REMINDER: Cambridge / MIT workshop on Decision Theory, etc.

23 May 2012 FROM 12PM

Lucia Windsor Room, Newnham College, Cambridge

Nozick's 1970 statement of Newcomb's problem inaugurated a dispute in the
foundations of decision theory that at present shows no sign of resolution.
The basic question is over the role of causal information in
decision-making. Perhaps agents *must* possess such information in
practical settings, in which case only a *Causal* Decision Theory can
appropriately formalize practical reasoning. Or perhaps they need only
possess whatever statistical and other non-causal information guides the
predictions and retrodictions of disinterested spectators--in which case an
*Evidential* theory is sufficient. Or perhaps the conflict is itself
illusory: maybe causation itself is a form of evidential connection that is
only visible from the agential perspective. This workshop presents recent
and in-progress work on these issues.


Program

12pm-110pm: Caspar Hare / Brian Hedden (MIT): Self-Reinforcing and
Self-Undermining Decisions

110-2 Lunch: (own arrangements)

2-310: Arif Ahmed (Cambridge): Deliberation and myopia

315-425: Richard Holton / Caspar Hare (MIT): Determinism, Sloth and the 
Opacity of the Future

425-450: Tea

450-6pm: Huw Price (Cambridge / Sydney): Retrocausality -- What would it
take?


All welcome. Registration is free but if you are interested please email
Arif Ahmed at [email protected] to give us an idea of numbers.


Arif Ahmed


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