Omega will either award you $1000 or ask you to pay him $100. He will award you $1000 if he predicts you would pay him if he asked. He will ask you to pay him $100 if he predicts you wouldn't pay him if he asked.
Omega asks you to pay him $100. Do you pay?
This problem is roughly isomorphic to the branch of Transparent Newcomb (version 1, version 2) where box B is empty, but it's simpler.
Here's a diagram:
I'm not completely sure what your comment means. The result hasn't "changed", it has appeared. Without the extra axiom there's not enough axioms to nail down a single result (and even with it I had to resort to lexicographic chance at one point). That's what incompleteness means here.
If you think that's wrong, try to prove the "correct" result, e.g. that any agent who precommits to not paying won't get the $1000, using only the original axioms and nothing else. Once you write out the proof, we will know for certain that one of us is wrong or the original axioms are inconsistent, which would be even better :-)
I was also previously suspicious to the word "change", but lately made my peace with it. Saying that there's change is just a way of comparing objects of the same category. So if you look at an apple and a grape, what changes from apple to grape is, for example, color. A change is simultaneously what's different, and a method of producing one from the other. Application of change to time, or to the process of decision-making, are mere special cases. Particular ways of parsing change in des... (read more)