Did you mean that if the other agents aren’t similar enough to you, it’s an error to assume that your cooperating will cause them to cooperate?
Yes, specifically similar with respect to decision theory implementation.
I was drawing the inference about two-boxing from the fact that the author seemed to dismiss the possibility that what you do could possibly affect what others do in any circumstance.
He seems to be talking about humans as they exist. If (or when) he generalises to all agents he starts being wrong.
Even among humans, there’s something to timeless considerations, right? If you were in a real prisoner’s dilemma with someone you didn’t know but who was very similar to you and had read a lot of the same things, it seems plausible you should cooperate? I don’t claim the effect is strong enough to operate in the realm of voting most of the time, but theoretically timeless considerations can matter for less-than-perfect copies of yourself.
Even among humans, there’s something to timeless considerations, right? If you were in a real prisoner’s dilemma with someone you didn’t know but who was very similar to you and had read a lot of the same things, it seems plausible you should cooperate?
Yes, it applies among (some of) that class of humans.
I don’t claim the effect is strong enough to operate in the realm of voting most of the time, but theoretically timeless considerations can matter for less-than-perfect copies of yourself.
Yes, specifically similar with respect to decision theory implementation.
He seems to be talking about humans as they exist. If (or when) he generalises to all agents he starts being wrong.
Even among humans, there’s something to timeless considerations, right? If you were in a real prisoner’s dilemma with someone you didn’t know but who was very similar to you and had read a lot of the same things, it seems plausible you should cooperate? I don’t claim the effect is strong enough to operate in the realm of voting most of the time, but theoretically timeless considerations can matter for less-than-perfect copies of yourself.
Yes, it applies among (some of) that class of humans.
Yes.