Well, there is a system
like that which Omega could be working by, which is a bit too large to rightly be called "fudging". He could be using quantum suicide, as I mentioned earlier. For those unfamiliar with this, it works sort of like this:
1) Flip quantum coin to determine whether to predict that person will pick box B or not
2) Use many-worlds interpretation to create one world with and one world without money in box B
3) Present boxes and game to person
4) If person picks wrongly, destroy that universe, leaving behind only the universe in which the person picked according to the prediction.
Hence, the fact that our universe exists, by a variant of the anthropic principle, shows that it's the one in which everyone picked the box that Omega "predicted".
I've read about quantum suicide before while article hopping on Wikipedia, it's kinda a fun idea in a completely counter-intuitive sort of way.
So, if Omega is using quantum suicide, the possibilities run like so:
Pick both:
Result 1: $1,000
Result 2: Wiped from existence
Pick B:
Result 1: $1,000,000
Result 2: Wiped from existence
I have a 50% chance of being wiped from existence, no matter what I pick. Ouch. Of the two results where I survive, box B gets me more money. I have no idea which is more likely. So I pick B, cross my fingers, and hope that the universe does not fall apart around me!
Not really. You only get $1,000,000 if Omega puts money in box B. Your choice has no relevance to what is actually in box B. If I choose box A and only get 1,000 dollars, then congrats to Omega for correctly predicting; but in my situation there was only $1,000 available, meaning I would have gotten $0 if I choose box B.
Again, it is not disputed that the contents of the boxes remain constant from the moment they are created. Here's the rub: what if Omega knows which option you will take,
when he creates the boxes! Say he's a time traveller. Say he's a mind reader. Whatever, it doesn't matter. The upshot is that if you pick both, then box B will
always have had nothing in it, and if you pick B, then box B will
always have had $1,000,000 in it! Becuase Omega will have predicted your choice like he was 'predicting' the colour of the sky!
SpockFederation said:
On another note about statistics of this situation: There isn't any "likelihood" that box B has a million dollars or not, and none of this "If Omega is able to predict 50.05% it is better to take box B". When you are presented with the choice of either both boxes or one box, the money is already there and will not change (as described in the OP). If you for some reason calculate that there is a 65.42345% chance that box B has a million dollars, it doesn't make a difference what you choose.
Imagine that you, for whatever reason, have to bet money on a football game. You look up some pundits and their opinions on the game:
Pundit 1 has predicted 20/100 games correctly, and thinks that team A will win.
Pundit 2 has predicted 80/100 games correctly, and thinks that team B will win
Would you bet on team A or team B? Whichever team you bet on, you will not influence the outcome of the game, and neither will the pundits. All any of you are doing is predicting! But you can endeavor to match your predictions as closely as possible to observed patterns.
SpockFederation said:
Also, about relying on past trends, you can think back again to coin flips. If I flipped a coin 100 times, and got 60 heads and 40 tails, does that make the chance of my next flip be 60% for heads and 40% for tails? No. The past flips have no relevance to the current flip.
Okay, so Omega has gotten 100/100 predictions correct. We do not know what the 'real' chance he will be correct is. Given this, is it wiser to infer:
A- He has no powers of prediction and has thus far been lucky.
B- He has very good powers of prediction.
The one-boxer says that it is wiser to infer B, however the two-boxer goes against the observed evidence and says that it is wiser to infer A.
