Said actions or lack thereof cause a fairly low utility differential compared to the actions in other, non-doomy hypotheses. Also I want to draw a critical distinction between “full knightian uncertainty over meteor presence or absence”, where your analysis is correct, and “ordinary probabilistic uncertainty between a high-knightian-uncertainty hypotheses, and a low-knightian uncertainty one that says the meteor almost certainly won’t happen” (where the meteor hypothesis will be ignored unless there’s a meteor-inspired modification to what you do that’s also very cheap in the “ordinary uncertainty” world, like calling your parents, because the meteor hypothesis is suppressed in decision-making by the low expected utility differentials, and we’re maximin-ing expected utility)
Said actions or lack thereof cause a fairly low utility differential compared to the actions in other, non-doomy hypotheses. Also I want to draw a critical distinction between “full knightian uncertainty over meteor presence or absence”, where your analysis is correct, and “ordinary probabilistic uncertainty between a high-knightian-uncertainty hypotheses, and a low-knightian uncertainty one that says the meteor almost certainly won’t happen” (where the meteor hypothesis will be ignored unless there’s a meteor-inspired modification to what you do that’s also very cheap in the “ordinary uncertainty” world, like calling your parents, because the meteor hypothesis is suppressed in decision-making by the low expected utility differentials, and we’re maximin-ing expected utility)