If we use a normal universal prior, won’t that lead to some pretty weird results? If someone in a very simple universe decides to write down a policy in a prominent location, then that policy is very simple in the universal prior, even if it takes trillions of pages of code.
If we use a normal universal prior, won’t that lead to some pretty weird results? If someone in a very simple universe decides to write down a policy in a prominent location, then that policy is very simple in the universal prior, even if it takes trillions of pages of code.
Maybe using a speed prior fixes these problems?