This paper formalizes de finetti’s book-making principle as a static individual preference condition. It thus avoids the confounding strategic and dynamic effects of modern formulations that consider games with sequential moves between a bookmaker and a bettor. This paper next shows that the book-making principle, commonly used to justify additive subjective probabilities, can be modified to agree with nonadditive probabilities. The principle is simply restricted to comonotonic subsets which, as usual, leads to an axiomatization of rank-dependent utility theory. Typical features of rank-dependence such as hedging, ambiguity aversion, and pessimism and optimism can be accommodated. The model leads to suggestions for a simplified empirical me...
We show that the well known equivalence between the "fundamental theorem of asset pricing" and...
Several consistency notions for lower previsions (coherence, convexity, others) require that the sup...
It is a common view that the axioms of probability can be derived from the following assumptions: (a...
This paper formalizes de finetti’s book-making principle as a static individual preference condition...
This paper shows how de Finetti's book-making principle, commonly used to justify additive subjectiv...
Dutch book' and `strong inconsistency' are generally equivalent: there is a system of bets...
Distribute white and black hats in a dark room to a group of three rational players with each player...
Abstract Support theory postulates that an individual’s probability judgment for a particular event ...
We study preference relations on conditional gambles of a decision maker acting under ambiguity. Dut...
We point out a yet unnoticed flaw in Dutch Book arguments that relates to a link between degrees of ...
Abstract. Inspired by Todd Ebert’s problem of the hats, we construct a betting situation which seems...
The "Dutch Book" argument, tracing back to Rarnsey (1926) and deFinetti (1974), offers prudential gr...
In this paper I present a new way of understanding Dutch Book Arguments: the idea is that an agent i...
Abstract in UndeterminedThe aim was to use Todd Ebert's Hats puzzle to devise a Dutch Book showing t...
We show that competitive markets protect consumers from many forms of exploitation, even when consum...
We show that the well known equivalence between the "fundamental theorem of asset pricing" and...
Several consistency notions for lower previsions (coherence, convexity, others) require that the sup...
It is a common view that the axioms of probability can be derived from the following assumptions: (a...
This paper formalizes de finetti’s book-making principle as a static individual preference condition...
This paper shows how de Finetti's book-making principle, commonly used to justify additive subjectiv...
Dutch book' and `strong inconsistency' are generally equivalent: there is a system of bets...
Distribute white and black hats in a dark room to a group of three rational players with each player...
Abstract Support theory postulates that an individual’s probability judgment for a particular event ...
We study preference relations on conditional gambles of a decision maker acting under ambiguity. Dut...
We point out a yet unnoticed flaw in Dutch Book arguments that relates to a link between degrees of ...
Abstract. Inspired by Todd Ebert’s problem of the hats, we construct a betting situation which seems...
The "Dutch Book" argument, tracing back to Rarnsey (1926) and deFinetti (1974), offers prudential gr...
In this paper I present a new way of understanding Dutch Book Arguments: the idea is that an agent i...
Abstract in UndeterminedThe aim was to use Todd Ebert's Hats puzzle to devise a Dutch Book showing t...
We show that competitive markets protect consumers from many forms of exploitation, even when consum...
We show that the well known equivalence between the "fundamental theorem of asset pricing" and...
Several consistency notions for lower previsions (coherence, convexity, others) require that the sup...
It is a common view that the axioms of probability can be derived from the following assumptions: (a...