Evidential decision theory

Evidential decision theory is a school of thought within decision theory according to which the best action is the one which, conditional on one's having chosen it, gives one the best expectations for the outcome. It contrasts with causal decision theory, which requires a causal connection between one's actions and the desirable outcome.

Description

In a 1981 article, Allan Gibbard and William Harper characterized evidential decision theory as maximization of the expected utility of an action "calculated from conditional probabilities":[1]

where is the desirability of outcome and is the conditional probability of given .

Criticism

David Lewis has characterized evidential decision theory as promoting "an irrational policy of managing the news".[2] James M. Joyce asserted, "Rational agents choose acts on the basis of their causal efficacy, not their auspiciousness; they act to bring about good results even when doing so might betoken bad news."[3]

gollark: You have some sort of contact form?
gollark: Did you know? Orbital ethics lasers are operational.
gollark: ++tel init_webhook
gollark: ++tel link apionet `#m`
gollark: Oh, you used antimemetic mode.

See also

References

  • Ahmed, Arif (2014). Evidence, Decision and Causality. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781139107990.

Footnotes

  1. Gibbard, A.; Harper, W.L. (1981), "Counterfactuals and two kinds of expected utility", Ifs: Conditionals, Beliefs, Decision, Chance, and Time: 153–190
  2. Lewis, D. (1981), "Causal decision theory" (PDF), Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 59 (1): 5–30, doi:10.1080/00048408112340011, retrieved 2009-05-29
  3. Joyce, J.M. (1999), The foundations of causal decision theory, p. 146


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