Dear Cambridge Philosophers of Science,

Yang Liu's talk 'Towards a More Realistic Subjective Decision Theory' 
has this abstract:

'Abstract. In his seminal work “the Foundations of Statistics,” Savage 
put forward a theory of subjective probabilities. The theory is based on 
a well-developed axiomatic theory of rational decision making. In 
constructing his system, additional problematic assumptions are however 
required. First, there is a Boolean algebra of events on which 
subjective probabilities are defined. Savage's proof requires this 
algebra to be a σ-algebra. However, on Savage's view, one should not 
require the probability to be σ-additive. He, therefore, finds the 
insistence on a σ-algebra peculiar and unsatisfactory. But he sees no 
way of avoiding it. Second, the assignment of utilities requires the 
constant act assumption: for every given consequence there exists a 
constant act which has that consequence in every state. This assumption 
is known to be highly counterintuitive. The paper on which this talk is 
based includes two mathematical results. The first, and the more 
difficult one, shows that the σ-algebra assumption can be dropped. The 
second states that, as long as utilities are assigned to finite gambles 
only, the constant act assumption can be replaced by the plausible, much 
weaker assumption that there are at least two non-equivalent constant 
acts.

In this talk, I will first review Ramsey and Savage’s classical 
decision-theoretic models. I will then discuss the notion of “idealized 
agents” in standard normative decision theory. I will argue that our 
simplified system, which is adequate for all the actual purposes for 
which the system is designed, involves a more realistic notion of 
idealized agents. This will be followed by a brief outline of our new 
technique of tripartition trees which leads to the construction of 
quantitative probabilities in Savage-style systems without the σ-algebra 
assumption.'

Sincerely,
Brian Pitts

-- 
J. Brian Pitts
Senior Research Associate
Faculty of Philosophy
University of Cambridge
[email protected]

Ph.D., Philosophy/History & Philosophy of Science, University of Notre 
Dame
Ph.D., Physics, University of Texas at Austin


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