CarlShulman comments on Newbomb's parabox - Less Wrong
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Comments (32)
This is just the "Death in Damascus" case. The case is more interesting if there is some asymmetry, e.g. you press the button you get pleasant background music for the hour before you die.
A TDTer or evidential decision theorist would be indifferent between the top options in the symmetric version, and pick the better choice in the asymmetric version.
For CDT, neither option is "ratifiable," i.e. CDT recommends doing whatever you think you won't do and immediately regretting any action you do take (if you can act suddenly, before you can update against following through with your plan).
Some unintended humour from the link essay:
That's true. If B gives the $700 and you want the $700 you clearly pick B, not A!
Oh! For this to make (limited) sense it must mean that answer 1 "so you should take box A" is a typo and he intended to say 'B' as the answer.
It seems that two wrongs can make a right (when both errors happen to entail a binary inversion of the same bit).
Poor guy. He did all the work of identifying the problem, setting up scenarios to illustrate and analysing the answers. But he just couldn't manage to bite the bullet that was staring him in the face. That his decision theory of choice was just wrong.
In the context, I think the author is talking about anti-prediction. If you want to be where Death isn't, and Death knows you use CDT, should you choose the opposite of what CDT normally recommends?
I don't think I endorse his reasoning, but I think you misread him.
It is not inconceivable that I misread him. Mind reading is a task that is particularly difficult when it comes to working out precisely which mistake someone is making when at least part of their reasoning is visibly broken. My subjectively experienced amusement applies to what seemed to be the least insane of the interpretations. Your explanation requires the explanation to be wrong (ie. it wouldn't be analogous to one boxing at all) rather than merely the label.
That wouldn't make much sense (for the reasoning in the paper).