There are two boxes. If you open a box, you get to keep the contents.
Omega is an omniscient oracle. Omega predicts what will happen if you open the first box and observe that it contains $100.
- If Omega predicts that you will open the second box, then Omega puts $0 in both boxes.
- If Omega predicts that you will not open the second box, then Omega puts $100 in both boxes.
You open the first box. It contains $100. Do you open the second box?
Answer
No. If you open the second box, that means you're being simulated by Omega. If you're being simulated by Omega, then opening the second box ends the simulation and kills you.
Extra Credit [Orthogonal Thinking]
You have not yet opened the first box. How do you generate (at least) $250 in profit? [Please use spoiler tags or equivalent obfuscation when discussing the extra credit.]
The spoiler tag only works for me if I type it, not if I copy-paste it.
In this scenario, Omega is described as predicting your actions and choosing how much money goes in the boxes, which is different from HPMOR where timelines settle into a self-consistent equilibrium in more complicated ways. And with this plan it should be straightforward for Omega to carry out its usual process, since you're not trying to generate a contradiction or force events through a weird narrow path, you're just entangling your box-opening decision with an observation about the world which you haven't made yet, but which omniscient Omega should know. For Omega, this is no different than you deciding that your second-box-opening decision will be contingent on the results of yesterday's Yankees game, which you haven't heard yet but which you will look up on your phone after you open the first box.