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by JoshCole
1481 days ago
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I think this, because I disagree with most people here about what the actual paradox is. I think the paradox is that the algorithm equates the expected value of the contents of an envelope with the expected value of a policy choice for a player. When I correct what I feel is the root of the paradox, my solution drastically differs in fundamental ways such that the way the problem restricts to pointing out the wrong step feels disingenuous. The entire structure is wrong, because even if you do correct the error that leads to the wrong EV for the envelope, you still haven't resolved the paradox. The right probabilities don't resolve the paradox, because they still imply that always switching has the same EV as not switching. If they were really equal, I could always choose switch, but I can't - so the paradox is still there. My resolution ends up being so critical of their argument that the entire way they go about solving gets thrown out. I end up seeing, not just a specific wrong EV calculation, but a decision problem that is just fundamentally using an inappropriate algorithm to determine the policy function. |
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We can agree that "the entire structure is wrong" because the "entire structure" is giving a wrong formula for the EV and saying "this is the formula for the EV."
Yes, switching and not switching have the same EV and you can always switch.