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Yes. There is a paradox if his predictive power is 90%.Osiris said:I hope we are talking about the paradox using an omniscient being.
That mutually exclusive logical arguments are present.what would be the contradiction?
And if his omniscience puts us in this situation, his omniscience is non-existent.we assume an omniscient being, he predicts your choice... where is the contradiction? that you will always pick both? he will know that, remember, he's omniscient...
No it's not. See my recent post. I would make more money than you if I picked both and you picked only B2 from the same prediction. Fact!it is logical to pick both boxes... but it is illogical to expect $1,001,000 by picking both...
You are taking the assumption too seriously.with an omniscient being, you will never get $1,001,000 -- there is no paradox.
Yes we do, or this wouldn't be the most famous paradox around - still hotly debated in the philosophical arena today.while it is true that when two contradictory things that are right happens it is a paradox... but we don't have that here.
I've answered this.The being's omniscience hasn't been disproved...
If I pick both every time and you pick only B2 every time then i will be richer than you.he knows your choices, he's omniscient....
if you pick both boxes, you will never get $1,001,000 out of it... that's a fact.
You are leaving out information...t_w said:However I don't think you've taken into account the fact that the money is already sealed. Our decision doesn't change this.
You are forgetting that the omniscient's prediction is based on your actual choice.So logically, we should get more money if we choose both, and if we choose only B2. Our choice doesn't change the being's prediction. This is the exact mistkae Osiris made.
t_w said:Osiris, please attempt to refute this:
If the being makes 10 predictions twice, one set for you and one set for me(with the same predictions in each set), and then you choose B2 every time and I choose both every time I will earn more than you, even if he is omniscient!
Osiris said:I think the paradox may be when both the predictor and the player are omniscient.
- player would pick both.
- predictor knows this and would put only 1000 in A
- player knows this and would pick only B (empty) proving predictor wrong.
- predictor would know this and would put 1,000,000
...
there be no answer unless both come into an honest agreement.
t_w said:Yes. There is a paradox if his predictive power is 90%.
And if his omniscience puts us in this situation, his omniscience is non-existent.
No it's not. See my recent post. I would make more money than you if I picked both and you picked only B2 from the same prediction. Fact!
t_w said:If the being has made his choice, and the money is either there or isn't, then whatever I do, I get more money if I take both. The act of me taking one won't make me richer. He's already made his choice.
This, coupled with the overwhelming evidence to take just B2, is called a paradox. That is the philosophically accepted reason why this is a paradox. I don't usually resort to arguments from authority, but really, do you honestly believe this isn't a paradox despite such philosophical, and indeed scientific, interest?
t_w said:No, it doesn't ignore information. It is a perfect argument for both maximising your money and in terms of logic(as is Osiris's of course...hence the paradox). Look at it this way. The being has placed the money in the box. Now, the choice you make won't change the amount in the box, so you should take both. There is absolutely no flaw here. You nearly have this paradox understood - you are simply assuming backward-acting causailty, as most people do(including me).
I will explain it the best I can. If the being makes 10 predictions twice, one set for you and one set for me(with the same predictions in each set), and then you choose B2 every time and I choose both every time I will earn more than you, even if he is omniscient!
t_w said:If the being has made his choice, and the money is either there or isn't, then whatever I do, I get more money if I take both.
I don't usually resort to arguments from authority, but really, do you honestly believe this isn't a paradox despite such philosophical, and indeed scientific, interest?
t_w said:Fair enough if you don't think it is a paradox. Your objections are reasonable - but I do think you are assuming that our choice will affect the amount of money.
If we are stood in front of the two boxes and are going to choose both, and then switch to choosing one, the money doesn't change.
You are both (implicitly) assuming our choice affects the amount in the box. Even if he is omniscient, this is no argument. Backward causality is specified as not acting in this situation.
Maxwell511 said:You know that the mathematical solution to this game is to win $1000. Right?
Any other outcome would have to be based on irrational behaviour. Predictive power or no predictive power.
--| B1&B2-- | B2-------|
1 | 1001000 | 1000000 |
2 | 1000----| 0------- |
The table above shows the choices of he players where the top is the choice of the person picking the box and the side is the person placing the money $100000 in box 2.
As you can see the first player will always win the most if they pick Box 1 and Box 2 so they should choice this all the time. The other player will always lose less if they don't put the money in then so they should always pick this option. Any other choice is illogical.
no one said that picking both boxes is 'wrong', all that has been said is that you will gain less money given if the predictor is an omniscient.t_w said:The paradox is that choosing both will always yield you with £1000 more than B2, and yet if the being is omniscient choosing B2 will always give you a million and choosing both will always give you £1000.
We have two logical arguments that, believe it or not contradict one another. You affirm the second argument, and argue the first isn't true because it is contradicted by the second! Can you not see this is what you are doing? I could affirm the first argument and say the second is wrong because the first contradicts it.
A very relevant quote from wikipedia:
In his 1969 article, Nozick noted that "To almost everyone, it is perfectly clear and obvious what should be done. The difficulty is that these people seem to divide almost evenly on the problem, with large numbers thinking that the opposing half is just being silly."
t_w said:The paradox is that choosing both will always yield you with £1000 more than B2, and yet if the being is omniscient choosing B2 will always give you a million and choosing both will always give you £1000.
We have two logical arguments that, believe it or not contradict one another.
You affirm the second argument, and argue the first isn't true because it is contradicted by the second! Can you not see this is what you are doing? I could affirm the first argument and say the second is wrong because the first contradicts it.
A very relevant quote from wikipedia:
In his 1969 article, Nozick noted that "To almost everyone, it is perfectly clear and obvious what should be done. The difficulty is that these people seem to divide almost evenly on the problem, with large numbers thinking that the opposing half is just being silly."
t_w said:If you choose both boxes you always gain £1000 more than if you chose only B2.
So, it is logical to choose both boxes. This point isn't difficult to grasp.
It is contradicted by the being's omniscience, true.
Osiris said:You are starving for a brownie.
I tell you I will give you a brownie ... BUT
1. You can take the brownie only if you don't eat it.
2. You can't take the brownie if you will eat it.
If you choose #1, you have yourself starving with a brownie that you can't eat...
Even if you will never choose it, if you could you would get more. So choosing both would give you more money.Osiris said:Not true.
Just because the sum of the two boxes will always be greater than what is just in box 2... choosing both boxes will not always give you more money than if you were to choose B2.
Consider this case:
Box 1: 1,000
Box 2: 1,000,000
It is true that the sum of both boxes is greater than just box 2... in this case you will never pick both - this is a rule not a contradiction. You are still ignoring this... please don't, else you will keep on repeating the same thing.
Well the reason it is a paradox is because we have two logical arguments that are contradictory. So if you concede it isn't illogical.....I didn't say choosing both boxes was illogical.
You are assuming that the act of choice changes the amount in the box - whether you realise it or not.what is illogical is expecting to get more money by picking the two boxes rather than box 2.
They are impossible but I don't think this changes anything. This isn't a practical experiment.literally there are only 2 choices, which are to get $1,000 or $1,000,000... this point isn't difficult to grasp.
$0 and $1,001,000 are illogical ...
A logical contradiction as a result of an assumption is a paradox. E.g. the Grandfather paradox assumes backwards time travel. The logical paradox disproves it.a mere contradiction doesn't make something a paradox.