This is an exploration of a way of looking at Newcomb’s Problem that helped me understand it. I hope somebody else finds it useful. I may add discussions of other game theory problems in this format if anybody wants them.
Consider Newcomb’s Problem:: Omega offers you two boxes, one transparent and containing $1000, the other opaque and containing either $1 million or nothing. Your options are to take both boxes, or only take the second one; but Omega has put money in the second box only if it has predicted that you will only take 1 box. A person in favor of one-boxing says, “I’d rather have a million than a thousand.” A two-boxer says, “Whether or not box B contains money, I’ll get $1000 more if I take box A as well. It’s either $1001000 vs. $1000000, or $1000 vs. nothing.” To get to these different decisions, the agents are working from two different ways of visualising the payoff matrix. The two-boxer sees four possible outcomes and the one-boxer sees two, the other two having very low probability.
The two-boxer’s payoff matrix looks like this:
Box B
|Money | No money|
Decision 1-box| $1mil | $0 |
2-box | $1001000| $1000 |
The outcomes $0 and $1001000 both require Omega making a wrong prediction. But as the problem is formulated, Omega is superintelligent and has been right 100 out of 100 times so far. So the one-boxer, taking this into account, describes the payoff matrix like this:
Box B
|Money | No money|
Decision 1-box| $1mil | not possible|
2-box | not possible| $1000 |
If Omega is really a perfect (nearly perfect) predictor, the only possible (not hugely unlikely) outcomes are $1000 for two-boxing and $1 million for one-boxing, and considering the other outcomes is an epistemic failure.
Oh dear, you seem to be running into contradictory assumptions. If Omega can change the state of the box, it's not Newcomb's problem, and if an apparently empty box contains money, it's not a transparent box. I'm excluding ad-hoc hypotheses like "you could be hallucinating," because it's stupid and inelegant - if Omega can exist, it is also possible for me to be an ideal agent. If it's impossible to be an ideal agent, why the hell are we talking about a problem where Omega can exist?
Of course Omega can't afterwards. At the moment you see the content the box either is empty or it isn't, and that doesn't change.
Of course it doesn't.
Sure, no hallucinating was assumed, though that doesn't actually change anything important.
I don't see what's so difficult to understand about this. If you counterfactually two-box if you see an empty box-1 yo... (read more)