The doomsday argument says I have only a 10% chance of being within the first 10% of humans ever born, which gives nonzero information about when humanity will end. The argument has some problems with the choice of reference class; my favorite formulation (invented by me, I'm not sure if it's well-known) is to use the recursive reference class of "all people who are considering the doomsday argument with regard to humanity". But this is not the issue I want to discuss right now.
Imagine your prior says the universe can contain 10, 1000 or 1000000 humans, with probability arbitrarily assigned to these three options. Then you learn that you're the 50th human ever born. As far as I can understand, after receiving this information you're certain to be among the first 10% of humans ever born, because it's true in every possible universe where you receive such information. Also learning your index doesn't seem to tell you very much about the date of the doomsday: it doesn't change the relative probabilities of doomsday dates that are consistent with your existence. (This last sentence is true for any prior, not just the one I gave.) Is there something I'm missing?
I have no coherent theory of updating on information like "you're the 50th human" that gives the result you suggest. I'm using the only coherent theory that I fully understand: updating on "the 50th human exists". (Note that it doesn't privilege the observer, i.e. if you know that the 51st human exists somewhere, you can update on that too.) If you have a theory for the former kind of updating, and it gives a different result, then I'd really like to learn it.
First, update on "there exists a Less Wronger with the handle 'cousin it'", along with everything else you know about you.
Depending on your posterior, there's basically two ways this could go:
You now find very strong evidence that cousin it is the 50th human. You update the probability that he is from about 10^-100 to 10^-80.
You now find very strong evidence that cousin it is the 50th human. You update the probabi... (read more)