In ‘Normative Uncertainty as a Voting Problem’, William MacAskill argues that positive credence in ordinal-structured or intertheoretically incomparable normative theories does not prevent an agent from rationally accounting for her normative uncertainties in practical deliberation. Rather, such an agent can aggregate the theories in which she has positive credence by methods borrowed from voting theory—specifically, MacAskill suggests, by a kind of weighted Borda count. The appeal to voting methods opens up a promising new avenue for theories of rational choice under normative uncertainty. The Borda rule, however, is open to at least two serious objections. First, it seems implicitly to ‘cardinalize’ ordinal theories, and so does not fully...
ABSTRACT—For centuries, the mathematical aggregation of preferences by groups, organizations, or soc...
We develop joint foundations for the fields of social choice and opinion pooling using coherent sets...
Social choice studies the differing implications of the concept of rationality (or transitivity) for...
In ‘Normative Uncertainty as a Voting Problem’, William MacAskill argues that positive credence in o...
Some philosophers have recently argued that decision-makers ought to take normative uncertainty into...
International audienceThis paper investigates to what extent a purely symbolic approach to decision ...
Condcrcet ' s criterion states that an alternative that defeats every other by a simple majorit...
The paper challenges the 'orthodox doctrine' of collective choice theory according to which Arrow’s ...
This paper argues in favor of a particular account of decision‐making under normative uncertainty: t...
This paper proposes normative consequentialist criteria for voting rules under Knightian uncertainty...
Voting theory is a branch of social choice theory, which studies the process and pro- cedures of the...
This paper investigates the problem of finding a preference relation on a set of acts from the knowl...
Rational choice theory may seem like a separate theoretical approach with its own forbidding mathema...
Modern social choice theory, following Kenneth Arrow, treats voting as a method for aggregating dive...
In his seminal Social Choice and Individual Values, Kenneth Arrow stated that his theory applies to ...
ABSTRACT—For centuries, the mathematical aggregation of preferences by groups, organizations, or soc...
We develop joint foundations for the fields of social choice and opinion pooling using coherent sets...
Social choice studies the differing implications of the concept of rationality (or transitivity) for...
In ‘Normative Uncertainty as a Voting Problem’, William MacAskill argues that positive credence in o...
Some philosophers have recently argued that decision-makers ought to take normative uncertainty into...
International audienceThis paper investigates to what extent a purely symbolic approach to decision ...
Condcrcet ' s criterion states that an alternative that defeats every other by a simple majorit...
The paper challenges the 'orthodox doctrine' of collective choice theory according to which Arrow’s ...
This paper argues in favor of a particular account of decision‐making under normative uncertainty: t...
This paper proposes normative consequentialist criteria for voting rules under Knightian uncertainty...
Voting theory is a branch of social choice theory, which studies the process and pro- cedures of the...
This paper investigates the problem of finding a preference relation on a set of acts from the knowl...
Rational choice theory may seem like a separate theoretical approach with its own forbidding mathema...
Modern social choice theory, following Kenneth Arrow, treats voting as a method for aggregating dive...
In his seminal Social Choice and Individual Values, Kenneth Arrow stated that his theory applies to ...
ABSTRACT—For centuries, the mathematical aggregation of preferences by groups, organizations, or soc...
We develop joint foundations for the fields of social choice and opinion pooling using coherent sets...
Social choice studies the differing implications of the concept of rationality (or transitivity) for...