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Online papers in philosophy feed

Long ago, I wrote a little script to automatize Brian Weatherson's (at the time) Online Papers in Philosophy blog. The script crawls the home pages of various philosophers and extracts author, title and abstract from every paper posted there. It then visits the pages again every other day or so to check for updates. This way, I'm currently tracking about 15000 papers from about 2000 pages.

Since the real OPP blog, maintained by Jonathan Ichikawa for the last few years, has caught a virus and is therefore not doing well right now, I've decided to dust off my script and make it available to the public. Then along came David Chalmers, who talked me into not making it public after all, but rather merging it into something even bigger that will hopefully go live very soonish. In the meantime, here is at least an RSS feed of my script, with daily updates of new papers it finds: OPP RSS.

Inadmissible games and counterfactuals

A time traveler offers you a game. You can toss a fair coin. If it lands heads, you win $2; if it lands tails, you lose $1. The time traveler informs you that all fair coins tossed today will land tails. (He knows, because he's seen all the results before traveling back in time.) Do you play?

Suppose you decide to toss. Trusting the time traveler, you can then be confident that you will lose $1. You would not have lost anything if you hadn't tossed, so the alternative option would have been better. It seems that you've made the wrong decision.

Absentmindedness and persistent instability

Hey there. I've been a bit busy moving house, sitting in the garden, watching the falling leaves, etc. I've also thought some more about the absentminded driver. Here's something odd: on a certain interpretation of this case, we get a an unstable decision problem that remains interestingly unstable even when mixing (randomization) is allowed.

Some background. A decision problem is unstable if a decision to do one thing inevitably makes another thing preferable. In a classic example, Death, who is very good at predicting people's whereabouts, has predicted where you will be tomorrow and awaits you there. Should you stay where you are (in Damascus) or flee to Aleppo?

Sleeping Beauty, Dutch Books and Newcomb's Problem

A curious aspect of the Sleeping Beauty debate is the role of Dutch Books. At first sight, it looks as if Dutch Book considerations support thirding (see e.g. Hitchcock 2004). However, as Halpern 2006 shows, Beauty can also be Dutch Booked if she is a thirder. Some have argued that these arguments might fail because in Sleeping Beauty type cases, credences and betting odds can come apart (see e.g. Bradley and Leitgeb 2006). I disagree. Instead, I will argue that her vulnerability to Dutch Books doesn't show that Beauty is irrational -- at least not if she is a halfer.

Desire Reflection

Bas van Fraassen's Reflection Principle says that your current beliefs should be in line with your current beliefs about your future beliefs. More precisely,

PRB: P_1(A | P_2(A)=x) = x.

P_1 is your credence at time 1, P_2 your credence at time 2. PRB says that conditional on the assumption that at time 2 you believe A to degree x, you should already believe A to degree x at time 1. For agents who believe that they will (or might) change their beliefs in irrational ways between the two times, PRB is not a reasonable demand: if you know that you will be hit on the head tomorrow and consequently believe that the Earth is flat, you shouldn't believe that the Earth is flat now. On the other hand, if you're certain you will not change your beliefs in any such irrational way between now and tomorrow, then PRB is reasonable: suppose tomorrow you will believe that the Earth is flat by rationally responding to some very surprising new information; then you can infer that there exists some such information strongly supporting that the Earth is flat. But the fact that there is evidence for P is of course itself evidence for P. Hence you should already believe today that the Earth is probably flat.

Ah, sh, push it!

I finally found the decision theory puzzle that I posted recently in a series of papers by Reed Richter from the mid 1980s. I'm not convinced by Richter's treatment though, and I'm still somewhat puzzled.

Here is Richter's version:

Button: You and another person, X, are put in separate rooms where each of you faces a button. If you both push the button within the next 10 minutes, you will (both) receive 10 Euros. If neither of you pushes the button, you (both) lose 1000 Euros. If one of you pushes and the other one doesn't, you (both) get 100 Euros.

What would you do? Most people, I guess, would push the button. After all, if you don't push it, there is a high risk of losing 1000 Euros. For how how can you be certain that X won't do the same? On the other hand, if you push the button, the worst possible outcome is a gain of 10 Euros.

How to change one's mind

Suppose beliefs locate us in centered logical space: to believe something is to rule out not only ways a universe might be, but ways things might be for an individual at a time. Then there will be two kinds of rational belief change: we can learn something new about our present situation, and we can change our situation and adjust our beliefs to this change. The rule for changes of the first kind is conditionalization. The rule for changes of the second kind doesn't have an official name yet, as far as I know. (In the AGM/KM framework, it is called "update", but we Bayesians often use "update" for conditioning.) In practice, the two rules always go hand in hand: you never learn something new without changing your situation, and you hardly ever change your situation without learning anything new.

In this paper, I try to spell out the two rules, and their combination: Believing in afterlife: conditionalization in a changing world (PDF).

I'm a bit unhappy with some parts of the story, and I should probably say more about alternative accounts in the literature, and why I don't like them. So hopefully there will be an update soon. In the meantime, comments are as always very welcome!

avi and idx/sub to dvd

Here is a little script I wrote to create DVDs from avi movies with subtitles in vobsub format (.idx and .sub) on Linux: dvdiso. Apparently, DeVeDe can't do that.

Knowledge, belief, and Anton's Syndrome

Mostly, when we don't believe something, we don't know it either. But arguably not always. The timid student thinks she's merely guessing, while in fact she knows. She knows, but she lacks the confidence required for belief. It would be nice to have an analysis of knowledge that allowed for such cases, but also explained why they are rare.

Lewis's analysis tries to do that. On Lewis's account, you know p iff your evidence rules out any relevant situation where ~p. Among the rules for what counts as 'relevant', the 'rule of belief' tells us that any possibility with non-negligible subjective probability counts as relevant. Now suppose you don't believe p. Then you give non-negligible probability to ~p situations. So you know p only if your evidence rules out all those ~p situations. Moreover, your present evidence 'rules out' a situation iff you have different evidence in that situation than you actually have. So if you have knowledge without belief, you must assign positive probability to situations where you have different evidence than you actually have. On a suitable understanding of evidence, those cases will be rare, because we are normally confident that we have the evidence that we have.

What if I went by the Sea?

This is a follow-up to the previous post on Shangri La. As before, the story is that a fair coin decides which path you take to Shangri La: on heads, you travel by the Mountains, on tails, by the Sea. If you arrive at Shangri La via the Sea, the guardians will replace your Sea memories with Mountain memories.

In the other post, I said that if you actually traveled by the Mountains, you should remain confident that you traveled by the Mountains, even though you would have ended up with the same evidence had you traveled by the Sea.

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