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:
And that is where most people make their mistake when encountering this kind of decision problem. It varies somewhat between people whether that error kicks in at standard Newcomb's, Transparent Newcomb's or some other even more abstract variant such as this.
I'll echo prase's request. It seems to me that given that he's made the offer and I am confident of his predictions, I ought not expect to pay him. This is true regardless of what decision I make: if I decide to pay him, I ought to expect to fail.
Perhaps I'm only carrying counterfeit bills, or perhaps a windstorm will come up and blow the money out of my hands, or perhaps by wallet has already been stolen, or perhaps I'm about to have a heart attack, or whatever.
Implausible as these things are, they are far more plausible than Omega being wrong. The last... (read more)