I don’t see this situation is impossible, but I think it’s because I’ve interpreted it differently from you.
First of all, I’ll assume that everyone agrees that given a 50⁄50 bet to win $10′000 versus losing $100, everyone would take the bet. That’s a straightforward application of utilitarianism + probability theory = expected utility, right?
So Omega correctly predicts that you would have taken the bet if he had offered it to you (a real no brainer; I too can predict that you would have taken the bet had he offered it).
But he didn’t offer it to you. He comes up now, telling you that he predicted that you would accept the bet, and then carried out the bet without asking you (since he already knew you would accept the bet), and it turns out you lost. Now he’s asking you to give him $100. He’s not predicting that you will give him that number, nor is he demanding or commanding you to give it. He’s merely asking. So the question is, do you do it?
I don’t think there’s any inconsistency in this scenario regardless of whether you decide to give him the money or not, since Omega hasn’t told you what his prediction would be (though if we accept that Omega is infallible, then his prediction is obviously exactly whatever you would actually do in that situation).
I don’t see this situation is impossible, but I think it’s because I’ve interpreted it differently from you.
First of all, I’ll assume that everyone agrees that given a 50⁄50 bet to win $10′000 versus losing $100, everyone would take the bet. That’s a straightforward application of utilitarianism + probability theory = expected utility, right?
So Omega correctly predicts that you would have taken the bet if he had offered it to you (a real no brainer; I too can predict that you would have taken the bet had he offered it).
But he didn’t offer it to you. He comes up now, telling you that he predicted that you would accept the bet, and then carried out the bet without asking you (since he already knew you would accept the bet), and it turns out you lost. Now he’s asking you to give him $100. He’s not predicting that you will give him that number, nor is he demanding or commanding you to give it. He’s merely asking. So the question is, do you do it?
I don’t think there’s any inconsistency in this scenario regardless of whether you decide to give him the money or not, since Omega hasn’t told you what his prediction would be (though if we accept that Omega is infallible, then his prediction is obviously exactly whatever you would actually do in that situation).