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 complaining about predictors that punish rational people.
(Of particular note, some people take this claim as a a basic, obvious fact - as opposed to others who reach this conclusion at the end of a long argument for the position).
However, I think the proponent of CDT actually holds a more subtle position than this (which is partly outlined in the FAQ section above). As your comment highlights, the question then becomes a complex one about which view of decisions we should accept. The answer to this debate is likely to be motivated in part by the result of a debate about which technical definition of winning we should accept (technical because we're not just counting average utility received by agents because if we did then not chewing in the chewing gum problem would come out as rational). The above section reveals that the proponent of CDT has their own views about what definition of winning matters in decision theory, just as the proponent of TDT does (it's not that one simply doesn't care about winning) and so it seems to me that the debate requires more steps to reach the above view than simply accepting it at face value.
CDT loses in NP and then proponents of CDT just whine about NP by complaining about predictors that punish rational people.
I don't actually disagree with this statement (except its tone) - but in order to have rational debates we need to [construct the strongest possible version of the opposite view|http://lesswrong.com/lw/85h/better_disagreement/] before we have a go at demolishing it. So with that in mind, I definitely like the way CDT is being framed here.
I just brought this up because I wasn't sure whether the original sentence I quoted was painted ...
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.)