When I first read about Newcomb’s Problem, I will admit that it struck me as artificial at first. But not unfamiliar! Similar dilemmas seem common in film and television.
For example, consider Disney’s Hercules. Hercules spends the entire movie trying to regain his status as a god. He is told that he must become a hero to do so, so of course he sets out doing what seem to be heroic things. In the end he succeeds by jumping into the Styx to save Meg despite being told he would die. Heroism in his world evidently requires irrationality!
While it isn’t identical to Newcomb’s Problem, there is the same theme of “just ignore the apparent causal chain and it will all work out”. There are countless other instances: let the girl go and you’ll end up with the girl, or admit to cheating in that contest and you’ll win the prize, etc. The message is that denying ourselves is virtuous, creating Newcomblike scenarios.
When I first read about Newcomb’s Problem, I will admit that it struck me as artificial at first. But not unfamiliar! Similar dilemmas seem common in film and television.
For example, consider Disney’s Hercules. Hercules spends the entire movie trying to regain his status as a god. He is told that he must become a hero to do so, so of course he sets out doing what seem to be heroic things. In the end he succeeds by jumping into the Styx to save Meg despite being told he would die. Heroism in his world evidently requires irrationality!
While it isn’t identical to Newcomb’s Problem, there is the same theme of “just ignore the apparent causal chain and it will all work out”. There are countless other instances: let the girl go and you’ll end up with the girl, or admit to cheating in that contest and you’ll win the prize, etc. The message is that denying ourselves is virtuous, creating Newcomblike scenarios.