A few weeks ago at a Seattle LW meetup, we were discussing the Sleeping Beauty problem and the Doomsday argument. We talked about how framing Sleeping Beauty problem as a decision problem basically solves it and then got the idea of using same heuristic on the Doomsday problem. I think you would need to specify more about the Doomsday setup than is usually done to do this.
We didn't spend a lot of time on it, but it got me thinking: Are there papers on trying to gain insight into the Doomsday problem and other anthropic reasoning problems by framing them as decision problems? I'm surprised I haven't seen this approach talked about here before. The idea seems relatively simple, so perhaps there is some major problem that I'm not seeing.
I'm partial to the surreals myself. Every ordered field is a subfield of the surreals, though this is slightly cheating since the elements of a field form a set by definition but there are also Fields, which have elements forming a proper class. The surreals themselves are usually a Field, depending on your preference of uselessly abstract set theory axioms. We know that we want utilities to form an ordered field (or maybe a Field?), but Dedekind completeness for utilities seems to violate our intuitions about infinite ethics.
I haven't studied the hyperreals, though. Is there any reason that you think they might be useful (the transfer principle?) or do you just find them cool as a mathematical structure?
They allow us to extend real-valued utilities, getting tractable "infinities" in at least some cases.