The dominance conditional 'If I drink the contents of cup A, I will drink more than if drink the contents of cup B' is true if we know that the first cup contains more than the second. In the first part of the paper, I show that only one kind of theory of indicative conditionals can explain this fact — a Stalnaker-type semantics. In the second part of the paper, I show that dominance conditionals can help explain a long-standing mystery: the question of how one-boxers and two-boxers are guided by conditionals to their respective answers to the Newcomb problem. I will suggest that both implicitly appeal to a decision theoretic principle I will call the Dominance Norm (DN), a principle that connects indicative dominance conditionals with rati...
We offer a novel argument for one-boxing in Newcomb's Problem. The intentional states of a rational ...
I present a game-theoretic way to understand the situation describing Newcomb’s Problem (NP) which h...
This paper discusses and relates two puzzles for indicative conditionals: a puzzle about indetermina...
The Newcomb problem is analysed here as a type of common cause problem. In relation to such problems...
141 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1980.Newcomb's Problem is a hypoth...
This paper aims to make three contributions to decision theory. First there is the hope that it will...
The relationship betueen Newcomb’s problem, which involves an apparent paradox of prediction. and Pr...
I consider a familiar argument for two-boxing in Newcomb's Problem and find it defective because it ...
Abstract: On the unbounded knapsack problem, dominance relations play a crucial role to reduce items...
Newcomb's Problem supposes that there are two boxes, an opaque and a transparent box. The transparen...
We offer a novel argument for one-boxing in Newcomb’s Problem. The intentional states of a rational...
Like Skyrms (1990), who transfers the equilibrium concept from game theory to rational decision theo...
The mathematical concept of stochastic dominance was introduced to describe preference of one random...
In Nozick’s rendition of the decision situation given in Newcomb’s Paradox dominance and the princip...
A standard requirement of rationality is that preferences obey stochastic dominance. In this paper, ...
We offer a novel argument for one-boxing in Newcomb's Problem. The intentional states of a rational ...
I present a game-theoretic way to understand the situation describing Newcomb’s Problem (NP) which h...
This paper discusses and relates two puzzles for indicative conditionals: a puzzle about indetermina...
The Newcomb problem is analysed here as a type of common cause problem. In relation to such problems...
141 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1980.Newcomb's Problem is a hypoth...
This paper aims to make three contributions to decision theory. First there is the hope that it will...
The relationship betueen Newcomb’s problem, which involves an apparent paradox of prediction. and Pr...
I consider a familiar argument for two-boxing in Newcomb's Problem and find it defective because it ...
Abstract: On the unbounded knapsack problem, dominance relations play a crucial role to reduce items...
Newcomb's Problem supposes that there are two boxes, an opaque and a transparent box. The transparen...
We offer a novel argument for one-boxing in Newcomb’s Problem. The intentional states of a rational...
Like Skyrms (1990), who transfers the equilibrium concept from game theory to rational decision theo...
The mathematical concept of stochastic dominance was introduced to describe preference of one random...
In Nozick’s rendition of the decision situation given in Newcomb’s Paradox dominance and the princip...
A standard requirement of rationality is that preferences obey stochastic dominance. In this paper, ...
We offer a novel argument for one-boxing in Newcomb's Problem. The intentional states of a rational ...
I present a game-theoretic way to understand the situation describing Newcomb’s Problem (NP) which h...
This paper discusses and relates two puzzles for indicative conditionals: a puzzle about indetermina...