"The Philosopher's Index" is a commercial software once widely
used to search for articles in philosophy journals. These days
it is
generally easier and faster to
search on the open internet. (Even the company behind the Philosopher's Index is not quite sure why the Index is still needed.) However, there is one thing the
Index has that can't be found anywhere else: many of its entries
contain abstracts of books and articles, apparently provided by the
authors themselves. These abstracts are often not part of the
published versions, and they can be quite useful to get an
authoritative summary, or to see what the author considered to be the
main point of a paper.
If you spin a wheel of fortune, the outcome -- red or black -- depends
on the speed with which you spin. As you increase the speed,
the outcome quickly cycles through the two possibilities red and
black. As a consequence, any reasonably smooth probability distribution
(or frequency distribution) over initial speed determines an
approximately equal probability (frequency) for red and black. Here is
an example of such a distribution, taken from Strevens.
I've been asked to review Michael Strevens's new book,
Tychomancy. This motivated me to have another look at his
earlier book Bigger than Chaos.
The aim of Bigger than Chaos is to explain how apparently
chaotic interactions in highly complex systems often give rise to
simple large-scale regularities, such as the laws of thermodynamics,
the stability of predator/prey population levels, or the economic
cycle. The basic explanatory strategy, which Strevens calls enion
probability analysis (EPA), consists in aggregating the
probabilistic dynamics for the individual components of a complex
system into a probabilistic dynamics for macro-level features of the
system.
Plausible moral theories should be agent-relative. They should
permit us to care more about close friends than about distant
strangers. They can prohibit killing ten innocent people even in
circumstances where eleven innocent people would otherwise be killed
by somebody else. They might say that it would be right for Alice to
dance with Bob, but wrong for Bob to dance with Alice.
But how should we think about agent-relative values? It may seem
that the state of affairs in which Alice dances with Bob is either
right or not right. How could it be right relative to Alice but wrong
relative to Bob? Or consider a case where I can prevent you from
killing eleven by killing ten myself. If it is wrong that you kill the
eleven, then surely I have a moral reason to see to it that you don't
kill the eleven, just as I have a moral reason to see to it that I
don't kill the ten. Moreover, presumably it is worse if you kill
eleven than if I kill ten. So shouldn't my reason to prevent you from
killing the eleven outweigh my reason to not kill the ten?
Often the factors that determine a phenomenon don't determine it
uniquely. Sometimes this changes the phenomenon itself.
Take language. Plausibly, the meanings of our words are somehow determined by
patterns of use, but these patterns aren't specific enough to fix,
say, a unique extension or intension for our language. There is a
range of precise meaning assignments all of which fit our use equally
well. One might leave it at that and say that it is indeterminate
which of these precise languages we speak. But this misses
something. It misses the fact that we don't speak a precise
language. For example, in a precise language, "Mount Everest has sharp boundaries"
would be true, but in English it is false. The logic of a precise
language would (arguably) be classical, but the logic of English is
not.
When we face a decision and work out what we should do, we gain information about what we will do. Taking into account this information can in turn affect what we should do. Here's an example.
(I) In front of you are two opaque boxes, one black one white. You can
open one of them and keep whatever is inside. Yesterday, a perfect (or
almost perfect) predictor tried to predict what you would choose. If
she predicted that you'd take the black box, she put a million dollars
in the white box and two dollars in the black box. If she predicted
that you'd take the white box, she put a thousand dollars in the black
box and one dollar in the white box. Which box do you open?
Let's say that at the beginning of your deliberation, you are
completely undecided, giving 50 percent credence to the hypothesis
that you'll end up opening the black box. Standard formulations of
causal decision theory then say that opening the white box has greater
expected payoff: since there's a 50 percent probability that it
contains a million, the expected payoff is 500000.50, which is a lot
more than what you could possibly find in the black box. However, choosing to open the white box would
provide you with highly relevant information: it would reveal
that the predictor has (almost certainly) put only one dollar in the white box and a thousand in the black box. As
a rational decision-maker you should take that information into
account. Many putative "counterexamples" to causal decision
theory, such as those
in Richter
1985 and Egan
2007, are based on this observation.
Lewis, in "Causal Decision Theory" (1981, p.308):
Suppose we have a partition of propositions that distinguish worlds
where the agent acts differently ... Further, he can act at
will so as to make any one of these propositions hold, but he cannot
act at will so as to make any proposition hold that implies but is
not implied by (is properly included in) a proposition in the
partition. ... Then this is the partition of the agent's
alternative options.
That can't be right. Assume I "can act at will so as to make hold"
the proposition P that I raise my hand. Let Q be an arbitrary fact
over which I have no control, say, that Julius Caesar crossed the
Rubicon. Then I can also act at will so as to make P & Q true. (By
raising my hand, I make it true, by not raising it I make it false.)
So, by Lewis's definition, P is not an option, since I can act at will
so as to make a more specific proposition P & Q true (a
proposition that implies but is not implied by P). By the same
reasoning, all my options must entail Q. So they don't form a
partition: they don't cover regions of logical space where Q is
false.
Consider a long list S1...Sn of sentences such that (a) each Si
is trivially equivalent to its predecessor and successor
(if any), and (b) S1 is not trivially equivalent to Sn.
For example, S1 might be a complicated mathematical or logical
statement, and S1...Sn a process of slowly transforming S1 into a
simpler expression. For another example, S1...Sn might be statements
in different languages, where each Si qualifies as a direct
translation of its neighbor(s) but S1 is not a direct translation
of Sn.
I recently accepted a Chancellor's Fellowship at the University of Edinburgh. So it looks like the next stop, after six years in Australia, will be Scotland. Woop!
Over the weekend I made a website that lets you search through the works of David Lewis. It's not perfect: a lot of the documents contain garbled words from OCR, the character encoding is messed up, and it doesn't show page numbers of matches. Maybe I'll fix that eventually. Also, three papers are currently missing from the index because I don't have them in PDF form: "Nachwort (1978)", "Lingue e Lingua", and "Review of Olson and Paul, Contemporary Philosophy in Scandanavia".
[Update: See the changelog for updates.]