Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- 1 The Biology of Logic
- 2 The Evolutionary Derivation of Life-History Strategy Theory
- 3 The Evolutionary Derivation of Decision Logic
- 4 The Evolutionary Derivation of Inductive Logic (Part I)
- 5 The Evolutionary Derivation of Deductive Logic
- 6 The Evolutionary Derivation of Inductive Logic (Part II)
- 7 The Evolutionary Derivation of Mathematics
- 8 Broadening the Evolutionary Foundation of Classical Logic
- 9 The Evolutionary Derivation of Nonclassical Logics
- 10 Radical Reductionism in Logic
- 11 Toward a Unified Science of Reason
- Appendix: Formal Theory
- References
- Index
Appendix: Formal Theory
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- 1 The Biology of Logic
- 2 The Evolutionary Derivation of Life-History Strategy Theory
- 3 The Evolutionary Derivation of Decision Logic
- 4 The Evolutionary Derivation of Inductive Logic (Part I)
- 5 The Evolutionary Derivation of Deductive Logic
- 6 The Evolutionary Derivation of Inductive Logic (Part II)
- 7 The Evolutionary Derivation of Mathematics
- 8 Broadening the Evolutionary Foundation of Classical Logic
- 9 The Evolutionary Derivation of Nonclassical Logics
- 10 Radical Reductionism in Logic
- 11 Toward a Unified Science of Reason
- Appendix: Formal Theory
- References
- Index
Summary
This appendix provides a proof of Theorem 4.1. More generally, it offers some minimal mathematical foundations for an evolutionary derivation of classical decision and utility theory, subjective probability theory, and deductive logic. The definitions and theorems constitute the mathematical underpinnings of the theory outlined in the main text. The conditions of Model 1 are assumed.
DEFINING RATIONALITY
Let S be the set of states of nature for a decision problem. The members of S are denoted by variables s, s′, etc. and its subsets are A, B, etc. Let F be the set of all potential consequences ƒ, g, h, etc. involved in the problem. An act for the problem is a function f from S into F.
A choice function is a function C mapping every set of acts for the problem to one of the set's members. In the case of sets with just two members, for any acts f, g clearly either C({f,g}) = f or C({f,g}) = g. Choice functions are interpreted behaviorally. That is, C({f,g}) is the act that an organism with the choice function C actually chooses or would choose if confronted with a choice between f and g. For brevity, expressions of form C({f,g}) = f will be written f C g, which may be read “f is chosen over g.”
A strict preference relation ≻ between acts is definable in terms of the choice function. Clearly it should be required that if f ≻ g then f C g. The converse, however, is unwanted because f C g can happen also in case of indifference.
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- Information
- The Evolution of ReasonLogic as a Branch of Biology, pp. 203 - 216Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001