Oh, neat. Agents in “lowest terms”, whose definitions don’t refer to other agents, can’t react to any agent’s decision, so they’re all at an epistemic disadvantage relative to each other, and to themselves, and to every other agent across all games.
How is agent epistemically inferior to agent ? They’re both in “lowest terms” in the sense that their definitions don’t make reference to other agents / other facts whose values depend on how environments depend on their values, so they’re functionally incapable of reacting to other agents’ decisions, and are on equivalent footing.
How is agent epistemically inferior to agent ? They’re both constant decisions across all games, both functionally incapable of reacting to any other agent’s actual decisions. Even if we broaden the definition of “react” so that constant programs are reacting to other constant programs, your two agents still have equivalent conditonal power / epistemic vantage / reactive footing.
“Take only the box with $1000.”
Which itself is inferior to “Take no box.”
Oh, neat. Agents in “lowest terms”, whose definitions don’t refer to other agents, can’t react to any agent’s decision, so they’re all at an epistemic disadvantage relative to each other, and to themselves, and to every other agent across all games.
How is agent epistemically inferior to agent ? They’re both in “lowest terms” in the sense that their definitions don’t make reference to other agents / other facts whose values depend on how environments depend on their values, so they’re functionally incapable of reacting to other agents’ decisions, and are on equivalent footing.
How is agent epistemically inferior to agent ? They’re both constant decisions across all games, both functionally incapable of reacting to any other agent’s actual decisions. Even if we broaden the definition of “react” so that constant programs are reacting to other constant programs, your two agents still have equivalent conditonal power / epistemic vantage / reactive footing.