@Vsauce2
  @Vsauce2
Vsauce2 | The Stolen Money Game (Pascal's Mugging) @Vsauce2 | Uploaded 3 years ago | Updated 1 hour ago
A money game exists in which the potential payoff from being robbed makes perfect mathematical sense… but I won’t play it. Will you?

“Pascal’s Mugging” is derived from the classic philosophical scenario of Pascal’s Wager, which posits that it’s rational for humans to behave as though God exists. If they’re wrong, they don’t lose much; if they’re right, they have an infinite payoff in the afterlife.

The scenario of Pascal’s Mugging stems from Eliezer Yudkowsky’s unique twist on the original wager: what if a thief promised you a tremendous payoff tomorrow for stealing your wallet today? At what point would the near-infinitesimal odds of a criminal rewarding you tomorrow actually warrant you giving them a small amount of money right now?

If we process the situation by using expected value, we could very well be giving up our wallets to criminals who we know without a doubt will disappear forever, and the math would reinforce our decision. The consequences of that mathematical rationalism extend not only into everyday behavior, but also into areas like artificial intelligence. If math can lead us into bad decisions, how can we possibly program AI to act in our best interest?

The next time a creepy baby threatens to steal your wallet, consider the nuanced ramifications in decision theory, probability theory, and utilitarianism -- and to what degree we’ve made progress on the problem over the last 400 years.

*** SOURCES ***

“Pascal’s Mugging,” Nick Bostrom: nickbostrom.com/papers/pascal.pdf

“Pascal’s Mugging: Tiny Probabilities of Vast Utilities,” by Eliezer Yudkowsky: lesswrong.com/posts/a5JAiTdytou3Jg749/pascal-s-mugging-tiny-probabilities-of-vast-utilities

“Pascal’s Muggle: Infinitesimal Priors and Strong Evidence,” by Eliezer Yudkowsky: lesswrong.com/posts/Ap4KfkHyxjYPDiqh2/pascal-s-muggle-infinitesimal-priors-and-strong-evidence

“Pascal’s Wager,” Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/pascal-wager/

Benn, Alfred W. “Pascal's Wager.” International Journal of Ethics, vol. 15, no. 3, 1905, pp. 305–323. JSTOR, jstor.org/stable/2376414

*** LINKS ***

Vsauce2:
TikTok: tiktok.com/@vsaucetwo
Twitter: twitter.com/VsauceTwo
Facebook: facebook.com/VsauceTwo
Talk Vsauce2 in The Create Unknown Discord: discord.gg/tyh7AVm

Hosted and Produced by Kevin Lieber
Instagram: instagram.com/kevlieber
Twitter: twitter.com/kevinlieber
Podcast: youtube.com/thecreateunknown

Research and Writing by Matthew Tabor
twitter.com/TaborTCU

Editing by John Swan
youtube.com/channel/UCJuSltoYKrAUKnbYO5EMZ2A

Huge Thanks To Paula Lieber
etsy.com/shop/Craftality

Music by Basswaite: https://linktr.ee/Basswaite

Select Music By Jake Chudnow: youtube.com/user/JakeChudnow

Get Vsauce's favorite science and math toys delivered to your door!
curiositybox.com

Get Vsauce2’s Woven Math t-shirts/hoodies: represent.com/store/vsauce2

#education #vsauce #maths
The Stolen Money Game (Pascals Mugging)This Is NOT 50/50MOST AMAZING ROBOT HAND   Mind Blow #102How Many Sides Does A Circle Have?The FBI Framed Him With ScienceThe Man Who Wants Us DeadThe Game That LearnsWhy Bugs Are Attracted To Light SOLVED - Mind BlowThe Missing Dollar RiddleEat Brains. Explain Zombies.What Foods Can Your Body Cook?LEVITATION HAND   Mind Blow #106

The Stolen Money Game (Pascal's Mugging) @Vsauce2

SHARE TO X SHARE TO REDDIT SHARE TO FACEBOOK WALLPAPER