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Bayesian Decision Theory

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Title: Bayesian Decision Theory


1
Bayesian Decision Theory
  • Foundations for a unified theory

2
What is it?
  • Bayesian decision theories are formal models of
    rational agency, typically comprising a theory
    of
  • Consistency of belief, desire and preference
  • Optimal choice
  • Lots of common ground
  • Ontology Agents states of the world
    actions/options consequences
  • Form Two variable quantitative models
    centrality of representation theorem
  • Content The principle that rational action
    maximises expected benefit.

3
  • It seems natural therefore to speak of plain
    Decision Theory. But there are differences too
    ...
  • e.g. Savage versus Jeffrey.
  • Structure of the set of prospects
  • The representation of actions
  • SEU versus CEU.
  • Are they offering rival theories or different
    expressions of the same theory?
  • Thesis Ramsey, Savage, Jeffrey (and others) are
    all special cases of a single Bayesian Decision
    Theory (obtained by restriction of the domain of
    prospects).

4
Plan
  • Introductory remarks
  • Prospects
  • Basic Bayesian hypotheses
  • Representation theorems
  • A short history
  • Ramseys solution to the measurement problem
  • Ramsey versus Savage
  • Jeffrey
  • Conditionals
  • Lewis-Stalnaker semantics
  • The Ramsey-Adams Hypothesis
  • A common logic
  • Conditional algebras
  • A Unified Theory (2nd lecture)

5
Types of prospects
  • Usual factual possibilities e.g. it will rain
    tomorrow UK inflation is 3 etc.
  • Denoted by P, Q, etc.
  • Assumed to be closed under Boolean compounding
  • Conjunction PQ
  • Negation P
  • Disjunction P v Q
  • Logical truth/falsehood T, ?
  • Plus derived conditional possibilities e.g. If it
    rains tomorrow our trip will be cancelled if the
    war in Iraq continues, inflation will rise.
  • The prospect of X if P and Y if Q will be
    represented as (P?X)(Q?Y)

6
Main Claims
  • Probability Hypothesis Rational degrees of
    belief in factual possibilities are
    probabilities.
  • SEU Hypothesis The desirability of (P?X)(P?Y)
    is an average of the desirabilities of PX and
    PY, respectively weighted by the probability
    that P or that P.
  • CEU Hypothesis The desirability of the prospect
    of X is an average of the desirabilities of XY
    and XY, respectively weighted by the conditional
    probability, given X, of XY and of XY.
  • Adams Thesis The rational degree of belief to
    have in P?X is the conditional probability of X
    given that P.

7
Representation Theorems
  • Two problems one kind of solution!
  • Problem of measurement
  • Problem of justification
  • Scientific application Representation theorems
    shows that specific conditions on (revealed)
    preferences suffice to determine a measure of
    belief and desire.
  • Normative application Theorems show that
    commitment to conditions on (rational) preference
    imply commitment to properties of rational belief
    and desire.

8
Ramsey-Savage Framework
  • Worlds / consequences ?1, ?2, ?3,
  • Propositions / events P, Q, R,
  • Conditional Prospects / Actions (P??1)(Q??2),
  • Preferences are over worlds and conditional
    prospects.
  • If we had the power of the almighty we could
    by offering him options discover how he placed
    them in order of merit

9
Ramseys Solution to the Measurement Problem
  • Ethically neutral propositions
  • Problem of definition
  • Enp P has probability one-half iff for all ?1 and
    ?2
  • (P??1)(P??2) ? (P??1)(P??2)
  • Differences in value
  • Values are sets of equi-preferred prospects
  • ? - ß ? ? d iff (P??)(P?d) ? (P? ß )(P??)

10
  • Existence of utility
  • Axiomatic characterisation of a value difference
    structure implies that existence of a mapping
    from values to real numbers such that
  • - ß ? d iff U(?) U(ß) U(?) U(d)
  • Derivation of probability
  • Suppose d ? (? if P)(ß if P). Then

11
Evaluation
  • The Justification problem
  • Why should measurement axioms hold?
  • Sure-Thing Principle versus P4 and Impartiality
  • Jeffreys objection
  • Fanciful causal hypotheses and artifacts of
    attribution.
  • Behaviourism in decision theory
  • Ethical neutrality versus state dependence
  • Desirabilistic dependence
  • Constant acts

12
Utility Dependence
13
Probability Dependence
14
Jeffrey
  • Advantages
  • A simple ontology of propositions
  • State dependent utility
  • Partition independence (CEU)
  • Measurement
  • Under-determination of quantitative
    representations
  • The inseparability of belief and desire?
  • Solutions More axioms, more relations or more
    prospects?
  • The logical status of conditionals

15
Conditionals
  • Two types of conditional?
  • Counterfactual If Oswald hadnt killed Kennedy
    then someone else would have.
  • Indicative If Oswald didnt kill Kennedy then
    someone else did
  • Two types of supposition
  • Evidential If its true that
  • Interventional If I make it true that
  • Lewis, Joyce, Pearl versus Stalnaker, Adams,
    Edgington

16
Lewis-Stalnaker semantics
  • Intuitive idea A??B is true iff B is true in
    those worlds most like the actual one in which A
    is true.
  • Formally A??B is true at a world w iff for every
    AB-world there is a closer AB-world (relative to
    an ordering on worlds).
  • Limit assumption There is a closest world
  • Uniqueness Assumption There is at most one
    closest world.

17
The Ramsey-Adams Hypothesis
  • General Idea Rational belief in conditionals
    goes by conditional belief for their consequents
    on the assumption that their antecedent is true.
  • Adams Thesis The probability of an (indicative)
    conditional is the conditional probability of its
    consequent given its antecedent
  • (AT)
  • Logic from belief A sentence Y can be validly
    inferred from a set of premises iff the high
    probability of the premises guarantees the high
    probability of Y.

18
  • A Common Logic
  • AB ? A?B ? A?B
  • ??A ? A
  • A?A ? ?
  • A?A ? ?
  • A?B ? A?AB
  • (A?B)(A?C) ? A?BC
  • (A?B) v (A?C) ? A?(B v C)
  • (A?B) ? A?B

19
The Bombshell
  • Question What must the truth-conditions of A?B
    be, in order that Ramsey-Adams hypothesis be
    satisfied?
  • Answer The question cannot be answered.
  • Lewis, Edgington, Hajek, Gärdenfors, Döring,
    There is no non-trivial assignment of
    truth-conditions to the conditional consistent
    with the Ramsey-Adams hypothesis.
  • Conclusion
  • few philosophical theses that have been more
    decisively refuted Joyce (1999, p.191)
  • Ditch bivalence!

20
Boolean algebra
?
A?B
B?C
A?C
C
B
A
?
21
Conditional Algebras (1)
?
A?C?A?C
A?B
B?C
A?C
A?C?A
A?C?C
C
B
A
A?C?AC
(X?Y)(X?Z) ? X?YZ (X?Y) v (X?Z) ? X?(Y v Z)
?
22
Conditional algebras (2)
?
A?C?A?C
A?B
B?C
A?C
A?C?A
A?C?C
C
B
A
A?C?AC
XY ? X?Y
?
23
Conditional algebras (3)
?
A?C?A?C
A?B
B?C
A?C
A?C?A
A?C?C
C
B
A
A?C?AC
X?Y ? X?Y
?
24
Normally bounded algebras (1)
?
A?C?A?C
A?B
B?C
A?C
A?C?A
A?C?C
C
B
A
A?C?AC
X?X ? ? X?Y ? X?XY
?
25
Material Conditional
?
A?C?A?C
A?B
B?C
A?C
A?C?A
A?C?C
C
B
A
A?C?AC
X?? ? X
?
26
Normally bounded algebras (2)
?
A?C?A?C
A?B
B?C
A?C
A?C?A
A?C?C
C
B
A
A?C?AC
X?X ? ? (X?Y) ? X?Y
?
27
Conditional algebras (3)
?
A?B
B?C
A?C
A?C?A
A?C?C
C
B
A
?
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