Nah, the semiotics of the action really are things which actually happen (physically located in the minds of observers) and which are caused by the action. Decision theories will automatically account for them just like any other effect of an action.
TDT doesn’t ignore the surrounding contex, it says “make this decision as if you were deciding for all circumstances which are exactly the same as this one”.
Nah, the semiotics of the action really are things which actually happen (physically located in the minds of observers) and which are caused by the action. Decision theories will automatically account for them just like any other effect of an action.
TDT doesn’t ignore the surrounding contex, it says “make this decision as if you were deciding for all circumstances which are exactly the same as this one”.
That just shifted the problem without resolving it though: How do you decide what makes the circumstances the same or different?