The scenario you propose does seem inevitably to cause a rational agent to lose. However, it is not realistic, and I can’t think of any situations in real life that are like this—your fate is not magically entangled with your beliefs. Though real placebo effects are still not fully understood, they don’t seem to work this way: they may make you feel better, but they don’t actually make you better. Merely feeling better could actually be dangerous if, say, you think your asthma is cured and decide to hike down into the Grand Canyon.
Maybe there are situations I haven’t thought of where this is a problem, though. Can you give a detailed example of how this paradox obtrudes on your life? I think you might get more useful feedback that way.
MAYBE asthma is an exception (I doubt it), but generally, in humans the scenario it actually IS realistic exactly because outcomes are entangled with your beliefs in a great many and powerful ways that influence you every day. It’s why you can detect lies, why positive thinking and placebos work, etc.
Edit: realized this might come of as more hostile than i intended, but to lazy to come up with somehting better.
I was really hoping for a detailed example. As I said, the evidence, though not unequivocal, does not indicate that placebos improve outcomes in any objective way.
The scenario you propose does seem inevitably to cause a rational agent to lose. However, it is not realistic, and I can’t think of any situations in real life that are like this—your fate is not magically entangled with your beliefs. Though real placebo effects are still not fully understood, they don’t seem to work this way: they may make you feel better, but they don’t actually make you better. Merely feeling better could actually be dangerous if, say, you think your asthma is cured and decide to hike down into the Grand Canyon.
Maybe there are situations I haven’t thought of where this is a problem, though. Can you give a detailed example of how this paradox obtrudes on your life? I think you might get more useful feedback that way.
MAYBE asthma is an exception (I doubt it), but generally, in humans the scenario it actually IS realistic exactly because outcomes are entangled with your beliefs in a great many and powerful ways that influence you every day. It’s why you can detect lies, why positive thinking and placebos work, etc.
Edit: realized this might come of as more hostile than i intended, but to lazy to come up with somehting better.
I was really hoping for a detailed example. As I said, the evidence, though not unequivocal, does not indicate that placebos improve outcomes in any objective way.