I think that ants like sugar. However, if I spill some sugar on the countertop, I’m not going to be shocked when every ant in a ten mile radius doesn’t immediately start walking towards the sugar. It’s reasonable to expect a model of an agent’s behavior to include a model of that agent’s model of its environment.
And so the assumptions pile up :-) We have to distinguish not knowing, from not caring, from not being able to plan the whole way through, from arious biases in the model… I agree that it’s necessary, but that doesn’t make it feasible.
I think that ants like sugar. However, if I spill some sugar on the countertop, I’m not going to be shocked when every ant in a ten mile radius doesn’t immediately start walking towards the sugar. It’s reasonable to expect a model of an agent’s behavior to include a model of that agent’s model of its environment.
And so the assumptions pile up :-) We have to distinguish not knowing, from not caring, from not being able to plan the whole way through, from arious biases in the model… I agree that it’s necessary, but that doesn’t make it feasible.