Aydin Mohseni is a scientific philosopher and Bayesian epistemologist specializing in evolutionary game theory and complexity theory. His research focuses on questions in metascience and AI safety.
Currently, he is an assistant professor in the Department of Philosophy and a core member of the Institute for Complex Social Dynamics at Carnegie Mellon University.
Some years ago, he was a Peace Corps volunteer in Morocco, stationed near أزرو.
His Erdős number is 3 along the path: Brian Skyrms → Persi Diaconis → Paul Erdős.
Fantastic post! I appreciate your direction of thought.
Your take on updatelessness—as an adaptive self-modification to handle anticipated experiences or strategic interactions (e.g., generalizations of the prisoner’s dilemma with a twin, or transparent Newcomb problems)—is the most sensible I’ve yet encountered. (I’ve also appreciated Martin Soto’s efforts to get clear on this topic.) As you say, there are many takes; you helped me see a coherent motivation behind one clearly.
And your picture of EDT evolving into “son of EDT” certainly seems plausible. As you say, perhaps that’s the best we can do—and to go further, we just have to do the hard work of analyzing particular, important problems.
One deeply insightful but lesser known analysis of logical uncertainty within a Bayesian framework is by Seidenfeld, Schervish, and Kadane (2012): “What Kind of Uncertainty Is That? Using Personal Probability for Expressing One’s Thinking About Logical and Mathematical Propositions.” I’d love to hear your thoughts on it sometime.