1 / 13

The Logic of Decision

The Logic of Decision. Symposium in honor of Richard Jeffrey Philosophy of Science Association October 24, 1998 Ethan Bolker Department of Mathematics and Computer Science UMass-Boston. Themes. Glimpses of history Revisiting the existence theorem two philosophical challenges:

dpatten
Download Presentation

The Logic of Decision

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Logic of Decision Symposium in honor of Richard Jeffrey Philosophy of Science Association October 24, 1998 Ethan Bolker Department of Mathematics and Computer Science UMass-Boston

  2. Themes • Glimpses of history • Revisiting the existence theorem • two philosophical challenges: • noncommutative logic • doing without impartiality • Everyday probability is hard • Decision theory with a human face

  3. Revisiting the existence theorem • Find all binary relations pref that average: • A, B incompatible, • A pref B •  • A pref (AB) pref B • Canonical example: the ordering on sets determined by computing the expected value of a function with respect to a probability measure.

  4. The domain of pref • In quantum mechanics, lattice of subspaces of Hilbert space replaces set of subsets of phase space - the expected value of an observable still averages. • 196x goal: prove theorems in this noncommutative logic. • 1998 challenge: is there a noncommutative logic of decision?

  5. The Existence Question • Canonical example revisited • value(A) = integral f(s) dprob(s) • des(A) = value(A)/prob(A) • des induces pref • value(A) = des(A) prob(A) • (value is discounted desirability) • When does pref come from value and prob?

  6. The jeffrey function • For each x in (0,1) (the range of des) let jeffrey(x,A) = xprob(A) - value(A) • jeffrey(x,A) <= 0 just when x <= des(A) • jeffrey is a (signed) measure: when A and B are incompatible, jeffrey (x,AB) = jeffrey (x,A) + jeffrey (x,B) • jeffrey(x,A) is an increasing function of x • Challenge: What does jeffrey (x,A) mean? • (when we know we may rename it)

  7. The Existence Theorem • Given a jeffrey such that • jeffrey(x, · ) is a signed measure • jeffrey( ·, A) is an increasing function • define des by • des(A) = the unique x such that jeffrey(x,A) = 0. • Then des averages, and every averaging des is of this form.

  8. The role of impartiality • Impartiality is equivalent to the existence of value and prob such that jeffrey(x,A) = xprob(A) - value(A) • That’s all it does • like the parallel postulate • thin disguise for fair coins and arbitrary gambles • how much (what kind of) decision theory can you do with weaker (other) assumptions about jeffrey?

  9. Into the third dimension • M = vector space of all signed measures • M+ = cone of positive measures • V = span of jeffrey • V+ = M+  V • Impartiality  dim V = 2 dim V+ = 1  classic uniqueness dim V+ = 2  weird (J/B) uniqueness • What does dim V = 3 mean?

  10. Everyday probability is hard • What is probability? • An elusive question in philosophy and psychology (only easy in mathematics) • Dick says “The skill consists … in coming to have appropriate degrees of belief between 0 and 1 when conditions are less than ideal …” • A short experiment under ideal conditions

  11. Count runs of 4… HTHHHHTTTTTH … expect (# runs) * (2/16) = 61/8 = 7.6 0 7 1 8 2 9 3 10 4 11 5 12 6 13

  12. Observations • Human instinct’s weak on probability in general and Poisson processes in particular • Short memory approximates memoryless • You can win stone/paper/scissors … • You can cross a busy street • When will wide ties return? • We need the Logic of Decision

  13. Radical probabilism • “It is a frequent complaint against academic moral philosophers …” (Braithwaite) • Dick argues that probability - a.k.a. uncertainty - is all there is • Life is a high risk enterprise • “… whenever there is a real issue between two of us, or whenever one of us is of two minds, both sides are ruled reasonable ...

More Related