•  185
    Why Rational Agents Should Not Be Liberal Maximizers
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 38 (S1): 1-17. 2008.
    Hans Herzberger's 1973 essay 'Ordinal Preference and Rational Choice' is a classic milestone in the erosion of the idea that rational agents are maximizers of utility. By the time Herzberger wrote, many authors had replaced this claim with the thesis that rational agents are maximizers of preference. That is to say, it was assumed that at the moment of choice a rational agent has a weak ordering representing his or her preferences among the options available to the agent for choice and that the …Read more
  •  237
    If Jones only knew more!
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 20 (2): 153-159. 1969.
  •  123
    Reply to Maher and Kashima
    Economics and Philosophy 7 (1): 101-103. 1991.
  •  65
    Reviews (review)
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 19 (3): 259-261. 1968.
  •  94
    Carol Rovane
    Synthese 140 (1). 2004.
  •  100
    The Matter of Chance
    Philosophical Review 82 (4): 524. 1973.
  •  76
    Information and error
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 6 (1): 74-75. 1983.
  •  71
    Prediction, Bayesian Deliberation and Correlated Equilibrium
    Vienna Circle Institute Yearbook 5 173-185. 1998.
    In a pair of controversy provoking papers1, Kadane and Larkey argued that the normative or prescriptive understanding of expected utility theory recommended that participants in a game maximize expected utility given their assessments of the probabilities of the moves that other players would make. They observed that no prescription, norm or standard of Bayesian rationality recommends how they should come to make probability judgments about the choices of other players. For any given player, it …Read more
  •  68
    Truth, content, and ties
    Journal of Philosophy 68 (23): 865-876. 1971.
  •  150
    It is a commonplace that in making decisions agents often have to juggle competing values, and that no choice will maximise satisfaction of them all. However, the prevailing account of these cases assumes that there is always a single ranking of the agent's values, and therefore no unresolvable conflict between them. Isaac Levi denies this assumption, arguing that agents often must choose without having balanced their different values and that to be rational, an act does not have to be optimal, …Read more
  •  95
    On Indeterminate Probabilities
    Journal of Philosophy 71 (13): 233--261. 1978.
  •  68
    Conjunctive bliss
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 6 (2): 254-255. 1983.
  •  142
    Support and surprise: L. J. Cohen's view of inductive probability (review)
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 30 (3): 279-292. 1979.
  •  100
    Fallacy and controversy about base rates
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19 (1): 31-32. 1996.
    Koehler's target article attempts a balanced view of the relevance of knowledge of base rates to judgments of subjective or credal probability, but he is not sensitive enough to the difference between requiring and permitting the equation of probability judgments with base rates, the interaction between precision of base rate and reference class information, and the possibility of indeterminate probability judgment.
  •  90
    Money Pumps and Diachronic Books
    Philosophy of Science 69 (S3). 2002.
    The idea that rational agents should have acyclic preferences and should obey conditionalization has been defended on the grounds that otherwise an agent is threatened with becoming a “money pump.” This essay argues that such arguments fail to prove their claims.
  •  30
    Book reviews (review)
    Mind 101 (402): 386-390. 1992.
  •  44
    Review: Inclusive Rationality (review)
    Journal of Philosophy 101 (5). 2004.
  •  150
    Jaakko Hintikka
    Synthese 140 (1). 2004.
  •  171
    A note on newcombmania
    Journal of Philosophy 79 (6): 337-342. 1982.
  •  53
    This is a collection of Isaac Levi's philosophical papers. Over the period represented by the work here, Professor Levi has developed an interrelated set of views, in the tradition of Peirce and Dewey, on epistemology and the philosophy of science and social science. This focus has been on the problem of induction and the growth of knowledge, the foundations of probability and the theory of rational decision-making. His most important essays in these areas are assembled here, with an introductio…Read more
  • Induction and the Aims of Inquiry
    In Ernest Nagel, Sidney Morgenbesser, Patrick Suppes & Morton White (eds.), Philosophy, science, and method, St. Martin's Press. pp. 99. 1969.
  •  218
    Two notions of epistemic validity
    with Horacio Arló Costa
    Synthese 109 (2): 217-262. 1996.
    How to accept a conditional? F. P. Ramsey proposed the following test in (Ramsey 1990).(RT) If A, then B must be accepted with respect to the current epistemic state iff the minimal hypothetical change of it needed to accept A also requires accepting B.
  •  59
    Probabilistic pettifoggery
    Erkenntnis 25 (2). 1986.
  •  109
    Change in View: Principles of Reasoning by Gilbert Harman (review)
    Journal of Philosophy 84 (7): 376-384. 1987.
  •  262
    This major work challenges some widely held positions in epistemology - those of Peirce and Popper on the one hand and those of Quine and Kuhn on the other.
  •  129
    Pragmatism and inquiry: selected essays
    Oxford University Press. 2012.
    This volume presents a series of essays which investigate the nature of intellectual inquiry: what its aims are and how it operates. The startingpoint is the work of the American pragmatists C.S. Peirce and John Dewey. Inquiry according to Peirce is a struggle to replace doubt by true belief. Dewey insisted that the transformation was from an indeterminate situation to a determinate or non-problematic one. So Isaac Levi's subject is changes in doxastic commitments, which may involve changes in a…Read more
  •  74
    Studies in Inductive Logic and Probability
    Philosophical Review 92 (1): 116. 1983.