Suppose I have choice between the following:
A) One simulation of me is run for me 100 years, before being deleted.
B) Two identical simulations of me are run for 100 years, before being deleted.
Is the second choice preferable to the first? Should I be willing to pay more to have multiple copies of me simulated, even if those copies will have the exact same experiences?
Forgive me if this question has been answered before. I have Googled to no avail.
I don't see anything inconsistent about believing that a good life loses values with repetition, but a bad life does not lose disvalue. It's consistent with the Value of Boredom, which I thoroughly endorse.
Now, there's a similar question where I think my thoughts on the subject might get a little weird. Imagine you have some period of your life that started out bad, but then turned around and then became good later so that in the end that period of life was positive on the net. I have the following preferences in regards to duplicating it:
I would not pay to have a simulation that perfectly relived that portion of my life.
If Omega threatened to simulate the bad first portion of that period of life, but not the good parts that turned it around later, I would pay him not to.
If Omega threatened to simulate the bad first portion of that period of life, but not the good parts that turned it around later, I would probably pay him to extend the length of the simulation so that it also encompassed the compensating good part of that period of life.
If the cost of 2 and 3 was identical I think would probably be indifferent. I would not care whether the simulation never occurred, or if it was extended.
So it seems like I think that repeated good experiences can sometimes "make up for" repeated bad ones, at least if they occur in the same instance of simulation. But all they can do is change the value I give to the simulation from "negative" to "zero." They can't make it positive.
These preferences I have do strike me as kind of weird. But on the other hand, the whole situation is kind of weird, so maybe any preferences I have about it will end up seeming weird no matter what they are.
I agree with you that my preferences aren't inconsistent, I just value repetition differently for +v and -v events.
For my own part, I share your #1 and #2, don't share your #3 (that is, I'd rather Omega not reproduce the bad stuff, but if they're going to do so, it makes no real difference to me whether they reproduce the good stuff as well), and share your indifference in #4.