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by roenxi
2410 days ago
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Agreed that most people could reject the mugging on those grounds but I think that is more than is needed. Even if someone being mugged had an unbounded utility function the finite resources argument forces them to rationally reject the deal. We've reintroduced infinities; so now our rationalist must accept that there are infinitely many situations with the same properties as the Mugging (positive expected value, Almost Sure to lose the stake). Their strategy would have to be to reject deals like the Mugging and seek out deals that have positive expected return and probably keep the stake/have a tiny stake compared to their reserves. I'm basically saying a rationalist with finite wealth is probably using the Kelly criterion [0] and would reject the Mugging on that basis. [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kelly_criterion |
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Yes, in the presence of infinities the decision function is inconsistent.
>Their strategy would have to be to reject deals like the Mugging and seek out deals that have positive expected return and probably keep the stake/have a tiny stake compared to their reserves.
Try formalizing that.
Kelly criterion doesn't work. Your link says it maximizes log wealth. If potential wealth is unbounded, you will still take bets that are positive E(log utility).