Ben Goertzel wrote:

Thanks for the reference.  The paper is entertaining, in that both
the theories presented (evidential decision theory and causal
decision theory) are patently very stupid right from the outset ;-)

EDT and CDT have been the two dominant decision theories, with CDT
having the upper hand, for decades.  I agree that both are wrong, but it
is an audacious assertion.  I haven't written up my own mathematical
analysis because it would require on the order of a book to put forth an
alternative theory in academia.  I just did the analysis for myself
because I needed to know if I had to do any special work in setting up
the initial conditions of an FAI.

EDT's foolishness is more mathematical in nature (via setting up the problem mathematically in a way that ignores relevant information) whereas CDT's foolishness is more philosophical in nature

EDT and CDT are precisely symmetrical except in how they compute
counterfactual probabilities.

(essentially, via introducing the folk-psychology notion of "causality" which has no role in rigorous formal analyses of events).

Causality a folk-psychology notion?  Judea Pearl begs to disagree with
you, and I beg to agree with Judea Pearl.  My own theory is causal in
nature - that is, it uses Pearl's graphs.

I really think this stuff is not that complicated; but people seem to
be misled in thinking about it via commonplace illusions related to "free will" ...

The answer itself is simple.  Justifying it is not.

--
Eliezer S. Yudkowsky                          http://singinst.org/
Research Fellow, Singularity Institute for Artificial Intelligence

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