position even though they think winning is important. Perhaps that's all there is and there's no lesson to be had from it other than "this is what lots of philosophers think".
Personally, however, I think it reveals more than this. People who are new to the debate sometimes have the following view about CDT:
...CDT loses in NP and then proponents of CDT just whine about NP by
With much help from crazy88, I'm still developing my Decision Theory FAQ. Here's the current section on Decision Theory and "Winning". I feel pretty uncertain about it, so I'm posting it here for feedback. (In the FAQ, CDT and EDT and TDT and Newcomblike problems have already been explained.)