Making a decision means discovering your disposition (if we are using that word, we could call it something else if that avoids terminology confusion. What I mean is the non-random element of how you react to a specific input) in respect to a certain action. In a certain sense you are your dispositions, and everything else is just meaningless extras (that is your values, experiences, non-value preferences, reasoning ability etc. collectively form your dispositions and are part of them). Controlling your dispositions is how you control your actions. And your dispositions are what is doing that controlling. Making a choice between A and B doesn't mean letting disposition a and disposition b fight and pick a winner, it means that preferences vs A and B are the cause for your disposition being what it is. You can change your disposition vs act X in the sense that your disposition vs any X before time t is Y and your disposition for any X after t is Z, but not in the sense that you can change your disposition vs X at time t from Y to Z. Whatever you actually do (modulo randomness) at time t, that's your one and only disposition vs X at time t.
Assume you prefer red to blue, but more strongly prefer cubes to spheres. When given the choice between a red sphere and a blue cube and only one of them you can't just pick the red cube. And it's not the case that you ought to pick the red after you already have the cube, that's just nonsense. The problem is more than just impossibility.
Whatever you actually do (modulo randomness) at time t, that's your one and only disposition vs X at time t.
Okay, I understand how you use the word "disposition" now. This is not the way I was using the word, but I don't think that is relevant to our disagreement. I hereby resolve to use the phrase "disposition to A" in the same way as you for the rest of our conversation.
I still don't understand how this point suggests that people with one-boxing dispositions ought not to two-box. I can only understand it in one way: as in the ar...
A common background assumption on LW seems to be that it's rational to act in accordance with the dispositions one would wish to have. (Rationalists must WIN, and all that.)
E.g., Eliezer:
And more recently, from AdamBell:
Within academic philosophy, this is the position advocated by David Gauthier. Derek Parfit has constructed some compelling counterarguments against Gauthier, so I thought I'd share them here to see what the rest of you think.
First, let's note that there definitely are possible cases where it would be "beneficial to be irrational". For example, suppose an evil demon ('Omega') will scan your brain, assess your rational capacities, and torture you iff you surpass some minimal baseline of rationality. In that case, it would very much be in your interests to fall below the baseline! Or suppose you're rewarded every time you honestly believe the conclusion of some fallacious reasoning. We can easily multiply cases here. What's important for now is just to acknowledge this phenomenon of 'beneficial irrationality' as a genuine possibility.
This possibility poses a problem for the Eliezer-Gauthier methodology. (Quoting Eliezer again:)
The problem, obviously, is that it's possible for irrational agents to receive externally-generated rewards for their dispositions, without this necessarily making their downstream actions any more 'reasonable'. (At this point, you should notice the conflation of 'disposition' and 'choice' in the first quote from Eliezer. Rachel does not envy Irene her choice at all. What she wishes is to have the one-boxer's dispositions, so that the predictor puts a million in the first box, and then to confound all expectations by unpredictably choosing both boxes and reaping the most riches possible.)
To illustrate, consider (a variation on) Parfit's story of the threat-fulfiller and threat-ignorer. Tom has a transparent disposition to fulfill his threats, no matter the cost to himself. So he straps on a bomb, walks up to his neighbour Joe, and threatens to blow them both up unless Joe shines his shoes. Seeing that Tom means business, Joe sensibly gets to work. Not wanting to repeat the experience, Joe later goes and pops a pill to acquire a transparent disposition to ignore threats, no matter the cost to himself. The next day, Tom sees that Joe is now a threat-ignorer, and so leaves him alone.
So far, so good. It seems this threat-ignoring disposition was a great one for Joe to acquire. Until one day... Tom slips up. Due to an unexpected mental glitch, he threatens Joe again. Joe follows his disposition and ignores the threat. BOOM.
Here Joe's final decision seems as disastrously foolish as Tom's slip up. It was good to have the disposition to ignore threats, but that doesn't necessarily make it good idea to act on it. We need to distinguish the desirability of a disposition to X from the rationality of choosing to do X.