The Ubiquitous Converse Lawvere Problem
post by Scott Garrabrant · 2018-11-29T03:16:16.453Z · LW · GW · 0 commentsContents
Motivation: True FairBot None No comments
(This post was originally published on Oct 20th 2017, and is 1 of 4 posts brought forwarded today as part of the AI Alignment Forum launch sequence on fixed points.)
In this post, I give a stronger version of the open question presented here, and give a motivation for this stronger property. This came out of conversations with Marcello, Sam, and Tsvi.
Definition: A continuous function is called ubiquitous if for every continuous function , there exists a point such that .
Open Problem: Does there exist a topological space with a ubiquitous function ?
I will refer to the original problem as the Converse Lawvere Problem, and the new version as the the Ubiquitous Converse Lawvere Problem. I will refer to a space satisfying the conditions of (Ubiquitous) Converse Lawvere Problem, a (Ubiquitous) Converse Lawvere Space, abbreviated (U)CLS. Note that a UCLS is also a CLS, since a ubiquitous is always surjective, since can be any constant function.
Motivation: True FairBot
Let be a Converse Lawvere Space. Note that since such an might not exist, the following claims might be vacuous. Let be a continuous surjection.
We will view as a space of possible agents in an open source prisoner's dilemma game. Given two agents , we will interpret as the probability with which A cooperates when playing against . We will define , and interpret this as the utility of agent when playing in the prisoner's dilemma with .
Since is surjective, every continuous policy is implemented by some agent. In particular, this means gives:
Claim: For any agent , there exists another agent such that . i.e. responds to the way that responds to .
Proof: The function is a continuous function, since is continuous, and evaluation is continuous. Thus, there is a policy in . Since is surjective, this policy must be the image under of some agent , so .
Thus, for any fixed agent , we have some other agent that responds to any the way responds to . However, it would be nice if , to create a FairBot that responds to any opponent the way that that opponent responds to it. Unfortunately, to construct such a FairBot, we need the extra assumption that is ubiquitous.
Claim: If is ubiquitous, then exists a true fair bot in : an agent , such that for all agents .
Proof: Given an agent , there exists an policy such that for all , since is continuous. Further, the function is continuous, since the function and the definition of the exponential topology. Since is ubiquitous, there must be some such that . But then, for all , we have .
Note that we may not need the full power of ubiquitous here, but it is the simplest property I see that gets the result.
Note that this FairBot is fair in a stronger sense than the FairBot of modal combat, in that it always has the same output as its opponent. This may make you suspicious, since the you can also construct an UnfairBot, such that for all . This would have caused a problem in the modal combat framework, since you can put a FairBot and an UnfairBot together to form a paradox. However, we do not have this problem, since we deal with probabilities, and simply have . Note that the exact phenomenon that allows this to possibly work is the fixed point property of the interval which is the only reason that we cannot use diagonalization to show that no CLS exists.
Finally, note that we already have a combat framework that has a true FairBot: the reflective oracle framework. In fact, the reflective oracle framework may have all the benefits we would hope to get out of a UCLS. (other than the benefit of simplicity of not having to deal with computability and hemicontinuity).
This post was originally published on Oct 20th 2017, and has been brought forwarded as part of the AI Alignment Forum launch sequences.
Tomorrow's AIAF sequences post will be 'Iterated Amplification and Distillation' by Ajeya Cotra, in the sequence on iterated amplification.
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