Then choice C isn’t a random mixture of choice A and choice B.
Preferring that there be randomness at a point where you otherwise wouldn’t get a decision at all, is fine. What doesn’t happen is preferring one coin-flip in place of one decision.
Then choice C isn’t a random mixture of choice A and choice B.
Preferring that there be randomness at a point where you otherwise wouldn’t get a decision at all, is fine. What doesn’t happen is preferring one coin-flip in place of one decision.