T|S One Box or Two Boxes (Newcomb's Paradox)

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"Bob is dead."

-- Friedrich Nietzche --

Aimless, Thursday, 27 May 2010 00:09 (thirteen years ago) link

okay I finally get the "take both" argument

basically it depends on the prediction not mattering at all; either one box is empty, so you get $1K if you take both, or neither box is empty, so you get $101K

Image: electrostimulation applied on a penis (HI DERE), Thursday, 27 May 2010 03:09 (thirteen years ago) link

But if the mechanism of the prediction is predicated on some causal connection to the choice predicted (which seems to be a necessity, really, to get to near-perfect accuracy) then it would be impossible to dismiss the prediction as not mattering. The causation then would not truly be "in reverse", any more so than the event of an eclipse causes the prediction of an eclipse.

Aimless, Thursday, 27 May 2010 03:19 (thirteen years ago) link

don't see how reverse causation figures in here. we don't know what causes bob's prediction, and it doesn't matter anyway. we only know that whatever our eventual decision might be, it is very likely to have been correctly predicted by bob. therefore, however many boxes we take, we can be reasonably confident that bob saw it coming, and that the amount contained in box B will have been predetermined accordingly. this creates a situation that might seem to resemble reverse causation, but only in a superficial sense. fundamentally, the puzzle has less to do with the manner in which the box contents are determined than the manner in which we make decisions based on our supposed foreknowledge of someone else's supposed foreknowledge.

we can take box A, knowing that we will get $1,000. we can take box B, knowing that we will probably get $100,000. or we can take both boxes, knowing that we will certainly get $1,000, and that we run a slight chance of getting $101,000. i suppose that the decision we make will be determined most of all by how much money we have and need. if we have very little and desperately need $1,000, then it might be best to take both boxes -- that at least guarantees a return of some kind. but if we can live with the chance that we might get nothing, then it's obviously best to take only box B.

agree with whoever said that the puzzle suffers for the absence of a precise measure of bob's accuracy. as stated here, it's mostly a measure of how we interpret the phrase "almost perfectly," and how we balance risk with benefit in monetary gambling. no matter how you slice it, though, there's no "paradox" i can see at any level. a (very inelegant) paradoxical formulation might work like this:

1) you can pick one and only one box.
2) box A contains $1,000, but only if bob fails in predicting your pick.
3) box B contains $100,000, but only if bob succeeds in predicting your pick.
4) if the above conditions are not met, the box contents are reversed.
6) bob predicts that that you will pick the box containing the least of the two amounts.

which box do you pick?

the other is a black gay gentleman from Los Angeles (contenderizer), Thursday, 27 May 2010 07:48 (thirteen years ago) link

As I understand it, the paradox is as follows:

1. [Using the rules mentioned in the first post on the thread]
2. You should take both boxes, since Bob already made his prediction and taking both boxes maximizes your profit.
3. But if you take both boxes, that means Bob probably predicted you'd take both boxes (since you're clearly the type of person who would take both boxes), and therefore Box B is empty.
4. So you should really just take Box B, because a person who would take Box B would get $100,000
5. But if you're the type of person who would take Box B, you might as well take both boxes, since the amount in them is predetermined.
6. But if you're now the type of person who would take both boxes, then Box B is empty (ie: back to step 3)

So it's an infinite loop.

Mordy, Thursday, 27 May 2010 07:56 (thirteen years ago) link

5. But if you're the type of person who would take Box B, you might as well take both boxes, since the amount in them is predetermined.
6. But if you're now the type of person who would take both boxes, then Box B is empty (ie: back to step 3)

this is the part that doesn't work for me as a paradox. i don't buy the psychological inference made in your point #5, and nothing in the setup implies that bob's predictions wouldn't take such a thing into account in the first place anyway. if you take box B, then box B is almost certainly going to contain $100,000. period. so you might as well take box B, accepting that you really are a box-B-taking kind of person.

i mean, if you go ahead and take both boxes knowing A) that the near-infallible bob has predicted your choice in advance -- and B) that IF bob has correctly predicted that you would choose both boxes, then box B will be empty -- then you're pretty much a moron. and you have to credit bob with knowing that you're not a moron, right?

the other is a black gay gentleman from Los Angeles (contenderizer), Thursday, 27 May 2010 08:05 (thirteen years ago) link

Wrong. Because if you take both boxes there's no reverse-correlation. It might mean you are the kind of person who would take both boxes, but you haven't damned yourself to less money because you took them in the moment. You were damned from the moment Bob made the prediction. Any chooser should simultaneously want to be the kind of person who would only take Box B, and recognize the impossibility of being that kind of person (because at the moment of choice, you are totally free to take both boxes). A similar paradox that explains this problem is Kavka's toxin puzzle.

An eccentric billionaire places before you a vial of toxin that, if you drink it, will make you painfully ill for a day, but will not threaten your life or have any lasting effects. The billionaire will pay you one million dollars tomorrow morning if, at midnight tonight, you intend to drink the toxin tomorrow afternoon. He emphasizes that you need not drink the toxin to receive the money; in fact, the money will already be in your bank account hours before the time for drinking it arrives, if you succeed. All you have to do is. . . intend at midnight tonight to drink the stuff tomorrow afternoon. You are perfectly free to change your mind after receiving the money and not drink the toxin.

The problem is similar to the one here. In Kavka, you simultaneously want to have intended to drink the poison and realized that any practical person would not drink the poison. Similarly, you want to be the kind of person who would only pick Box B, but must grapple with the fact that at the moment of choice, you'll inevitably take both boxes.

Mordy, Thursday, 27 May 2010 08:11 (thirteen years ago) link

Because if you take both boxes there's no reverse-correlation. It might mean you are the kind of person who would take both boxes, but you haven't damned yourself to less money because you took them in the moment. You were damned from the moment Bob made the prediction. Any chooser should simultaneously want to be the kind of person who would only take Box B, and recognize the impossibility of being that kind of person (because at the moment of choice, you are totally free to take both boxes).

but that assumes things that aren't stated in the puzzle's premises. nowhere is it said that bob's prediction is indirect, based on the kind of person you are, or the kind of person bob takes you to be. it's instead an "almost perfect" estimate of what you will actually do. it therefore can't be circumvented by speculating about the kind of person that bob envisions or the kind of person you actually might be. no matter what you choose or why, no many how much analysis you subject the choice to, bob's prediction remains "almost perfect." and it is therefore almost perfectly certain that box B will be empty if you take both boxes -- no matter what rationale you use to arrive at that choice.

kava's toxin seems similarly non-paradoxical. it's only when one begins to question whether or not one should actually drink the toxin that the attainment of the money comes to be in jeopardy. therefore, the real question is not the wormhole implied by the hidden paradox, it's a straightforward, "should i drink the toxin?" and the answer is a similarly straightforward, "yes, you should." if one puts aside all thought of what one might gain by NOT drinking the toxin and instead simply plans to do it, then one remains assured of gaining the money.

the other is a black gay gentleman from Los Angeles (contenderizer), Thursday, 27 May 2010 08:27 (thirteen years ago) link

strike

"...no many how much analysis you subject the choice to..."

sub

"...no matter the analysis to which you subject the choice..."

working through the booze here

the other is a black gay gentleman from Los Angeles (contenderizer), Thursday, 27 May 2010 08:29 (thirteen years ago) link

i mean, i get what you're saying: if you choose to take box B and really mean it, then bob very likely predicted that. okay, so having made that sincere choice, what's to prevent you from changing your mind and taking both boxes, thus somehow "fooling" the supposedly near-infallible bob?

two things:

1) if it's a truly sincere choice, then once made, it cannot be undone. i.e., sincere choice is irrevocable. i say this because any mental decision that IS revocable can be described as a part of the pattern of consideration that might eventually lead to a real and final choice, and that's not what bob seems to be predicting.

2) although reverse causation cannot be assumed, we must still act as though reverse causation is in effect. i say this because we do not understand the actual mechanism that governs bob's predictions. that's what i meant earlier. we only know that the act of taking both boxes seems to drastically reduce the likelihood that box B will contain anything, and given the absence of any other information, we might as well go with what we've been given.

the other is a black gay gentleman from Los Angeles (contenderizer), Thursday, 27 May 2010 08:41 (thirteen years ago) link

There's certainly a correlation between taking both boxes and Box B not containing anything. Not a causation though. (The causation is that Bob predicted you'd take both boxes, that's why Box B doesn't contain anything. That you took both boxes is incidental.)

OT: I kinda want to run a bunch of other polls in a similar vein (A priori knowledge: Yes/No, Abstract Objects: Platonism/Nominalism, etc). Peeps be interested?

Mordy, Thursday, 27 May 2010 08:48 (thirteen years ago) link

There's certainly a correlation between taking both boxes and Box B not containing anything. Not a causation though. (The causation is that Bob predicted you'd take both boxes, that's why Box B doesn't contain anything. That you took both boxes is incidental.)

yeah, i get that. but as a chooser, you have to assume a quasi-causal relationship between the choice you make (the only part of this situation you can control) and the outcome you hope to receive. you cannot know how bob came to possess this almost perfect understanding, after all. nor can you know what bob has predicted. you only know that whatever choice you ultimately do make, it is very likely to have been correctly anticipated by bob. therefore, by making a choice, and only from your own perceptual standpoint, you more-or-less "cause" the outcome. this has to do with the nature of time. in the scenario described, bob has predicted the future existence of something that did not yet exist at the time of prediction. in other words and regardless of what bob has predicted, prior to your actually making a choice, your choice does not exist. since it asks you (dear reader) to render a decision, this puzzle assumes the existence of free will. therefore, in the act of choosing, you validate (or invalidate) bob's prediction, and your choice IS causal in that sense. the problem is that you cannot possibly know how to invalidate bob's prediction, which makes it prudent to assume that bob has predicted things correctly and to make the choice that will provide maximum benefit under that circumstance.

the other is a black gay gentleman from Los Angeles (contenderizer), Thursday, 27 May 2010 09:17 (thirteen years ago) link

the problem is that you cannot possibly know how to invalidate bob's prediction, which makes it prudent to assume that bob has predicted things correctly and to make the choice that will provide maximum benefit under that circumstance.

This is my reasoning as well.

The only thing that violates this is the friend who can see into the boxes, and the interesting thing is that if you assume Bob is near-infallible, the odds that you will get $101K after your friend looks at the money goes down dramatically.

Image: electrostimulation applied on a penis (HI DERE), Thursday, 27 May 2010 13:21 (thirteen years ago) link

contenderizer otm

Aimless, Thursday, 27 May 2010 17:02 (thirteen years ago) link

Automatic thread bump. This poll is closing tomorrow.

System, Monday, 31 May 2010 23:01 (thirteen years ago) link

I kinda want to run a bunch of other polls in a similar vein (A priori knowledge: Yes/No, Abstract Objects: Platonism/Nominalism, etc). Peeps be interested?

yeah, there ain't enough philosophy in this place.

literally with cash (ledge), Monday, 31 May 2010 23:08 (thirteen years ago) link

Automatic thread bump. This poll's results are now in.

System, Tuesday, 1 June 2010 23:01 (thirteen years ago) link


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