I would like to ask for help on how to use expected utility maximization, in practice, to maximally achieve my goals.
As a real world example I would like to use the post 'Epistle to the New York Less Wrongians' by Eliezer Yudkowsky and his visit to New York.
How did Eliezer Yudkowsky compute that it would maximize his expected utility to visit New York?
It seems that the first thing he would have to do is to figure out what he really wants, his preferences1, right? The next step would be to formalize his preferences by describing it as a utility function and assign a certain number of utils2 to each member of the set, e.g. his own survival. This description would have to be precise enough to figure out what it would mean to maximize his utility function.
Now before he can continue he will first have to compute the expected utility of computing the expected utility of computing the expected utility of computing the expected utility3 ... and also compare it with alternative heuristics4.
He then has to figure out each and every possible action he might take, and study all of their logical implications, to learn about all possible world states he might achieve by those decisions, calculate the utility of each world state and the average utility of each action leading up to those various possible world states5.
To do so he has to figure out the probability of each world state. This further requires him to come up with a prior probability for each case and study all available data. For example, how likely it is to die in a plane crash, how long it would take to be cryonically suspended from where he is in case of a fatality, the crime rate and if aliens might abduct him (he might discount the last example, but then he would first have to figure out the right level of small probabilities that are considered too unlikely to be relevant for judgment and decision making).
I probably miss some technical details and got others wrong. But this shouldn't detract too much from my general request. Could you please explain how Less Wrong style rationality is to be applied practically? I would also be happy if you could point out some worked examples or suggest relevant literature. Thank you.
I also want to note that I am not the only one who doesn't know how to actually apply what is being discussed on Less Wrong in practice. From the comments:
You can’t believe in the implied invisible and remain even remotely sane. [...] (it) doesn’t just break down in some esoteric scenarios, but is utterly unworkable in the most basic situation. You can’t calculate shit, to put it bluntly.
None of these ideas are even remotely usable. The best you can do is to rely on fundamentally different methods and pretend they are really “approximations”. It’s complete handwaving.
Using high-level, explicit, reflective cognition is mostly useless, beyond the skill level of a decent programmer, physicist, or heck, someone who reads Cracked.
I can't help but agree.
P.S. If you really want to know how I feel about Less Wrong then read the post 'Ontological Therapy' by user:muflax.
1. What are "preferences" and how do you figure out what long-term goals are stable enough under real world influence to allow you to make time-consistent decisions?
2. How is utility grounded and how can it be consistently assigned to reflect your true preferences without having to rely on your intuition, i.e. pull a number out of thin air? Also, will the definition of utility keep changing as we make more observations? And how do you account for that possibility?
3. Where and how do you draw the line?
4. How do you account for model uncertainty?
5. Any finite list of actions maximizes infinitely many different quantities. So, how does utility become well-defined?
1) What decision-making procedure do you use to replace intuition with another decision-making procedure?
2) What decision-making procedure is used to come up with numerical utility assignments and what evidence do you have that it is correct by a certain probability?
3) What method is used to convert those rough estimates provided by our intuition into numeric estimates?
3b) What evidence do you have converting intuitive judgements of the utility of world states into numeric estimates increases the probability of attaining what you really want?
An example would be FAI research. There is virtually no information to judge the expected utility of it. If you are in favor of it you can cite the positive utility associated with a galactic civilizations, if you are against it you can cite the negative utility associated with getting it wrong or making UFAI more likely by solving decision theory.
The desired outcome is found by calculating how much it satisfies your utility-function, e.g. how much utils you assign to an hour of awesome sex and how much negative utility you assign to an hour of horrible torture.
Humans do not have stable utility functions and can simply change the weighting of various factors and thereby the action that maximizes expected utility.
What evidence do you have that the whole business of expected utility maximization isn't just a perfect tool to rationalize biases?
(Note that I am not talking about the technically ideal case of a perfectly rational (whatever that means in this context) computationally unbounded agent.)
Sure, but if attaining an event is dangerous because the crime rate in that area is very high due to recent riots, what prevents you from adjusting your utility function to attain anyway? In other words, what difference is there between just doing what you want based on naive introspection versus using expected utility calculations? If utility is completely subjective and arbitrary then it won't help you to evaluate different actions objectively. Winning is then just a label you can assign to any world state you like best at any given moment.
What would be irrational about playing the lottery all the day as long as I assign huge amounts of utility to money won by means of playing the lottery and therefore world states where I am rich by means of playing the lottery?