Given your preferences, they do show what your utility function should be (up to affine transformation).
Assuming your preferences satisfy the axioms.
By completeness I assume you mean assigning a finite utility to every lottery, including the infinite ones.
No, by completeness I mean that for any two lotteries you prefer one over the other.
Why not reject completeness?
So why not reject it in the finite case as well?
The St. Petersburg lottery is plainly one that cannot exist.
Care to assign a probability to that statement.
So why not reject it in the finite case as well?
Actually, I would, but that's digressing from the subject of infinite lotteries. As I have been pointing out, infinite lotteries are outside the scope of the VNM axioms and need additional axioms to be defined. It seems no more reasonable to me to require completeness of the preference ordering over St. Petersburg lotteries than to require that all sequences of real numbers converge.
Care to assign a probability to that statement.
"True." At some point, probability always becomes subordinate to...
Summary: the problem with Pascal's Mugging arguments is that, intuitively, some probabilities are just too small to care about. There might be a principled reason for ignoring some probabilities, namely that they violate an implicit assumption behind expected utility theory. This suggests a possible approach for formally defining a "probability small enough to ignore", though there's still a bit of arbitrariness in it.