The main question that remains for me (only paranthetically alluded to in my above comment) is:
Do we get something that deserves to be called an “anthropic shadow” for any particular, more narrow choice of “reference class”, and...
can the original proposes of an “anthropic shadow” be read as proposing that we should work with such reference classes?
I think the answer to the first question is probably “yes” if we look at a reference class that changes over time, something like R_t = “people alive at period t of development in young civilizations’ history”.
I don’t know about the answer to the second question. I think R_t seems like kind of a wild reference class to work with, but I never really understood how reference classes were supposed to be chosen for SSA, so idk what SSA’s proponents thinks is reasonable vs. not.
With some brief searches/skim in the anthropic shadow paper… I don’t think they discuss the topic in enough depth that they can be said to have argued for such a reference class, and it seems like a pretty wild reference class to just assume. (They never mention either the term “reference class” or even any anthropic principles like SSA.)
And ok, I agree that the answer to the first question is probably “yes”, so maybe what I was calling an alternative anthropic principle in my original comment could be framed as SSA with this directly time-centric reference class. If so, instead of saying “that’s not SSA”, I should have said “that’s not SSA with a standard reference class (or a reference class anyone seems to have argued for)”. I agree that Bostrom et al. (2010) don’t seem to argue for such a reference class.
On my reading (and Teru’s, not coincidentally), the core insight Bostrom et al. have (and iterate on) is equivalent to the insight that if you haven’t observed something before, and you assign it a probability per unit of time equal to its past frequency, then you must be underestimating its probability per unit of time. The response isn’t that this is predicated on, or arguing for, any weird view on anthropics, but just that it has nothing to do with anthropics: it’s true, but for the same reason that you’ll underestimate the probability of rain per unit time based on past frequency if it’s never rained (though in the prose they convey their impression that the fact that you wouldn’t exist in the event of a catastrophe is what’s driving the insight). The right thing to do in both cases is to have a prior and update the probability downward as the dry spell lengthens. A nonstandard anthropic principle (or reference class) is just what would be necessary to motivate a fundamental difference from “no rain”.
Nice, I feel compelled by this.
The main question that remains for me (only paranthetically alluded to in my above comment) is:
Do we get something that deserves to be called an “anthropic shadow” for any particular, more narrow choice of “reference class”, and...
can the original proposes of an “anthropic shadow” be read as proposing that we should work with such reference classes?
I think the answer to the first question is probably “yes” if we look at a reference class that changes over time, something like R_t = “people alive at period t of development in young civilizations’ history”.
I don’t know about the answer to the second question. I think R_t seems like kind of a wild reference class to work with, but I never really understood how reference classes were supposed to be chosen for SSA, so idk what SSA’s proponents thinks is reasonable vs. not.
With some brief searches/skim in the anthropic shadow paper… I don’t think they discuss the topic in enough depth that they can be said to have argued for such a reference class, and it seems like a pretty wild reference class to just assume. (They never mention either the term “reference class” or even any anthropic principles like SSA.)
Ok great!
And ok, I agree that the answer to the first question is probably “yes”, so maybe what I was calling an alternative anthropic principle in my original comment could be framed as SSA with this directly time-centric reference class. If so, instead of saying “that’s not SSA”, I should have said “that’s not SSA with a standard reference class (or a reference class anyone seems to have argued for)”. I agree that Bostrom et al. (2010) don’t seem to argue for such a reference class.
On my reading (and Teru’s, not coincidentally), the core insight Bostrom et al. have (and iterate on) is equivalent to the insight that if you haven’t observed something before, and you assign it a probability per unit of time equal to its past frequency, then you must be underestimating its probability per unit of time. The response isn’t that this is predicated on, or arguing for, any weird view on anthropics, but just that it has nothing to do with anthropics: it’s true, but for the same reason that you’ll underestimate the probability of rain per unit time based on past frequency if it’s never rained (though in the prose they convey their impression that the fact that you wouldn’t exist in the event of a catastrophe is what’s driving the insight). The right thing to do in both cases is to have a prior and update the probability downward as the dry spell lengthens. A nonstandard anthropic principle (or reference class) is just what would be necessary to motivate a fundamental difference from “no rain”.