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Olivier Roy

Universität Bayreuth
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  •  Publications
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 More details
  • Universität Bayreuth
    Department of Philosophy
    Professor
Areas of Interest
Philosophy of Action
Logic and Philosophy of Logic
  • All publications (35)
  • Quelques considérations sur la logique temporelle actualiste
    Revue Phares 4 (1). 2004.
  •  210
    A dynamic-epistemic hybrid logic for intentions and information changes in strategic games
    Synthese 171 (2). 2009.
    In this paper I present a dynamic-epistemic hybrid logic for reasoning about information and intention changes in situations of strategic interaction. I provide a complete axiomatization for this logic, and then use it to study intentions-based transformations of decision problems.
    Epistemic LogicDecision-Theoretic Puzzles
  •  353
    Interpersonal coordination and epistemic support for intentions with we-content
    Economics and Philosophy 26 (3): 345-367. 2010.
    In this paper I study intentions of the form, that is, intentions with a we-content, and their role in interpersonal coordination. I focus on the notion of epistemic support for such intentions. Using tools from epistemic game theory and epistemic logic, I cast doubt on whether such support guarantees the other agents' conditional mediation in the achievement of such intentions, something that appears important if intentions with a we-content are to count as genuine intentions. I then formulate …Read more
    In this paper I study intentions of the form, that is, intentions with a we-content, and their role in interpersonal coordination. I focus on the notion of epistemic support for such intentions. Using tools from epistemic game theory and epistemic logic, I cast doubt on whether such support guarantees the other agents' conditional mediation in the achievement of such intentions, something that appears important if intentions with a we-content are to count as genuine intentions. I then formulate a stronger version of epistemic support, one that does indeed ensure the required mediation, but I then argue that it rests on excessively strong informational conditions. In view of this I provide an alternative set of conditions that are jointly sufficient for coordination in games, and I argue that these conditions constitute a plausible alternative to the proposed notion of epistemic support
    Game TheoryRationality in EconomicsCollective Intentionality
  •  110
    Rational Choice (review)
    Economics and Philosophy 28 (1). 2012.
    Rational Choice Theory
  •  1090
    Dynamic consequence for soft information
    with Ole Thomassen Hjortland
    Journal of Logic and Computation. forthcoming.
    Modal LogicSubstructural LogicDoxastic and Epistemic LogicLogical Consequence and Entailment
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