at the very least, I see no hint that there must be infinite ones
Am I correct in interpreting this as "infinitely many of them"? If so, I am curious as to what you mean by "functionally different types of connections between events". Could you provide an example of some "types of connections between events"? Functionally different ones to be sure.
Presumably, the relevance must be your belief that decision theories differ in just how many of these different kinds of connections they handle correctly. Could you illustrate this by pointing out how the decision theory of your choice handles some types of connections, and why you have confidence that it does so correctly?
Am I correct in interpreting this as "infinitely many of them"?
Oops, yes. Fixed.
If so, I am curious as to what you mean by "functionally different types of connections between events". Could you provide an example of some "types of connections between events"? Functionally different ones to be sure.
CDT can 'see' the classical, everyday causal connections that are marked in formulas with the symbol ">" (and I'd have to spend several hours reading at least the Stanford Encyclopaedia before I could give you a ...
A monthly thread for posting rationality-related quotes you've seen recently (or had stored in your quotesfile for ages).