By “physics-based” I’m lumping together physics and history a bit, but it’s hard to disentangle them especially when people start talking about multiverses. I generally mean “the combined information of the laws of physics and our knowledge of the past”. The reason I do want to cite physics too, even for the past case of (1), is that if you somehow disagreed about decision theorists in WW1 I’d go to the next part of the argument, which is that under the technology of WW1 we can’t do the necessary predictive control (they couldn’t build deterministic twins back then).
However, it seems like we’re mostly in agreement, and you could consider editing the post to make that more clear. The opening line of your post is “I think that you can “control” events you have no causal interaction with, including events in the past.” Now the claim is “everyone agrees about the relevant physics — and in particular, that you can’t causally influence the past”. These two sentences seem inconsistent, and especially since your piece is long and quite technical opening with a wrong summary may confuse people.
I realize you can get out of the inconsistency by leaning on the quotes, but it still seems misleading.
Ah, I see: you’re going to lean on the difference between “cause” and “control”. So to be clear: I am claiming that, as an empirical matter, we also can’t control the past, or even “control” the past.
To expand, I’m not using physics priors to argue that physics is causal, so we can’t control the past. I’m using physics and history priors to argue that we exist in the non-prediction case relative to the past, so CDT applies.
Cool, this gives me a clearer picture of where you’re coming from. I had meant the central question of the post to be whether it ever makes sense to do the EDT-ish try-to-control-the-past thing, even in pretty unrealistic cases—partly because I think answering “yes” to this is weird and disorienting in itself, even if it doesn’t end up making much of a practical difference day-to-day; and partly because a central objection to EDT is that the past, being already fixed, is never controllable in any practically-relevant sense, even in e.g. Newcomb’s cases. It sounds like your main claim is that in our actual everyday circumstances, with respect to things like the WWI case, EDTish and CDT recommendations don’t come apart—a topic I don’t spend much time on or have especially strong views about.
“you’re going to lean on the difference between ‘cause’ and ‘control’”—indeed, and I had meant the “no causal interaction with” part of opening sentence to indicate this. It does seem like various readers object to/were confused by the use of the term “control” here, and I think there’s room for more emphasis early on as to what specifically I have in mind; but at a high-level, I’m inclined to keep the term “control,” rather than trying to rephrase things solely in terms of e.g. correlations, because I think it makes sense to think of yourself as, for practical purposes, “controlling” what your copy writes on his whiteboard, what Omega puts in the boxes, etc; that more broadly, EDT-ish decision-making is in fact weird in the way that trying to control the past is weird, and that this makes it all the more striking and worth highlighting that EDT-ish decision-making seems, sometimes, like the right way to go.
By “physics-based” I’m lumping together physics and history a bit, but it’s hard to disentangle them especially when people start talking about multiverses. I generally mean “the combined information of the laws of physics and our knowledge of the past”. The reason I do want to cite physics too, even for the past case of (1), is that if you somehow disagreed about decision theorists in WW1 I’d go to the next part of the argument, which is that under the technology of WW1 we can’t do the necessary predictive control (they couldn’t build deterministic twins back then).
However, it seems like we’re mostly in agreement, and you could consider editing the post to make that more clear. The opening line of your post is “I think that you can “control” events you have no causal interaction with, including events in the past.” Now the claim is “everyone agrees about the relevant physics — and in particular, that you can’t causally influence the past”. These two sentences seem inconsistent, and especially since your piece is long and quite technical opening with a wrong summary may confuse people.
I realize you can get out of the inconsistency by leaning on the quotes, but it still seems misleading.
Ah, I see: you’re going to lean on the difference between “cause” and “control”. So to be clear: I am claiming that, as an empirical matter, we also can’t control the past, or even “control” the past.
To expand, I’m not using physics priors to argue that physics is causal, so we can’t control the past. I’m using physics and history priors to argue that we exist in the non-prediction case relative to the past, so CDT applies.
Cool, this gives me a clearer picture of where you’re coming from. I had meant the central question of the post to be whether it ever makes sense to do the EDT-ish try-to-control-the-past thing, even in pretty unrealistic cases—partly because I think answering “yes” to this is weird and disorienting in itself, even if it doesn’t end up making much of a practical difference day-to-day; and partly because a central objection to EDT is that the past, being already fixed, is never controllable in any practically-relevant sense, even in e.g. Newcomb’s cases. It sounds like your main claim is that in our actual everyday circumstances, with respect to things like the WWI case, EDTish and CDT recommendations don’t come apart—a topic I don’t spend much time on or have especially strong views about.
“you’re going to lean on the difference between ‘cause’ and ‘control’”—indeed, and I had meant the “no causal interaction with” part of opening sentence to indicate this. It does seem like various readers object to/were confused by the use of the term “control” here, and I think there’s room for more emphasis early on as to what specifically I have in mind; but at a high-level, I’m inclined to keep the term “control,” rather than trying to rephrase things solely in terms of e.g. correlations, because I think it makes sense to think of yourself as, for practical purposes, “controlling” what your copy writes on his whiteboard, what Omega puts in the boxes, etc; that more broadly, EDT-ish decision-making is in fact weird in the way that trying to control the past is weird, and that this makes it all the more striking and worth highlighting that EDT-ish decision-making seems, sometimes, like the right way to go.