To clarify: everyone should agree that the winning agent is the one with the giant heap of money on the table. The question is how we attribute parts of that winning to the decision rather than other aspects of the agent (because this is the game the CDTers are playing and you said you think they are playing the game wrong, not just playing the wrong game). CDTers use the following means to attribute winning to the decision: they attribute the winning that is caused by the decision. This may be wrong and there may be room to demonstrate that this is the case but it seems unreasonable to me to describe it as “contorted” (it’s actually quite a straightforward way to attribute the winning to the decision) and I think that using such descriptions skews the debate in an unreasonable way. This is basically just a repetition of my previous point so perhaps further reiteration is not of any use to either of us...
In terms of NP being “unfair”, we need to be clear about what the CDTer means by this (using the word “unfair” makes it sound like the CDTer is just closing their eyes and crying). On the basic level, though, the CDTer simply mean that the agent’s winning in this case isn’t entirely determined by the winning that can be attributed to the decision and hence that the agent’s winning is not a good guide to what decision wins. More specifically, the claim is that the agent’s winning is determined in part by things that are correlated with the agent’s decision but which aren’t attributable to the agent’s decision and so the agent’s overall winning in this case is a bad guide to determining which decision wins. Obviously you would disagree with the claims they’re making but this is different to claiming that CDTers think NP is unfair in some more everyday sense (where it seems absurd to think that Omega is being unfair because Omega cares only about what decision you are going to make).
I don’t necessarily think the CDTers are right but I don’t think the way you outline their views does justice to them.
So to summarise. On LW the story is often told as follows: CDTers don’t care about winning (at least not in any natural sense) and they avoid the problems raised by NP by saying the scenario is unfair. This makes the CDTer sound not just wrong but also so foolish it’s hard to understand why the CDTer exists.
But expanded to show what the CDT actually means, this becomes: CDTers agree that winning is what matters to rationality but because they’re interested in rational decisions they are interested in what winning can be attributed to decisions. Specifically, they say that winning can be attributed to a decision if it was caused by that decision. In response to NP, the CDTer notes that the agent’s overall winning is not a good guide to the winning decision as in this case, the agent’s winning it also determined by factors other than their decisions (that is, the winning cannot be attributed to the agent’s decision). Further, because the agent’s winnings correlate with their decisions, even though it can’t be attributed to their decisions, the case can be particularly misleading when trying to determine the winning decisions.
Now this second view may be both false and may be playing the wrong game but it at least gives the CDTer a fair hearing in a way that the first view doesn’t.
To clarify: everyone should agree that the winning agent is the one with the giant heap of money on the table. The question is how we attribute parts of that winning to the decision rather than other aspects of the agent (because this is the game the CDTers are playing and you said you think they are playing the game wrong, not just playing the wrong game). CDTers use the following means to attribute winning to the decision: they attribute the winning that is caused by the decision. This may be wrong and there may be room to demonstrate that this is the case but it seems unreasonable to me to describe it as “contorted” (it’s actually quite a straightforward way to attribute the winning to the decision) and I think that using such descriptions skews the debate in an unreasonable way. This is basically just a repetition of my previous point so perhaps further reiteration is not of any use to either of us...
In terms of NP being “unfair”, we need to be clear about what the CDTer means by this (using the word “unfair” makes it sound like the CDTer is just closing their eyes and crying). On the basic level, though, the CDTer simply mean that the agent’s winning in this case isn’t entirely determined by the winning that can be attributed to the decision and hence that the agent’s winning is not a good guide to what decision wins. More specifically, the claim is that the agent’s winning is determined in part by things that are correlated with the agent’s decision but which aren’t attributable to the agent’s decision and so the agent’s overall winning in this case is a bad guide to determining which decision wins. Obviously you would disagree with the claims they’re making but this is different to claiming that CDTers think NP is unfair in some more everyday sense (where it seems absurd to think that Omega is being unfair because Omega cares only about what decision you are going to make).
I don’t necessarily think the CDTers are right but I don’t think the way you outline their views does justice to them.
So to summarise. On LW the story is often told as follows: CDTers don’t care about winning (at least not in any natural sense) and they avoid the problems raised by NP by saying the scenario is unfair. This makes the CDTer sound not just wrong but also so foolish it’s hard to understand why the CDTer exists.
But expanded to show what the CDT actually means, this becomes: CDTers agree that winning is what matters to rationality but because they’re interested in rational decisions they are interested in what winning can be attributed to decisions. Specifically, they say that winning can be attributed to a decision if it was caused by that decision. In response to NP, the CDTer notes that the agent’s overall winning is not a good guide to the winning decision as in this case, the agent’s winning it also determined by factors other than their decisions (that is, the winning cannot be attributed to the agent’s decision). Further, because the agent’s winnings correlate with their decisions, even though it can’t be attributed to their decisions, the case can be particularly misleading when trying to determine the winning decisions.
Now this second view may be both false and may be playing the wrong game but it at least gives the CDTer a fair hearing in a way that the first view doesn’t.