The Puritans would one-box: evidential decision theory in the 17th century

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Ev­i­den­tial de­ci­sion the­ory was used way ear­lier than I would have ex­pected, and its de­vel­op­ment was mo­ti­vated the­olog­i­cally.

Un­con­di­tional elec­tion is the Protes­tant (mainly Calv­inist and Pu­ri­tan) idea that God made the de­ci­sions of who would go to heaven and hell be­fore He cre­ated the world (very similar to pre­des­ti­na­tion). It is “un­con­di­tional” be­cause noth­ing you do in your life can change the out­come of whether you go to heaven or hell.

If you be­lieve in this un­con­di­tional elec­tion, then you face a dilemma: “if elec­tion is un­con­di­tional and grace is ir­re­sistible, then why not sit back and wait for the in­evitable?” (Stearns and Brawner, “New England Church ‘Re­la­tions’ and Con­ti­nu­ity in Early Con­gre­ga­tional His­tory”, 30). If this is the case, where did the term “Pu­ri­tan work ethic” come from? Why were the Sepratists so re­li­gious? Ac­cord­ing to Stearns and Brawner, prayer was used to find out if you were “elected”:

The sim­plest and per­haps most satis­fy­ing method of deal­ing with this ques­tion was that of ex­am­in­ing closely per­sonal ex­pe­rience for signs of elec­tion. If an anx­ious Chris­tian could find as­surance that the seeds of re­gen­er­a­tion had been planted in him, he could then be urged to la­bor with the Holy Ghost to bring forth the fruits of sanc­tifi­ca­tion and thus par­ti­ci­pate ac­tively in the work of his own re­demp­tion. But the spiritual physi­ci­ans could not ad­minister real com­fort un­less they could demon­strate con­vinc­ingly that the symp­toms of true faith and re­pen­tance were dis­t­in­guish­able from the simu­lacra pro­duced by hope and fear. To this end they la­bored dili­gently. In 1592, William Perk­ins pub­lished a work en­ti­tled, A Case of Con­science, the great­est that ever was: How a Man may know whether he be a Child of God or No. The years that fol­lowed wit­nessed a great vol­ume of ser­mons and trea­tises ad­dressed in whole or in part to the same ques­tion. This liter­a­ture may prop­erly be called sci­en­tific, in the mod­ern sense of the word, be­cause it pro­ceeded from the premise that the hu­man will is a pas­sive agent of the Holy Ghost—just as in mod­ern psy­chol­ogy, the will is a pas­sive agent of equally mys­te­ri­ous pneuma, la­bel­led id, libido, etc. Pu­ri­tan ca­su­istry, in other words, was a branch of the sci­ence of pneu­ma­tol­ogy. It was not pri­mar­ily con­cerned to chas­ten hyp­ocrites (for hyp­ocrites and true be­liev­ers al­ike were caught up in the same in­ex­orable de­ter­minism), but to iden­tify the phe­nom­ena of re­birth, and to sep­a­rate these from what to­day we would call auto-sug­ges­tion and wish-fulfill­ment. Th­ese phe­nom­ena were sorted out and ar­ranged in nor­ma­tive, epi­sodic se­quences with which in­di­vi­d­ual Pu­ri­tans could com­pare their own ex­pe­riences. In ad­di­tion, rules of thumb were worked out by which the au­then­tic­ity of in­di­vi­d­ual ex­pe­rience could be tested.

Th­ese norms and rules of thumb—which Mor­gan sums up as the “mor­phol­ogy of con­ver­sion”—were ap­plied to Bay Colony Con­gre­ga­tion­al­ist stan­dards of ad­mis­sion in the form of the church re­la­tion.” By listen­ing to a brief ac­count of a can­di­date’s spiritual ex­pe­rience, and by oc­ca­sion­ally ask­ing well-cho­sen lead­ing ques­tions, ex­pert ex­am­in­ersini­tially the church el­ders—could quickly de­cide, on grounds well-laid, whether the can­di­date was, in Perk­ins’s words, “a child of God or no.” Thus, the church re­la­tion was a sev­en­teenth cen­tury fore­run­ner of the Rorschach, or ink-blot, test, by which a trained tech­ni­cian can make a sketchy but com­pre­hen­sive as­sess­ment of the salient fea­tures of his sub­ject’s per­son­al­ity. (Stearns and Brawner, n.d., 30-31).

Tak­ing the idea fur­ther, the Pu­ri­tans wanted ev­i­dence that they were elected (Heyr­man n.d.). And since hu­mans es­sen­tially have free will (even if we don’t ac­tu­ally), we can cre­ate ev­i­dence. The Pu­ri­tan work ethic comes from the idea that “the Pu­ri­tan sought suc­cess as ev­i­dence of his elec­tion to eter­nal bliss” (Gris­wold 1934, 476). The Pu­ri­tans were al­lowed to work hard (and charge in­ter­est on loans) be­cause God al­lowed them. If they were sucess­ful, surely they were “elected,” and if they were not elected, God would make them un­sucess­ful. Put an­other way, be­ing sucess­ful was ev­i­dence that they were “elected,” so they should strive to be sucess­ful.


This logic is iso­mor­phic to New­comb’s Prob­lem. The money (or heaven) is already in the box. Omega (or God) can not change the out­come. You can gain more util­ity by open­ing both boxes (or “sit­ting back and wait­ing for the in­evitable”). You can choose to make the de­ci­sion that some­one who Omega thought would one-box would make (or the choices that God knew you would make if you were “elected”).

We can use this as a case study to see what hap­pens when some­one ac­tu­ally be­lieves an ex­otic de­ci­sion-the­o­retic para­dox deep in their bones. They one-box.

There are a few rea­sons this might not be that good of a case study. First, in the case of the Pu­ri­tans, does two-box­ing (liv­ing a life of laz­i­ness) ac­tu­ally provide more util­ity? The Pu­ri­tans seemed to think be­ing lazy and un­pious pro­vided them with more im­me­di­ate-term util­ity, but to me, it’s un­clear. Se­cond, most peo­ple were not think­ing for them­selves; they were fol­low­ing the preists and the­olo­gans. Fi­nally, the the­ol­ogy evolved and most Chris­ti­ans to­day do not be­lieve in un­con­di­tional elec­tion.

When I made the con­nec­tion be­tween the Pu­ri­tans and ev­i­den­tial de­ci­sion the­ory, I was re­ally sur­prised. In­ves­ti­gat­ing it more, it feels slightly more nat­u­ral. Of course, it’s still quite im­pres­sive and is a tes­ta­ment to how much in­tel­lec­tual progress can be made un­der to­tally false as­sump­tions.


References

Gris­wold, A. Whit­ney. 1934. “Three Pu­ri­tans on Pros­per­ity.” The New England Quar­terly 7 (3): 475–93. https://​​doi.org/​​10.2307/​​359674.

Heyr­man, Chris­tine Leigh. n.d. “Pu­ri­tanism and Pre­des­ti­na­tion, Div­in­ing Amer­ica, TeacherServe®, Na­tional Hu­man­i­ties Cen­ter.” Ac­cessed Oc­to­ber 12, 2023. http://​​na­tion­alhu­man­i­ties­cen­ter.org/​​tserve/​​eigh­teen/​​ekey­info/​​pu­ri­tan.htm.

“New­comb’s Para­dox.” 2023. In Wikipe­dia. https://​​en.wikipe­dia.org/​​w/​​in­dex.php?ti­tle=New­comb’s_para­dox&ol­did=1179359324.

Stearns, Ray­mond Phineas, and David Holmes Brawner. 1965. “New England Church ‘Re­la­tions’ and Con­ti­nu­ity in Early Con­gre­ga­tional His­tory.” Pro­ceed­ings of the Amer­i­can An­tiquar­ian So­ciety 75 (1): 13–45.

“Un­con­di­tional Elec­tion.” 2023. In Wikipe­dia. https://​​en.wikipe­dia.org/​​w/​​in­dex.php?ti­tle=Un­con­di­tional_elec­tion&ol­did=1150601094.