•  151
    Belief and Action
    The Monist 48 (2): 306-315. 1964.
    “Ethics and science,” wrote Poincaré, “have their own domains, which touch but do not interpenetrate. The one shows us to what goal we should aspire, the other, given the goal, teaches us how to attain it.” Poincare’ may be mistaken in supposing that science has nothing to contribute to the selection of goals. He is surely right, however, in insisting on the relevance of the results of science to the choice of policies for realising goals already selected.
  •  215
    Direct inference
    Journal of Philosophy 74 (1): 5-29. 1977.
  •  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.
  •  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
  •  94
    Carol Rovane
    Synthese 140 (1). 2004.
  •  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.