There’s surely some point or joke in this, but I’m just going “Wat?”. This disturbs me because not many things go completely over my head. Maybe I’m not decision theory literate enough (or I guess maybe I’m not Star Wars literate enough).
Is Vader supposed to have yet another decision theory? And what’s the whole thing with the competing orders supposed to be about?
Tarkin doesn’t really want to destroy Alderan for the reasons Leia mentions. His claims that he has precommited to the destruction of Alderan, unless Leia reveals the placement of a base, is a threat. Which Leia ignores as rational agent should.
Tarkin’s precommitment is only rational if Leia indeed reveals the placement of the base when this precommitment is made. Leia knows it and, therefore, doesn’t reveal the placement of the base. This retroactively makes Tarkin’s precommitment irrational, so he constantly reconsiders it. It’s rational for him to claim that he has precommited to the destruction of Alderan, but it is irrational for him to actually destroy Alderan. So they are caught in a loop: Tarkin keeps claiming that he has precommited, maybe even fully believing that his precommitment is true in the moment of making it, but the next moment, he second guesses it, and therefore he is unable to truly precommit. Leia knows all of it and therefore she is initially confident that Alderan is safe: the only stable equilibrium is when Alderan is not destroyed.
Vader really doesn’t care about Alderan. He is not saying that he is going to destroy it, expecting a particular reaction from Leia, he is ready to do it regardless of her reaction. For him it’s not a threat—it’s BATNA. And so he is capable to actually precommit and follow through. Leia understands this and that now the stable equilibrium is that Alderan is destroyed, unless she does something.
Then Vader proceeds to destroy Alderan anyway, which proves that he indeed was going to do it, and not just making a threat expecting a particular behavior from Leia. On the other hand, Tarkin tries to stop it, because he doesn’t want Alderan destroyed in the first place, and because he has precommited not to destroy Alderan if Leia reveals the placement of the base, which he believes she did. They have a short precommitment race with Vader, which ends when Tarkin’s blaster fails to shoot (something to do with following the rules of physics when the lightsaber is lit).
There is an extra layer of Commander Tenn Graneet’s mental process where he apparently understands that Vader is going to win the precommitment race. And whether Leia lied about the placement of the base or not, and whether Vader caught her lying, which, I suppose, will be revealed later.
For me the main thing in this story was that cheap talk =/= real commitment. You can talk all you want about how “totally precommitted” you are, but this lacks some concreteness.
Also, I saw Vader as much less galaxy brained as you portray him. Destroying Alderaan at the end looked to me more like mad ruthlessness than calculated strategy. (And if Leia had known Vader’s actual policy, she would have no incentive to confess.) Maybe one thing that Vader did achieve, is signal for the future that he really does not care and will be ruthless (but also signaled that it doesn’t matter if you give in to him, which is dumb).
Anyway, I liked the story, but for the action, not for some deep theoretic insight.
A bit more about whether Leia lied and Vader reasoning process.
For Vader there are two options, either Leia lied, and therefore Alderan is to be destroyed or she told the truth, but her decision algorithm for telling the truth was not correlated with Vaders not destroying Alderan as Vader has precommited to destroying Alderan, and therefore Alderan is to be destroyed.
Vader could’ve calculated all this beforehand which makes his initial precommitment to destroy Alderan rational. He looses nothing as he doesn’t care about Alderan, but wins in case Leia tells the truth, which probability is non-zero. It’s not rational for Leia to tell the truth, but she is put into a much more stressful situation where she is likelier to make a mistake than when dealing with Trakin from the comfort of confidence that Alderan is safe.
Its easy to ignore threats when all their effects are purely counterfactual. Much less so, otherwise. Next time when she will be dealing with Tarkin who will make a threat Leia may want to reconsider her superior rationality of ignoring threats, because otherwise she will have to deal with Lord Vader BATNAs.
Vader is clearly homicidal and irrational. Leia’s superior rationality won’t slow him down. Leia recognizes that immediately, but she should also have realized that revealing the base’s location wouldn’t prevent him from destroying the planet.
There’s surely some point or joke in this, but I’m just going “Wat?”. This disturbs me because not many things go completely over my head. Maybe I’m not decision theory literate enough (or I guess maybe I’m not Star Wars literate enough).
Is Vader supposed to have yet another decision theory? And what’s the whole thing with the competing orders supposed to be about?
Tarkin doesn’t really want to destroy Alderan for the reasons Leia mentions. His claims that he has precommited to the destruction of Alderan, unless Leia reveals the placement of a base, is a threat. Which Leia ignores as rational agent should.
Tarkin’s precommitment is only rational if Leia indeed reveals the placement of the base when this precommitment is made. Leia knows it and, therefore, doesn’t reveal the placement of the base. This retroactively makes Tarkin’s precommitment irrational, so he constantly reconsiders it. It’s rational for him to claim that he has precommited to the destruction of Alderan, but it is irrational for him to actually destroy Alderan. So they are caught in a loop: Tarkin keeps claiming that he has precommited, maybe even fully believing that his precommitment is true in the moment of making it, but the next moment, he second guesses it, and therefore he is unable to truly precommit. Leia knows all of it and therefore she is initially confident that Alderan is safe: the only stable equilibrium is when Alderan is not destroyed.
Vader really doesn’t care about Alderan. He is not saying that he is going to destroy it, expecting a particular reaction from Leia, he is ready to do it regardless of her reaction. For him it’s not a threat—it’s BATNA. And so he is capable to actually precommit and follow through. Leia understands this and that now the stable equilibrium is that Alderan is destroyed, unless she does something.
Then Vader proceeds to destroy Alderan anyway, which proves that he indeed was going to do it, and not just making a threat expecting a particular behavior from Leia. On the other hand, Tarkin tries to stop it, because he doesn’t want Alderan destroyed in the first place, and because he has precommited not to destroy Alderan if Leia reveals the placement of the base, which he believes she did. They have a short precommitment race with Vader, which ends when Tarkin’s blaster fails to shoot (something to do with following the rules of physics when the lightsaber is lit).
There is an extra layer of Commander Tenn Graneet’s mental process where he apparently understands that Vader is going to win the precommitment race. And whether Leia lied about the placement of the base or not, and whether Vader caught her lying, which, I suppose, will be revealed later.
This is the exact conversation I hoped to find in the comments.
For me the main thing in this story was that cheap talk =/= real commitment. You can talk all you want about how “totally precommitted” you are, but this lacks some concreteness.
Also, I saw Vader as much less galaxy brained as you portray him. Destroying Alderaan at the end looked to me more like mad ruthlessness than calculated strategy. (And if Leia had known Vader’s actual policy, she would have no incentive to confess.) Maybe one thing that Vader did achieve, is signal for the future that he really does not care and will be ruthless (but also signaled that it doesn’t matter if you give in to him, which is dumb).
Anyway, I liked the story, but for the action, not for some deep theoretic insight.
A bit more about whether Leia lied and Vader reasoning process.
For Vader there are two options, either Leia lied, and therefore Alderan is to be destroyed or she told the truth, but her decision algorithm for telling the truth was not correlated with Vaders not destroying Alderan as Vader has precommited to destroying Alderan, and therefore Alderan is to be destroyed.
Vader could’ve calculated all this beforehand which makes his initial precommitment to destroy Alderan rational. He looses nothing as he doesn’t care about Alderan, but wins in case Leia tells the truth, which probability is non-zero. It’s not rational for Leia to tell the truth, but she is put into a much more stressful situation where she is likelier to make a mistake than when dealing with Trakin from the comfort of confidence that Alderan is safe.
Its easy to ignore threats when all their effects are purely counterfactual. Much less so, otherwise. Next time when she will be dealing with Tarkin who will make a threat Leia may want to reconsider her superior rationality of ignoring threats, because otherwise she will have to deal with Lord Vader BATNAs.
Vader is clearly homicidal and irrational. Leia’s superior rationality won’t slow him down. Leia recognizes that immediately, but she should also have realized that revealing the base’s location wouldn’t prevent him from destroying the planet.