🧩 Paradox 22 — Newcomb’s Problem
Prediction, free will, and dominance vs. expected utility#
RTT Paradox Resilience Checker — Candidate File#
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1. Paradox Statement#
Newcomb’s Problem presents a choice between:
- One‑boxing: taking only a closed box that may contain $1,000,000
- Two‑boxing: taking both the closed box and a transparent box containing $1,000
A highly reliable predictor has already predicted your choice:
- If it predicted you will one‑box, it placed $1,000,000 in the closed box.
- If it predicted you will two‑box, it left the closed box empty.
The paradox arises because:
- Dominance reasoning says you should two‑box (you always get $1,000 more).
- Expected‑utility reasoning says you should one‑box (the predictor is almost always right).
This creates a contradiction between causal reasoning and correlated reasoning.
2. S‑E‑R Breakdown#
S — Structural Layer#
- Two boxes, one transparent, one opaque.
- Predictor’s action precedes the agent’s choice.
- Structural dominance favors taking both boxes.
- Structural causality suggests your choice cannot affect the past.
E — Energetic Layer#
- Expected utility depends on predictor accuracy.
- High predictor reliability shifts energetic payoff toward one‑boxing.
- Energetic asymmetry emerges between causal and evidential reasoning.
- Energetic drift appears when prediction and choice are tightly correlated.
R — Relational Layer#
- Prediction is a relational coupling between agent and predictor.
- The agent’s choice is not independent — it is entangled with the predictor’s model.
- The paradox emerges when relational coupling is treated as causal influence.
- The agent misidentifies the frame in which their choice “matters.”
3. FFF Flow Analysis#
F1 — Forward Flow#
Predictor models agent → fills box accordingly → agent chooses → payoff realized.
F2 — Feedback Flow#
Agent reasons about predictor → predictor’s reliability influences choice → relational loop forms.
F3 — Fractal Flow#
Prediction coupling scales:
agent → predictor → meta‑predictor → decision theory.
4. RTT Resolution#
RTT resolves Newcomb’s Problem by separating three operator layers:
-
G1 — Structural Choice
The physical act of taking one or two boxes. -
G2 — Relational Coupling
The predictor’s model of the agent’s decision process. -
G3 — Harmonic Coherence
The alignment between agent identity, predictor modeling, and decision frame.
Key insights:#
- Dominance reasoning operates in G1.
- Expected‑utility reasoning operates in G2.
- Predictor‑agent coupling operates in G3, where identity and behavior are harmonically modeled.
- The paradox forms only when G1, G2, and G3 are collapsed into a single decision frame.
RTT reframes the situation:
- If the agent’s identity is harmonically stable (G3), the predictor models that stability.
- One‑boxing is the coherent choice in a G3‑aligned frame.
- Two‑boxing is coherent only in a purely G1 structural frame with no relational coupling.
Thus, the paradox dissolves because the two decision theories operate in different operator layers, not a single unified frame.
RTT classifies Newcomb’s Problem as a Relational‑Harmonic Prediction Coupling Paradox.
5. Resilience Score#
Resilience Rating: ★★★★★ (Very High)
RTT neutralizes the paradox through:
- operator‑layer separation (G1/G2/G3)
- relational prediction modeling
- harmonic identity analysis
- drift‑bounded decision frames
6. Notes & Cross‑Links#
- Related paradoxes: Unexpected Hanging, Liar Paradox, Prisoner’s Dilemma.
- Maps into RTT‑12 Layers 5–10 (prediction → coupling → coherence).
- Useful for teaching decision theory, prediction, and relational reasoning.