Superrationality

Applied to Infra-Bayesian haggling by hannagabor ago

Eliezer Yudkowsky shared the same core intuition with Douglas Hofstadter, but took the path of trying to reclaim the word rational for what he meant.meant, in Functional Decision Theory.  As a result, LessWrong does not consistently use superrational/superrationality.

Eliezer YudkowskiYudkowsky shared the same core intuition with Douglas Hofstadter, but took the path of trying to reclaim the word rational for what he meant. As a result, LessWrong does not consistently use superrational/superrationality.

Douglas Hofstadter did not publish a full theory of superrationality, instead focusing on the prisoner's dilemma.dilemma and other specific examples to communicate his intuition. However, some principles can be clearly inferred from his writing, such as reasoning as if you have control over the other player's policy (in symmetric games).

Superrationality is a concept invented by Douglas Hofstadter. He thought that agents should cooperate in Prisoner's Dilemma, but the primary notion of "rationality" which had been deeply developed by economists, decision-theorists, and game-theorists disagreed. Rather than fighting over the definition of rational, Douglas Hofstadter coined the term superrational for the kind of rationality he was interested in.

Douglas Hofstadter did not publish a full theory of superrationality, instead focusing on the prisoner's dilemma. However, some principles can be clearly inferred from his writing, such as reasoning as if you have control over the other player's policy (in symmetric games).

Eliezer Yudkowski shared the same core intuition with Douglas Hofstadter, but took the path of trying to reclaim the word rational for what he meant. As a result, LessWrong does not consistently use superrational/superrationality.

Created by Abram Demski at