I just remembered that in Naive TDT, Bayes nets, and counterfactual mugging, Stuart Armstrong made the point that it shouldn’t matter whether you are simulated (in a way that you might be the simulation) or just predicted (in such a way that you don’t believe that you could be the simulation).
I just remembered that in Naive TDT, Bayes nets, and counterfactual mugging, Stuart Armstrong made the point that it shouldn’t matter whether you are simulated (in a way that you might be the simulation) or just predicted (in such a way that you don’t believe that you could be the simulation).