Yes, it was this exact objection that I addressed in my previous replies that relied upon a misreading of the problem. I missed that the boxes were open and thought that the only clue to the prediction was the note that was left.
The only solution was to assume that the predictor does not always leave a note, and this solution also works for the stated scenario. You see that the boxes are open, and the left one contains a bomb, but did everyone else? Did anyone else? The problem setup doesn’t say.
This sort of vagueness leaves holes big enough to drive a truck through. The stated FDT support for picking Left depends absolutely critically on the subjunctive dependency odds being at least many millions to one, and the stated evidence is nowhere near strong enough to support that. Failing that, FDT recommends picking Right.
So the whole scenario is pointless. It doesn’t explore what it was intended to explore.
You can modify the problem to say that the predictor really is that reliable for every agent, but doesn’t always leave the boxes open for you or write a note. This doesn’t mean that the predictor is perfectly reliable, so a SpiteBot can still face this scenario but is just extremely unlikely to.
Yes, it was this exact objection that I addressed in my previous replies that relied upon a misreading of the problem. I missed that the boxes were open and thought that the only clue to the prediction was the note that was left.
The only solution was to assume that the predictor does not always leave a note, and this solution also works for the stated scenario. You see that the boxes are open, and the left one contains a bomb, but did everyone else? Did anyone else? The problem setup doesn’t say.
This sort of vagueness leaves holes big enough to drive a truck through. The stated FDT support for picking Left depends absolutely critically on the subjunctive dependency odds being at least many millions to one, and the stated evidence is nowhere near strong enough to support that. Failing that, FDT recommends picking Right.
So the whole scenario is pointless. It doesn’t explore what it was intended to explore.
You can modify the problem to say that the predictor really is that reliable for every agent, but doesn’t always leave the boxes open for you or write a note. This doesn’t mean that the predictor is perfectly reliable, so a SpiteBot can still face this scenario but is just extremely unlikely to.