I think the point is that if extinction is not immediate, then the whole civilisation can’t exploit big world immortality to survive; every single member of that civilisation would still survive in their own piece of reality, but alone.
It doesn’t really matter if it’s immediate according to empty individualism. Instead the chance of survival in the branches where you try to die must be much lower than the chance of choosing that world.
You can never make a perfect doomsday device, because all kinds of things could happen to make it fail at the moment or during preparation. Even if it operates immediately.
I think the point is that if extinction is not immediate, then the whole civilisation can’t exploit big world immortality to survive; every single member of that civilisation would still survive in their own piece of reality, but alone.
It doesn’t really matter if it’s immediate according to empty individualism. Instead the chance of survival in the branches where you try to die must be much lower than the chance of choosing that world.
You can never make a perfect doomsday device, because all kinds of things could happen to make it fail at the moment or during preparation. Even if it operates immediately.