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 "this sentence has lukeprog/crazy88's unconditional support" or "this sentence belongs as part of the CDT philosophy".
Is it worth mentioning (in a different section) the problems of reconciling the CDT model of a "decision" with reductionism? i.e. no matter how small you grind up the physical universe, you won't find anything that looks like a "decision", but you can grind up algorithm space until you find something that looks like "you". Or is this too advanced (or nonsensical) for the FAQ?
I agree. In terms of my statement regarding those who hold that:
CDT loses in NP and then proponents of CDT just whine about NP by complaining about predictors that punish rational people.
My claim wasn't that this wasn't a suitable conclusion but rather that it wasn't a suitable starting point. As you note, it's good to construct a steel man of an opponent's argument before attacking it but even more crucially, it's important that we don't attack straw men. The view of CDT in the FAQ isn't even a steel man, it's just the position advocated by many propo...
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.)