There's not even a one in a million; it's closer to "But there's still a chance, right?"
And you're still dealing in probabilities too small to sensibly calculate in this manner and be saying anything meaningful - "switching on the LHC is equivalent to killing 6,000 people for certain" is a statement that isn't actually sensible when rendered in English, and I don't see another way to render in English your calculated result that switching it on is "equivalent to killing 6,000 people with probability one". But please do enlighten me.
(I realise you're multiplying 6E9 by 1E-6 and asserting that six billion conceptual millionth-of-a-person slivers equals six thousand actual existing people. "Shut up and multiply" doesn't stop me balking at this, and that the result says "switching on the LHC is equivalent to killing 6,000 people for certain" seems to constitute a reductio ad absurdum for however one gets there.)
Rees estimated the probability of the LHC destroying the world at 1 in 50 million, and it would be surprising if he were one of the few people in the world without overconfidence bias, or one of the few people in the world who doesn't underestimate global existential risks.
I assume from the first sentence that you believe an appropriate probability to have for the LHC destroying the world is less than one in a billion. Trusting anyone, even the world scientific consensus, with one in a billion probability, seems excessive to me - the world scientific conse...
For background, see here.
In a comment on the original Pascal's mugging post, Nick Tarleton writes:
Coming across this again recently, it occurred to me that there might be a way to generalize Vassar's suggestion in such a way as to deal with Tarleton's more abstract formulation of the problem. I'm curious about the extent to which folks have thought about this. (Looking further through the comments on the original post, I found essentially the same idea in a comment by g, but it wasn't discussed further.)
The idea is that the Kolmogorov complexity of "3^^^^3 units of disutility" should be much higher than the Kolmogorov complexity of the number 3^^^^3. That is, the utility function should grow only according to the complexity of the scenario being evaluated, and not (say) linearly in the number of people involved. Furthermore, the domain of the utility function should consist of low-level descriptions of the state of the world, which won't refer directly to words uttered by muggers, in such a way that a mere discussion of "3^^^^3 units of disutility" by a mugger will not typically be (anywhere near) enough evidence to promote an actual "3^^^^3-disutilon" hypothesis to attention.
This seems to imply that the intuition responsible for the problem is a kind of fake simplicity, ignoring the complexity of value (negative value in this case). A confusion of levels also appears implicated (talking about utility does not itself significantly affect utility; you don't suddenly make 3^^^^3-disutilon scenarios probable by talking about "3^^^^3 disutilons").
What do folks think of this? Any obvious problems?