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.
If we look at the odds ratios, then P(A|B)/P(¬A|B)=P(A)/P(¬A) * P(B|A)/P(B|¬A). So as long as we have P(B|A) and P(B|¬A), it seems to work exactly as usual.
Good idea. Though since it's a ratio, you do miss out on a scale factor - In my example, you don't know whether to scale the heads world by 1/3 or the tails world by 3. Or mess with both by factors of 3/7 and 9/7, who knows?
Scaling by the ratio does successfully help you correct if you want to compare options between two worlds - for example, if you know you would pay 1 in the tails world, you now know you would pay 1/3 in the heads world. But if you don't know something along those lines, that missing scale factor seems like it would become an actual problem.